The panic buying phase ended. The cost phase didn't.
In 2020 and 2021, supply chain optimization meant keeping anything that moved. Port of Montreal dwell times stretched to 14-18 days. Detention charges were afterthoughts because demand was infinite. Importers locked in premium drayage slots, paid for expedited cross-dock, and carried inventory in sufferance warehouses at rates they'd normally reject.
That's not the market anymore. Demand has reset. The Port of Montreal operates at more normalized throughput now. Detention clears faster. But most importers are still running 2021's playbook: expensive drayage windows, bloated in-bond storage, and dock-to-stock cycles built for emergency conditions.
Supply chain optimization post-pandemic isn't about fighting for capacity. It's about cutting the costs that made sense under pressure but bleed cash in a normalized market.
Why sufferance warehouse holding costs matter now
A CBSA-authorized sufferance warehouse charges by the day. Most of our clients at FENGYE LOGISTICS pay somewhere between CAD 12 and CAD 18 per skid per day for standard handling and storage. That was invisible when containers sat at port for three weeks waiting for a drayage window. Now, when a typical container holds 18-22 skids and sits in warehouse for 7-10 days by choice rather than bottleneck, that's CAD 1,500 to CAD 4,000 per container in pure storage cost.
The pandemic logic was: better to hold it here than lose it to a competitor. The optimization logic is: move it to the customer's DC or a cross-dock hub within 48 hours and let them carry the holding cost, or consolidate smaller shipments and skip warehouse days entirely.
We're seeing importers shift inbound patterns. Instead of 40HC containers arriving loose with a 10-day buffer before picking, they're now requesting 48-hour dock-to-stock commitments. That sounds like a service bump. It's actually a cost decision: pay a small premium for faster release and reduce warehouse days from 10 to 2.
Drayage pricing and the Q4 trap
Port of Montreal's volume pattern hasn't changed. The port still moves the bulk of annual import volume between August and December, which means August through October are the windows when you can negotiate reasonable drayage windows. November and December, capacity tightens, driver availability drops, and spot rates climb 15-22% above baseline.
Three years ago, importers absorbed that premium because they had to. Now, supply chain optimization means working backward: if Q4 drayage is going to cost 18% more per unit, you compress inbound timing into September-October, pre-position inventory at a bonded warehouse with lower handling cost, and release it to the customer on a controlled cadence instead of one spike arrival that forces rush drayage.
The math is simpler than it sounds. A typical 40HC container moving from Port of Montreal to Lachine or Dorval in September costs CAD 4,200-4,600 all-in drayage. The same move in November might cost CAD 5,100-5,400. But holding that same container in a sufferance warehouse for 6 weeks at CAD 12-15 per skid per day costs roughly CAD 2,000-2,500 total. Release three pallets per week to the customer, move drayage into a softer market window, and you've cut total inbound cost by CAD 1,500-2,000 per container.
Racking density and the LTL / FTL split
One of the quieter optimization shifts we've seen post-pandemic is importers moving away from full-truckload staging toward consolidation and LTL delivery. During the boom, FTL made sense: pay per move, not per pallet, and stock was turning fast enough that density didn't matter. Now, with demand more predictable, consolidating 8-12 smaller shipments into a single truck and staging them in a bonded warehouse cuts the per-unit drayage cost by 25-35%.
That only works if your warehouse can actually stage and consolidate cargo without eating those savings in labor. Racking density, beam height, and dock-door throughput matter in a way they didn't when importers were just grateful to have space. A warehouse running 2.5 pallets per pallet position uses more floor space for the same SKU count. A warehouse running 3.5 or 4.0 cuts your per-pallet holding cost significantly.
FENGYE LOGISTICS runs block-pallet racking on most import lines, which lets us hit 3.5-4.0 density easily. But it requires real coordination on inbound: no random weight distributions, pallets prepped to standard height, and release orders staggered so we're not breaking down the entire racking configuration every Monday morning.
CARM Phase 2 and pre-arrival processing
The Customs Act Modernization (CARM) rollout, which CBSA has been implementing in phases through 2024-2025, changed how brokers file declarations and how release timing works. One actual optimization that came from modernization is pre-arrival review acceleration. A broker can now submit a Commercial Accounting Declaration (CAD) well before the container lands, which means a compliant import can clear within hours of arrival instead of the old 24-48 hour dock examination window.
Most importers haven't adjusted dock-to-stock SLAs to capture that. They still plan for 2-3 days of exam buffer even though a straightforward PARS release can now happen at the gate. If your supply chain plan still assumes a 72-hour window from Port of Montreal arrival to full warehouse pick-pack, you're overbuilding dwell time and underutilizing the broker's ability to accelerate.
That said, CARM also means a failed CAD submission or a hold for compliance review creates longer delays than the old system because the broker can't just walk it over to a desk. The optimization is: work with a broker who pre-stages CADs early and understands your product mix well enough to avoid red flags. Don't just assume modernization made everything faster.
The cross-dock cutoff squeeze
Cross-dock operations sit at the crease between inbound and outbound. A typical cross-dock cutoff in Montreal is 14:00 for next-day regional delivery. Anything arriving after 14:00 sits overnight in a warehouse at in/out handling rate (usually CAD 30-40 per skid for the round trip) instead of flowing straight to truck.
Post-pandemic, we're seeing importers front-load their drayage arrivals to morning windows to hit the cross-dock cutoff. That sounds good: faster delivery, lower handling cost. But it also means drayage demand is now concentrated into an 8-hour window instead of spread across the day. That drives up spot rates and tightens driver availability in the morning slot.
Real optimization is running inbound at whatever time the drayage market will give you at baseline rate, planning a 24-48 hour warehouse hold if needed, and letting the customer's downstream requirement drive the delivery window instead of squeezing everything into the cross-dock cutoff. The cost of one night in warehouse is often less than paying a 12% premium for rush drayage timing.
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Inventory position and the bonded warehouse buffer
The biggest shift we've observed in supply chain optimization post-pandemic is how importers now use in-bond storage as a strategic buffer instead of a disaster fix. During the boom, anything in sufferance warehouse was seen as expensive inventory you wanted out. Now, it's recognized as a way to extend cash flow (you pay duties only on release, not on arrival) and to smooth seasonal demand without pushing finished goods to a customer DC weeks early.
An importer can now land a 40HC container, hold it in-bond for 6-8 weeks at a known per-day cost, and release pallets weekly as customer demand signals arrive. That's not pandemic-era panic buying. That's logistics optimization: defer duty payment, reduce customer safety stock, and manage working capital more carefully.
The constraint is that you need a bonded warehouse with real operational discipline: accurate inventory, quick release processing, and the ability to pick and stage smaller parcels without creating chaos. Most commodity importers can't do this themselves, which is why bonded warehouse partnerships have become a real part of the supply chain stack post-pandemic.
Supply chain optimization in Canada isn't about finding capacity or fighting for port slots anymore. It's about reducing the cost stack: drayage window discipline, sufferance warehouse timing, racking density, and using CBSA modernization to accelerate release cycles without overbuilding safety stock. The importers who've made that transition are running inbound cost 12-18% lower than pandemic-era baseline. The ones still pushing FTL, absorbing Q4 drayage premiums, and holding inventory in warehouse as a default are still paying pandemic tax. Learn more about Fengye Logistics.
Originally published at https://www.fywarehouse.com/news/supply-chain-optimization-canada-what-actually-changed-after-2020-3c19f99f.
