27 research outputs found

    Synchromodal logistics: An overview of critical success factors, enabling technologies, and open research issues

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    Abstract As supply chain management is becoming demand driven, logistics service providers need to use real-time information efficiently and integrate new technologies into their business. Synchromodal logistics has emerged recently to improve flexibility in supply chains, cooperation among stakeholders, and utilization of resources. We survey the existing scientific literature and real-life developments on synchromodality. We focus on the critical success factors of synchromodality and six categories of enabling technologies. We identify open research issues and propose the introduction of a new stakeholder, which takes on the role of orchestrator to coordinate and provide services through a technology-based platform

    Business perspectives for freight transportation management The SYNCHRO-NET project

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    Nowadays, the eects of globalization impacted on the international trade that is growing faster. To conrm this trend, the volume of world trade continued to grow in the 2015, according to the estimates provided by the World trade Organization. In this context, the challenge for transportation is to overcome the complexities related to higher service quality, time-sensitive delivery, the increasing distances and the vulnerability of the supply chain. To these issues are added those concerning the economical end environmental sustainability of the logistics operations. In fulllment of the Horizon 2020 programme, dierent projects and research eorts are addressed to de-stressing the supply chain, introducing ICT-based solutions (e.g., e-Freight tools) and slow steaming concepts. The paper presents the SYNCHRO-modal supply chain eco-NET (SYNCHRO-NET) project, which has the aim to demonstrate the eectiveness of slow streaming combined with the synchro-modality, to reduce the externalities of the supply chain (i.e., costs and emissions) and to improve the reliability, the sustainability and the optimization planning process. This project takes into account the results obtained by the previous successful projects in the same eld, but introduces a further layer of innovation that extends the current state-of-the-art. In fact, the SYNCHRO-NET implementation is not strictly focused on the ICT solution, but it combines operational models with a business perspective and includes a stakeholder-driven approach

    A conceptual framework for synchromodol port: an extension of synchromodality from hinterland transport to marine operations

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    A Literature Review, Container Shipping Supply Chain: Planning Problems and Research Opportunities

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    This paper provides an overview of the container shipping supply chain (CSSC) by taking a logistics perspective, covering all major value-adding segments in CSSC including freight logistics, container logistics, vessel logistics, port/terminal logistics, and inland transport logistics. The main planning problems and research opportunities in each logistics segment are reviewed and discussed to promote further research. Moreover, the two most important challenges in CSSC, digitalization and decarbonization, are explained and discussed in detail. We raise awareness of the extreme fragmentation of CSSC that causes inefficient operations. A pathway to digitalize container shipping is proposed that requires the applications of digital technologies in various business processes across five logistics segments, and change in behaviors and relationships of stakeholders in the supply chain. We recognize that shipping decarbonization is likely to take diverse pathways with different fuel/energy systems for ships and ports. This gives rise to more research and application opportunities in the highly uncertain and complex CSSC environment.</jats:p

    Ports in transition

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    Technological Innovations

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    Sustainability

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    Decarbonizing Freight Transport

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    This Open-Access-Book analyzes the acceptance of sustainable freight transport and suggests a new framework for policy measures to decarbonize freight transport. Despite intense political endeavors, the environmental performance of the transport system has not improved in the previous years. It seems that the existing measures are not sufficient to motivate transport users to implement sustainable freight transport strategies. The case of three different strategies for sustainable freight transport is studied: horizontal collaboration in a Physical Internet network, multimodal freight transport and liquefied natural gas (LNG) as alternative truck fuel. Each of these three strategies falls within a different pillar of the avoid-shift-reduce framework. The determinants of acceptance and suggested policy measures in this study reflect transport users’ needs towards sustainable freight transport. This should support policy makers and the logistics industry to implement sustainable practices and achieve the ambitious emission targets by decarbonizing freight transport

    Biorefarmeries: Milking ethanol from algae for the mobility of tomorrow

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    The idea of this project is to fully exploit microalgae to the best of its potential, possibly proposing a sort of fourth generation fuel based on a continuous milking of macro- and microorganisms (as cows in a milk farm), which produce fuel by photosynthetic reactions. This project proposes a new transportation concept supported by a new socio-economic approach, in which biofuel production is based on biorefarmeries delivering fourth generation fuels which also have decarbonization capabilities, potential negative CO2 emissions plus positive impacts on mobility, the automotive Industry, health and environment and the econom

    Decarbonizing Freight Transport

    Get PDF
    This Open-Access-Book analyzes the acceptance of sustainable freight transport and suggests a new framework for policy measures to decarbonize freight transport. Despite intense political endeavors, the environmental performance of the transport system has not improved in the previous years. It seems that the existing measures are not sufficient to motivate transport users to implement sustainable freight transport strategies. The case of three different strategies for sustainable freight transport is studied: horizontal collaboration in a Physical Internet network, multimodal freight transport and liquefied natural gas (LNG) as alternative truck fuel. Each of these three strategies falls within a different pillar of the avoid-shift-reduce framework. The determinants of acceptance and suggested policy measures in this study reflect transport users’ needs towards sustainable freight transport. This should support policy makers and the logistics industry to implement sustainable practices and achieve the ambitious emission targets by decarbonizing freight transport
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