What are the key trends shaping DHL’s innovation and future growth strategy in Singapore?
Life sciences and healthcare represent a key strategic focus for DHL because we see this as a growing sector with technological advances of great importance for mankind. Our Pharma Hub, a dedicated facility for pharmaceutical logistics launched in 2025, addresses the critical need for cold chain logistics. This is crucial since modern pharmaceuticals, particularly in the biologics space, are sensitive to temperature. They need precise and consistent temperature control at typically two to eight degrees Celsius, with some samples requiring frozen temperatures. We have seen strong demand with the first facility already at capacity, so we are looking towards establishing a second one.
Autonomous vehicles and robots represent another important trend for logistics, especially given that DHL employs 584,000 people worldwide. Our aim is to alleviate physically hard and repetitive work through the many robots already deployed in our facilities for intralogistics. Now we are also expanding beyond the warehouse. Here in Singapore, we have autonomous vehicles shuttling between our facilities transporting goods – you can see this technology in action around our warehouses at Tampines Logistics Park. This is an area that DHL will continue to explore and prioritise.
At DHL, we are also taking a focused approach to AI. Rather than developing general-purpose models, we concentrate on areas where we can add unique value, especially in processes that matter most to our operations and customers. We leave broad model development to companies with the scale and expertise to do so, and instead invest our time in targeted, high-impact applications. One example of this is agentic AI tools that we have developed for customs clearance that can look up relevant regulations and document the reasoning for classification decisions.
Sustainability, especially through the decarbonisation of logistics and international transportation, is very important to DHL. We need to physically reduce the amount of greenhouse gases in the atmosphere. That requires us to burn less fossil fuels and create less carbon dioxide, and we continue to do that in multiple ways. First, we have taken great strides to electrify our transportation fleet. We operate the largest fleet of electric vehicles in Europe, and we also electrify our fleet here in Singapore within the Asia Pacific region. Second, we play a strong role in promoting sustainable aviation – we are the number one airline in the world when it comes to using sustainable aviation fuels. While these fuels are currently derived from biological sources, we are also working intensively with our suppliers to find new feedstocks so that we can produce more sustainable aviation fuels for the decades to come.