The UK is “sleepwalking into a disaster” over its border plans for the end of the Brexit transition period on 31 December, road hauliers have warned.
Groups representing truckers have written to ministers warning of “severe” disruption to supply chains.
Rod McKenzie, from the Road Haulage Association, said the government should “act now before it’s too late”.
But Boris Johnson said the UK was “ready for any eventuality” after the transition period.
The government has also given itself powers to build temporary lorry parks in England without local approval.
However, Mr McKenzie told BBC News: “It is a real case of the government sleepwalking to a disaster with the border preparations that we have, whether it is a deal or no-deal Brexit at the end of December.
“The supply chain on which we are all dependent to get the things we need could be disrupted and there is a lack of government focus and action on this.”
He added: “When we are trying to emerge from the crisis of Covid, if we then plunge straight into a Brexit-related crisis, that will be a really difficult moment and we need real pace.
“The difference here is between a disaster area and a disaster area with rocket boosters on.”
Labour’s shadow cabinet office minister, Rachel Reeves, said the government “must urgently come forward with a plan to put workable solutions in place”.
Speaking to reporters on Friday, Mr Johnson said: “We must make sure that people understand at the end of the year, whatever happens, we’re leaving the EU, leaving the transition period.
“That’s why it is vital that people who have questions about what they need to do get onto our government websites … look at what they need to do to prepare, and certainly, we will help them.
“But we will get through this.”
The UK left the European Union on 31 January, but a transition period – where the UK continues to follow some of the bloc’s rules – remains in place until 31 December while the two sides negotiate a trade agreement.
However, trade talks have been taking place since March and both sides have complained of little progress being made.
If a deal is not agreed and ratified by parliaments by the end of the year, the UK will go into 2021 trading with the bloc on World Trade Organization rules, which critics fear cause issues at the border.
In a letter to the Cabinet Office Minister Michael Gove, seen by Bloomberg, eight logistics organisations – including the Road Haulage Association – raised concerns over IT systems, the funding to train up customs agents and the pace of physical infrastructure being built.
They asked for an “urgent roundtable meeting” with Mr Gove, Chancellor Rishi Sunak and Transport Secretary Grants Shapps, saying supply chain must be protected ahead of a potential second wave of the coronavirus pandemic.
Mr Shapps said he regularly met the Road Haulage Association and wanted to reassure them “planning for the end of the transition period hasn’t stopped” during the coronavirus outbreak.
He told BBC Radio 4’s Today programme he “could not pre-empt the outcome” of trade talks with the EU, which he conceded created “some uncertainty”.
But, he said the government had kept supply changes going throughout the pandemic and “we are absolutely confident we will do that again in the future”.