"On the last stage of the distribution, you need to bring goods in and out of the truck all the time, you have the city traffic, the cyclists and all that, so you really need a human there."
DSV has more than 20,000 trucks on the road around the world every day. But most of those are owned by independent drivers.
In 2015, the trucks drove about 1.9 billion kilometers (1.2 billion miles), or 2,500 times the distance to the moon and back. This year it will be further still after DSV acquired US rival UTi Worldwide for $1.35 billion.
Self-driving trucks are an opportunity for the logistics business because it would help lower the costs of operating the vehicles through better fuel efficiency.
All this won't change just because there's no longer a driver behind the wheel.
"If it then becomes cheaper, it will be good for our clients and we will do what we can to protect the margins we have," Andersen said. He doesn't see the development as a threat to workers either.
"You need people who handle the goods, who consolidate the packaging, who utilize the truck capacity, who fill out customs forms, who advise clients," he said.
"All this won't change just because there's no longer a driver behind the wheel."