Methodology for Consolidating E-commerce Cargo on International Logistics Corridors: From Shipment Acceptance to Delivery to the Final Recipient

Kamalbek Jurayev

Citation: Kamalbek Jurayev, "Methodology for Consolidating E-commerce Cargo on International Logistics Corridors: From Shipment Acceptance to Delivery to the Final Recipient", Universal Library of Business and Economics, Volume 03, Issue 02.

Copyright: This is an open access article distributed under the Creative Commons Attribution License, which permits unrestricted use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original work is properly cited.

Abstract

The article examines a methodology for consolidating e-commerce cargo on international logistics corridors, from shipment registration to delivery to the final recipient. The study’s relevance lies in the growth of cross-border e-commerce in Central Asia, the high importance of air delivery for double-landlocked countries, and the need to reduce the transportation costs of small shipments. The aim of the article is to develop an applied consolidation model that integrates digital customer identification, warehouse acceptance, repackaging, customs pre-verification, multi-route transportation, and last-mile management. The scientific novelty lies in the description of an integrated operational framework in which Suite ID, CRM, WMS, manifests, API integrations, dimensional-weight control, and risk protocols operate as a single logistics system. The main findings show that consolidation efficiency is determined by data quality, warehouse location selection, preliminary customs verification, direct contracts with air carriers, and the availability of reserve corridors. The model increases delivery-time predictability, reduces the share of identification errors, decreases customs delays, and supports delivery within a ten-day cycle. The article will be useful for logistics researchers, e-commerce delivery operators, warehouse managers, customs brokers, and companies developing cross-border supply chains.


Keywords: E-Commerce Logistics, Cargo Consolidation, International Logistics Corridors, Central Asia.

Download doi https://doi.org/10.70315/uloap.ulbec.2026.0302009