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Ocado warns customers of shortages as staff absences mount

2021-01-11 newfoodmagazine

Tag: Ocado shortages as staff mount

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online supermarket Ocado has warned customers that certain products may be in short supply over the coming weeks, as more and more of its workforce is forced to self-isolate.

Ocado, which recently launched a partnership with UK supermarket Marks and Spencer last year, has reduced the amount of product lines it is running on its website as a result of the circumstances brought about by the vicious new wave of the COVID-19 pandemic.

“Staff absences across the supply chain may lead to an increase in product substitutions for a small number of customers, as some suppliers consolidate their offering to maintain output,” a spokesperson from Ocado told the BBC.

Ocado, like most other online food delivery services, often substitute an unavailable item with a similar product. Of course, you don’t have to accept the substitution, but Ocado makes it clear on its website that you cannot return any substitutions to your driver that you have touched due to the risk of infection. 

Demand for food deliveries has massively increased since the UK was plunged into lockdown in March last year and last week’s announcement of a third lockdown in England saw demand soar even higher. The virtual queues on websites of the UK’s major supermarkets made a comeback just hours after PM Boris Johnson addressed the nation on 5 January 2021.

“We apologise for any inconvenience caused and we are working hard to mitigate any impact,” Ocado told its customers. It has, however, reaffirmed that there is plenty of food still available.

Some customers were not satisfied by the apology though, and took to Twitter to vent their frustrations.

Nope i’m a ‘regular’ Ocado user and I’ve had items missing and not replaced, and slots are hard to go by… it’s tricky no matter who you use AND expensive.

— Sabrina Leb (@Sabstar) January 11, 2021

hate the substitutions why not take the stuff that’s not available off the website @Ocado !????? https://t.co/XxFHLCGTYE

— sèignèur (@taj_kang) January 11, 2021

@Ocado According to your advice I keep checking for slots but nothing for January?! Please tell me what I am paying a delivery subscription for? You should not take more subscriptions than you can reasonably service. Awful customer service

— Christine (@cbrown1230) January 11, 2021

The food industry, like so many others in the UK and around the world, has found itself under immense stress in the current circumstances, as staff are forced to self-isolate more and more.

The British Meat Processors Association (BMPA) has even called on the UK government to add workers in meat factories on the priority lists for the COVID-19 vaccine.

Brexit price hikes 

The COVID-19 pandemic might be a huge problem, but it isn’t the only one the food industry is facing right now. Coupled with the deteriorating health situation, retailers and suppliers are battling with new paperwork brought in now that the UK has left the EU. 

Supermarkets are struggling to keep shelves stocked with certain foodstuffs, with fresh fruit and vegetables seeming to be a particular challenge for retailers. According to the Daily Mail, Road Haulage Association’s chairman Rod McKenzie said: “Drivers are being turned back for a variety of reasons, including not having a valid Covid test. At the same time, they are being told the paperwork has not been done satisfactorily.

“The French have had a relatively light touch on enforcement so far, but they won’t from Monday.”

Lord Rose, former chairman of Marks and Spencer and Ocado, has also warned that any extra costs incurred by retailers will be passed onto consumers eventually. The former chairman of the Remain campaign told BBC Radio 4’s Today programme: “You can’t interfere with a finely honed, 50-year legacy supply chain and expect it to all run smoothly on day one.

“The issue of transport and hauliers not wanting to send their lorries here is because they are worried about their lorries being stuck and worried about lost profit, which means therefore the cost will be passed on to the consumer.” 

He did, however, add that despite shortages of certain goods, “there is not going to be a famine. Food will continue to come in…”

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