Capacity planning for container terminals (part 2)

Since the inception of containerisation in the 20th century, demand for this mode of transportation has been on the rise. This phenomenon has led to the increasing importance of the container terminal as it acts as the interface between container vessels and other modes of transportation. Being a cr...

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Main Author: Chan, Amelia Hiang Ping.
Other Authors: Teo Chee Chong
Format: Final Year Project
Language:English
Published: 2009
Subjects:
Online Access:http://hdl.handle.net/10356/15967
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Institution: Nanyang Technological University
Language: English
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spelling sg-ntu-dr.10356-159672023-03-03T17:24:03Z Capacity planning for container terminals (part 2) Chan, Amelia Hiang Ping. Teo Chee Chong School of Civil and Environmental Engineering DRNTU::Engineering::Maritime studies::Maritime management and business Since the inception of containerisation in the 20th century, demand for this mode of transportation has been on the rise. This phenomenon has led to the increasing importance of the container terminal as it acts as the interface between container vessels and other modes of transportation. Being a crucial connection in container transportation, operational bottlenecks at any point in the container terminal will cause delays in overall container flow. This paper aims to carefully examine the potential areas of criticality in container terminal operations and thereafter make use of the resource view of operations strategy to determine the suitable types of container handling equipments to procure, the right quantity of equipments to purchase and the timing in which such procurements should be made to avoid excessive or lack of container handling capacity in the container terminal. However, even when careful capacity planning is made in the purchase of key equipments which drive terminal operations, there will still be short-term fluctuations in the demand for the services of the container terminal, leading to short-term over or under capacity. To counter such seasonality in demand, short-term capacity planning solutions, namely the use of inter-haulage, buffer areas and empties, the control of demand with capacity contracts and tactical pricing schemes, and the mothballing of excess equipments will be examined. Interview findings will also be included in the paper to give light on the industrial practices in capacity planning of container terminals. Bachelor of Science (Maritime Studies) 2009-05-19T08:17:47Z 2009-05-19T08:17:47Z 2009 2009 Final Year Project (FYP) http://hdl.handle.net/10356/15967 en Nanyang Technological University 57 p. application/pdf
institution Nanyang Technological University
building NTU Library
continent Asia
country Singapore
Singapore
content_provider NTU Library
collection DR-NTU
language English
topic DRNTU::Engineering::Maritime studies::Maritime management and business
spellingShingle DRNTU::Engineering::Maritime studies::Maritime management and business
Chan, Amelia Hiang Ping.
Capacity planning for container terminals (part 2)
description Since the inception of containerisation in the 20th century, demand for this mode of transportation has been on the rise. This phenomenon has led to the increasing importance of the container terminal as it acts as the interface between container vessels and other modes of transportation. Being a crucial connection in container transportation, operational bottlenecks at any point in the container terminal will cause delays in overall container flow. This paper aims to carefully examine the potential areas of criticality in container terminal operations and thereafter make use of the resource view of operations strategy to determine the suitable types of container handling equipments to procure, the right quantity of equipments to purchase and the timing in which such procurements should be made to avoid excessive or lack of container handling capacity in the container terminal. However, even when careful capacity planning is made in the purchase of key equipments which drive terminal operations, there will still be short-term fluctuations in the demand for the services of the container terminal, leading to short-term over or under capacity. To counter such seasonality in demand, short-term capacity planning solutions, namely the use of inter-haulage, buffer areas and empties, the control of demand with capacity contracts and tactical pricing schemes, and the mothballing of excess equipments will be examined. Interview findings will also be included in the paper to give light on the industrial practices in capacity planning of container terminals.
author2 Teo Chee Chong
author_facet Teo Chee Chong
Chan, Amelia Hiang Ping.
format Final Year Project
author Chan, Amelia Hiang Ping.
author_sort Chan, Amelia Hiang Ping.
title Capacity planning for container terminals (part 2)
title_short Capacity planning for container terminals (part 2)
title_full Capacity planning for container terminals (part 2)
title_fullStr Capacity planning for container terminals (part 2)
title_full_unstemmed Capacity planning for container terminals (part 2)
title_sort capacity planning for container terminals (part 2)
publishDate 2009
url http://hdl.handle.net/10356/15967
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