Developing the fifth generation port concept model : an empirical test

Purpose: The purpose of this paper is to test the 5GP concept with measurement of the performance of Busan, Hong Kong, Singapore and Shanghai ports, employing a hybrid method of consistent fuzzy preference relation (CFPR), VIsekriterijumska Optimizacija i KOmpromisno Resenje (VIKOR) and PROMETHEE. D...

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Main Authors: Lee, Paul Tae-Woo, Lam, Jasmine Siu Lee, Lin, Cheng-Wei, Hu, Kai-Chieh, Cheong, Inkyo
Other Authors: School of Civil and Environmental Engineering
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: 2020
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Online Access:https://hdl.handle.net/10356/139826
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Institution: Nanyang Technological University
Language: English
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spelling sg-ntu-dr.10356-1398262020-05-28T06:29:31Z Developing the fifth generation port concept model : an empirical test Lee, Paul Tae-Woo Lam, Jasmine Siu Lee Lin, Cheng-Wei Hu, Kai-Chieh Cheong, Inkyo School of Civil and Environmental Engineering Engineering::Civil engineering Asia Simulation Purpose: The purpose of this paper is to test the 5GP concept with measurement of the performance of Busan, Hong Kong, Singapore and Shanghai ports, employing a hybrid method of consistent fuzzy preference relation (CFPR), VIsekriterijumska Optimizacija i KOmpromisno Resenje (VIKOR) and PROMETHEE. Design/methodology/approach: The authors developed the concept of the fifth generation ports (5GPs), and apply CFPR, VIKOR and preference ranking organization method for enrichment evaluations (PROMETHEE) to evaluate the 5GPs. Findings: The performance of the ports of Hong Kong and Singapore is close to meet the definition of 5GP criteria. On the contrary, ports of Busan and Shanghai are still behind the 5GP stage in light of the majority of the evaluation criteria’s performance. Research limitations/implications: This paper studies four ports. More empirical tests are needed to verify the applicability of the 5GP concept toward other ports. Practical implications: The findings provided port managers with the insight of how to improve their port to meet the criteria of 5GP. Social implications: New criteria and higher expectations of existing requirements present challenges to port managers for a need to raise the bar of service standards and develop new competencies. Originality/value: The authors developed the concept of the 5GPs. Newly developed 5GP contributes to expanding the concepts of first to fourth generation ports developed by UNCTAD. 2020-05-22T02:23:27Z 2020-05-22T02:23:27Z 2018 Journal Article Lee, P. T.-W., Lam, J. S. L., Lin, C.-W., Hu, K.-C. & Cheong, I. (2018). Developing the fifth generation port concept model : an empirical test. The International Journal of Logistics Management, 29(3), 1098-1120. doi:10.1108/ijlm-10-2016-0239 0957-4093 https://hdl.handle.net/10356/139826 10.1108/IJLM-10-2016-0239 2-s2.0-85048357315 3 29 1098 1120 en International Journal of Logistics Management © 2018 Emerald Publishing Limited. All rights reserved.
institution Nanyang Technological University
building NTU Library
country Singapore
collection DR-NTU
language English
topic Engineering::Civil engineering
Asia
Simulation
spellingShingle Engineering::Civil engineering
Asia
Simulation
Lee, Paul Tae-Woo
Lam, Jasmine Siu Lee
Lin, Cheng-Wei
Hu, Kai-Chieh
Cheong, Inkyo
Developing the fifth generation port concept model : an empirical test
description Purpose: The purpose of this paper is to test the 5GP concept with measurement of the performance of Busan, Hong Kong, Singapore and Shanghai ports, employing a hybrid method of consistent fuzzy preference relation (CFPR), VIsekriterijumska Optimizacija i KOmpromisno Resenje (VIKOR) and PROMETHEE. Design/methodology/approach: The authors developed the concept of the fifth generation ports (5GPs), and apply CFPR, VIKOR and preference ranking organization method for enrichment evaluations (PROMETHEE) to evaluate the 5GPs. Findings: The performance of the ports of Hong Kong and Singapore is close to meet the definition of 5GP criteria. On the contrary, ports of Busan and Shanghai are still behind the 5GP stage in light of the majority of the evaluation criteria’s performance. Research limitations/implications: This paper studies four ports. More empirical tests are needed to verify the applicability of the 5GP concept toward other ports. Practical implications: The findings provided port managers with the insight of how to improve their port to meet the criteria of 5GP. Social implications: New criteria and higher expectations of existing requirements present challenges to port managers for a need to raise the bar of service standards and develop new competencies. Originality/value: The authors developed the concept of the 5GPs. Newly developed 5GP contributes to expanding the concepts of first to fourth generation ports developed by UNCTAD.
author2 School of Civil and Environmental Engineering
author_facet School of Civil and Environmental Engineering
Lee, Paul Tae-Woo
Lam, Jasmine Siu Lee
Lin, Cheng-Wei
Hu, Kai-Chieh
Cheong, Inkyo
format Article
author Lee, Paul Tae-Woo
Lam, Jasmine Siu Lee
Lin, Cheng-Wei
Hu, Kai-Chieh
Cheong, Inkyo
author_sort Lee, Paul Tae-Woo
title Developing the fifth generation port concept model : an empirical test
title_short Developing the fifth generation port concept model : an empirical test
title_full Developing the fifth generation port concept model : an empirical test
title_fullStr Developing the fifth generation port concept model : an empirical test
title_full_unstemmed Developing the fifth generation port concept model : an empirical test
title_sort developing the fifth generation port concept model : an empirical test
publishDate 2020
url https://hdl.handle.net/10356/139826
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