By Claire Swedberg
July 14, 2009—
Packaging Logistics Services (PLS), a British provider of plastic pallets and reusable containers, as well as a manager of pallets and containers used by other companies, is using
RFID to track its own assets—while also helping its customers set up RFID tracking for their own reusable pallets and containers throughout Europe. With PLS adding RFID tags to its own fleet of pallets and containers, as well as to those owned by its customers, returnable transit packaging materials and the products they transport can be better tracked throughout the European supply chain, says Jon Graves, PLS' general manager.
The RFID system is being provided by
Xterprise, which Graves says was chosen by PLS because of its history with other reusable transit packaging firms in the United States and globally. Xterprise has provided what it calls the Clarity Reusable Transport Item (RTI) application, which includes RFID hardware and software, to such companies as
Intelligent Global Pooling Systems (see
IGPS Rolls Out RFID-Enabled Plastic Pallets) and
Continental Automotive Group (see
Automotive Manufacturer Tracks Incoming Inventory). "We understand the logistics business," says Dean Frew, Xterprise's president and CEO.
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Jon Graves, PLS' general manager
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Xterprise and PLS signed an agreement two weeks , after planning the system's deployment for approximately one year. PLS has begun tagging its own products, as well as installing RFID interrogators at its four European depots (three in the United Kingdom, and one in Germany). In addition, PLS has signed an agreement with one of its customers, an unnamed global beverage manufacturer, to apply RFID tags to that company's own plastic pallets, in order to help the business track the movement of its pallets loaded with product on their way to retailers, as well as the servicing and return of those pallets to the distribution center.
PLS manages reusable containers and pallets belonging to a number of European companies, by tracking the shipping, receiving, location and condition of those assets, as well as washing and repairing them. In this way, the firm helps its clients ensure that the appropriate number of functional containers is available where needed for shipping products. The firm also leases its own plastic transit packaging, and currently has nearly 2.5 million containers and pallets.
By using RFID technology, Graves says, PLS has another tool to offer its customers, as well as manage its own assets. Xterprise is providing ultrahigh-
frequency (
UHF)
EPC Gen 2 tags from
Avery Dennison and
Alien Technology, to be affixed to the corners or edges of reusable packaging. Two to four tags will be attached to most of those containers or pallets, Frew says. All of the tags affixed to an individual container or pallet are encoded with the same unique Global Reusable Asset Identifier (GRAI) number. What's more, Xterprise is installing Alien and
Motorola RFID readers at the dock doors of PLS' depots and third-party warehouses, in addition to providing Motorola handheld readers in some cases.