I believe that the basis for this horrific incident may well be found in the structure of the Road Haulage Industry. In the main approximately six multinational companies control road distribution within the United kingdom. These are companies such as DHL, Wincanton, Bibby Distribution etc. Those organisations carryout the main haulage for the large supermarket retailers and manufacturers and it is their logos (Tesco etc) you see on the sides of the vehicles.
That stated, with journeys through the ports to and from European Union Countries those main distributors subcontract that work to smaller mid-sized hauliers who operate on a regular basis to become the backbone of the British based JIT services to and from the continent.
However, there are often ad-hoc loads that are not regular work such as when a supermarket chain is carrying out offers on fruit etc. Such irregular loads are again sub contacted by those companies doing the main continental work and that is carried out often by one person owner driver hauliers who operate with no regular contracts or guarantees of work whatsoever.
For such operators the revenue rates for what they carry out can offten be very low being that the Distribution companies in the layers above them take their percentage before passing the work on. Those owner drivers can at times find themselves on the continent or even in Britain unable to find a paying load for their vehicle or having a tonnage freight rate so low it will hardly pay for the fuel for the journey.
In the above, it has been widely felt throughout the industry for some time that some of those often desperate owner-drivers may be open to offers from people traffickers to bring their "cargo" into Britain.
As evidence to the above, anyone only has to look at the tractor unit of the vehicle involved in the Purfleet tragedy. That truck is in sole vehicle ownership of a family. However, it is fitted with such equipment as chrome exhausts, specialised personal paintwork, large banks of spotlights and much more. Therefore anyone has to ask where did the many thousands of pounds come from so as to be available to a third-tier haulier that enabled the vehicle to be "Jazzed up" in such a manner.
I would emphasise that the vast majority of Britains owner driver operators would in all probability never consider getting involved in such trafficking, but to some the very lucrative amounts of money on offer for such activity must obviously be very attractive.
Therefore many involved in the distribution industry or who like myself work in close association with it believe that it is the fundamental structure of trans continental haulage that requires change if such tragedies as that which has happened at Purfleet are to be avoided in the future.