169 research outputs found
Assessment of Quay and Yard Transshipment Operations Under Proximity Limitations in Multi-Terminal Container Ports
The assignment of storage locations and space has a considerable impact on the performance of container terminals. This holds especially in multi-terminal transshipment ports where the planning of inbound and outbound container flows needs to consider space limitations and travel distances for reallocations, causing both intra- and inter-terminal transports. Thus, in this work, we study the impact of closeness limitations on quay and yard areas when conducting transshipment operations at multi-terminal transshipment ports. In doing so, a mathematical formulation and several scenarios covering different distance policies for limiting the allocation of containers before vessel loading or unloading operations are assessed. At a tactical level, this paper provides insights on assignment decisions while assessing distance-based policies that can be incorporated in practice
Digital Twins for Ports: Derived from Smart City and Supply Chain Twinning Experience
Ports are striving for innovative technological solutions to cope with the
ever-increasing growth of transport, while at the same time improving their
environmental footprint. An emerging technology that has the potential to
substantially increase the efficiency of the multifaceted and interconnected
port processes is the digital twin. Although digital twins have been
successfully integrated in many industries, there is still a lack of
cross-domain understanding of what constitutes a digital twin. Furthermore, the
implementation of the digital twin in complex systems such as the port is still
in its infancy. This paper attempts to fill this research gap by conducting an
extensive cross-domain literature review of what constitutes a digital twin,
keeping in mind the extent to which the respective findings can be applied to
the port. It turns out that the digital twin of the port is most comparable to
complex systems such as smart cities and supply chains, both in terms of its
functional relevance as well as in terms of its requirements and
characteristics. The conducted literature review, considering the different
port processes and port characteristics, results in the identification of three
core requirements of a digital port twin, which are described in detail. These
include situational awareness, comprehensive data analytics capabilities for
intelligent decision making, and the provision of an interface to promote
multi-stakeholder governance and collaboration. Finally, specific operational
scenarios are proposed on how the port's digital twin can contribute to energy
savings by improving the use of port resources, facilities and operations.Comment: This work has been submitted to the IEEE for possible publication.
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The synergistic effect of operational research and big data analytics in greening container terminal operations: a review and future directions
Container Terminals (CTs) are continuously presented with highly interrelated, complex, and uncertain planning tasks. The ever-increasing intensity of operations at CTs in recent years has also resulted in increasing environmental concerns, and they are experiencing an unprecedented pressure to lower their emissions. Operational Research (OR), as a key player in the optimisation of the complex decision problems that arise from the quay and land side operations at CTs, has been therefore presented with new challenges and opportunities to incorporate environmental considerations into decision making and better utilise the ‘big data’ that is continuously generated from the never-stopping operations at CTs. The state-of-the-art literature on OR's incorporation of environmental considerations and its interplay with Big Data Analytics (BDA) is, however, still very much underdeveloped, fragmented, and divergent, and a guiding framework is completely missing. This paper presents a review of the most relevant developments in the field and sheds light on promising research opportunities for the better exploitation of the synergistic effect of the two disciplines in addressing CT operational problems, while incorporating uncertainty and environmental concerns efficiently. The paper finds that while OR has thus far contributed to improving the environmental performance of CTs (rather implicitly), this can be much further stepped up with more explicit incorporation of environmental considerations and better exploitation of BDA predictive modelling capabilities. New interdisciplinary research at the intersection of conventional CT optimisation problems, energy management and sizing, and net-zero technology and energy vectors adoption is also presented as a prominent line of future research
Korea container ports and spatial effects on manufacturing
Over the last half century, the Korean economy has progressed its status from that of an underdeveloped country to a developed and dynamic economy, now home to global brands working in shipbuilding and the automobile, electronics, and mobile phones, amongst others. Crucial to this rapid progress, shipping and ports have functioned as a lifeline by moving almost 100% of exports and imports. Examination of the effects of Korean container ports on the manufacturing industries is important to enhance our knowledge on the relationship between a port and its region. By looking at the regional panel datasets of all Korean manufacturing industries and port activities, the thesis first finds that the economic effects of Busan Port on the manufacturing industries in Korea are positive. The thesis notices that the regional effects of container ports vary in accordance with temporal changes and regions. In the case of the implementation of the container system in Korea we can look at two periods. The first period from 1991 to 1998 demonstrates positive coefficients of container throughput from Busan Port. However, the coefficients are inconclusive in the second period, 1999-2011. We find that the transshipment activity of Korean container ports does not affect overall the output of Korean manufacturing industries in the port cities and other regions. By undertaking a case analysis of the leather, bag and shoe industry, and the automobile industry, we find differences in regional effects of container throughput of ports by period and by region. Following these findings, the thesis defines a new classification of container port on the basis of shipping and inland transport networks, and suggests hub indexes by combining differently two sub-indexes of port classification and container handling capacity of container ports
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