PROUDLY CANADIAN
PROUDLY CANADIAN
Logistics for Canadian Chickpeas | Shipment Planning, Packing, and Delivery Coordination

Logistics for Canadian Chickpeas | Shipment Planning, Packing, and Delivery Coordination

Logistics in chickpea trade is not only about moving product from one point to another. For commercial buyers, it is about aligning product location, packing format, container planning, and shipment timing with the actual requirements of the order.

Our logistics approach is built around practical execution. That includes coordinating product flow, packing requirements, shipment structure, and delivery planning in a way that supports the commercial program.

Logistics Built Around the Order

Each chickpea order may require a different logistics structure depending on product type, packaging format, destination, shipment window, and buyer requirements. That is why logistics should be reviewed as part of the order planning process, not as a final step after the product has already been committed.

A well-planned logistics program helps reduce delays, improve shipment coordination, and support smoother execution from packing to dispatch.

From Farm Region to Packing and Dispatch

Product flow is coordinated based on the location of supply, the needs of the program, and the required packing format. This allows sourcing, processing, packing, and shipment planning to work together more efficiently.

Processing and packing are coordinated through selected third-party facilities across Western Canada based on proximity to the harvest farm and the operational needs of the order.

From Farm Region to Packing and Dispatch

Packaging and Container Planning

Logistics planning should match the packing structure of the order. Depending on buyer requirements, chickpeas may be prepared in:

The packing format affects handling, loading, container efficiency, and shipment planning, so it should be defined early in the inquiry stage.

Freight Coordination Through Key Canadian Gateways

For export programs, freight planning can be aligned with major Canadian gateways such as Vancouver and Montreal, depending on the destination market and shipment structure.

This helps connect inland product flow with the export plan in a more practical way and supports better coordination between packing, dispatch, and ocean freight planning.

Bennetts Chickpeas