Reengineering the seaport container truck hauling process: Reducing empty slot trips for transport capacity improvement
Abstract
Purpose
Empty container trucks may cause a deficit in transport capacity and contribute to congestion and emissions in the port territory. Reengineering of the container truck hauling process to introduce truck-sharing arrangements using the truck appointment system has the potential of reducing the number of empty-truck trips. The paper aims to discuss these issues.
Design/methodology/approach
This research evaluates the results from an investigation of the truck appointment system using a case study approach. The data collection phase involved primary and secondary sources along with using publicly available data on port operations.
Findings
The study explores a dynamic truck-sharing facility for a computer-based matching system to assign probable export containers to available empty slots of a container truck. The proposed model reengineers the truck appointment system with a potential to reduce the number of empty-truck trips to increase container transport capacity around seaport gates.
Research limitations/implications
Due to continuous increases in container-freight traffic, leading seaports of the world are experiencing a capacity shortage resulting in traffic congestion. The research findings are useful in practice as the proposed truck-sharing model can be introduced to enhance capacity in the container transport chain of the port territory.
Originality/value
The empty-trucks problem has not been addressed much in studies from a decentralized perspective where all truck operators have an equal chance to contribute to optimize the supply chain in contrast with the typical one-company-based optimization. The solution addressed here uses the shared-transportation concept to cover the research gap.
Keywords
Citation
Islam, S., Olsen, T. and Daud Ahmed, M. (2013), "Reengineering the seaport container truck hauling process: Reducing empty slot trips for transport capacity improvement", Business Process Management Journal, Vol. 19 No. 5, pp. 752-782. https://doi.org/10.1108/BPMJ-Jun-2012-0059
Publisher
:Emerald Group Publishing Limited
Copyright © 2013, Emerald Group Publishing Limited