Economic
development and trading activities will have enormous industrial and consumer
products which demand storage; it means spaces must be found where the products
could be kept safely for the required period; this is where warehouses play a
very critical role. Now, the situation is creation of warehouse hubs; that is,
businesses can bank on them to store their products till they reach their
destinations, that is, the customers, the ultimate focal point of any business
enterprise.
Take for
example Bhiwandi. Situated 20 kms away from Mumbai’s city centre and within the
limits of Thane, it was originally known as a textile centre. However, the
decline in the textile sector since 2012 made the city switch to a new, lucrative
mode of livelihood – as a centre for massive warehouses catering to the likes
of not just ecommerce players like Amazon and Flipkart, but also logistics
providers like Delhivery and FedEx. The reason? Its proximity to not just Nhava
Sheva, the port though which most of India’s exports sail off, but also as a
transit point for consumer products meant for the Mumbai metropolitan region?
In other words, warehouses prove a great commercial convenience.
Bhiwandi
is today one of Asia’s biggest warehousing hubs, with some of the biggest
godowns in the continent, but it has competition from other similar warehousing
hubs within the country. It is bound to be such. Just beyond Gurugram
(Gurgaon), the national capital’s richest satellite city lies the Luhari industrial
hub as well as the Bilaspur-Tauru Road, both leaving behind their agrarian
origins with factories and warehouses catering to the new economy, and helped
greatly by the spate of new highways linking them to big cities
According
to real estate consultancy Colliers, these hubs are attracting immense leasing
interest, the next logical step in business improvement, with new warehousing
supply at nearly 70 lakh sq ft in just the first three months of 2024. More
than half of this were concentrated in just the two metros of Mumbai and
Chennai. After Bhiwandi, the highest demand for warehousing was seen in
Oragadam, Chennai’s own warehousing hub.
Like big
engineering firms and automobile makers form the biggest lessors of warehousing
space, third party logistics providers
(3PL) are the biggest occupiers of warehouses in the country. 3PL formed 16
per cent of the total national warehousing leasing demand, though it was much
higher in Chennai, most of it in Oragadam.
“It is
noteworthy to see that the cumulative share of these three sectors (3PL,
engineering, automobile) have risen from 26 per cent last year to 40 per cent
this year,” said Vijay Ganesh, managing director (industrial & logistics
services), Colliers India, “This signifies changing consumption patterns and
hints at opportunities emerging in the sector from the steady demand
diversification.”
While
e-commerce companies have been increasing their leasing of warehouses
particularly since Covid, the demand is only likely to go up, especially with
the emergence of quick commerce trend, says Colliers