The impact of "Maritime Silk Road" on trade between China and OBOR countries

This final year project seeks to analyses the impact of the 21st Century Maritime Silk Road on container shipping lines. This deviates from our original title as our project’s scope was changed to accommodate the requirements of Pacific International Lines (PIL) which we have collaborated with to pr...

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Main Author: Ravikumar, Avinash
Other Authors: Chiu Sai Hoi, Benson
Format: Final Year Project
Language:English
Published: 2016
Subjects:
Online Access:http://hdl.handle.net/10356/68208
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Institution: Nanyang Technological University
Language: English
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spelling sg-ntu-dr.10356-682082023-03-03T17:16:21Z The impact of "Maritime Silk Road" on trade between China and OBOR countries Ravikumar, Avinash Chiu Sai Hoi, Benson School of Civil and Environmental Engineering DRNTU::Engineering This final year project seeks to analyses the impact of the 21st Century Maritime Silk Road on container shipping lines. This deviates from our original title as our project’s scope was changed to accommodate the requirements of Pacific International Lines (PIL) which we have collaborated with to produce a report that can be used practically in vessel routeing decision making. The report investigates the developments of OBOR and the suitability of the countries as a container hub port within the region confined between China to East Africa. This is done from the perspective of a container shipping line and how it can position itself to harness the benefits of the project. The first section of the report evaluates the current trends and events and their influence on future developments of China’s “One belt One Road” (OBOR) scheme. The speculations and suggestions are supplemented through extensive research of articles and opinions from newsletters and reports from reliable maritime and media sources. The second section utilises an analytic hierarchy process (AHP) modelling method to derive a weighted evaluation of factors concerning the establishment of a hub port from the surveys gathered from industry professionals. The various countries within four targeted regions are evaluated based on the top three priorities of overall cost, political stability and port efficiency to identify best countries to establish hub ports. The findings reveal that current trends and events within the container industry could influence the OBOR’s decision-making policy by requiring them to build multiple ports per region that cater to both mega vessels and container shipping alliances. It also shows that Vietnam, Sri Lanka, India and Tanzania are the best locations to set up hub port in the South East Asian, Bay of Bengal, Arabian Sea and East African respectively. Limitations of the research are the lack of suitable interviewees, up-to-date data concerning certain factors. Bachelor of Science (Maritime Studies) 2016-05-25T01:44:22Z 2016-05-25T01:44:22Z 2016 Final Year Project (FYP) http://hdl.handle.net/10356/68208 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
spellingShingle DRNTU::Engineering
Ravikumar, Avinash
The impact of "Maritime Silk Road" on trade between China and OBOR countries
description This final year project seeks to analyses the impact of the 21st Century Maritime Silk Road on container shipping lines. This deviates from our original title as our project’s scope was changed to accommodate the requirements of Pacific International Lines (PIL) which we have collaborated with to produce a report that can be used practically in vessel routeing decision making. The report investigates the developments of OBOR and the suitability of the countries as a container hub port within the region confined between China to East Africa. This is done from the perspective of a container shipping line and how it can position itself to harness the benefits of the project. The first section of the report evaluates the current trends and events and their influence on future developments of China’s “One belt One Road” (OBOR) scheme. The speculations and suggestions are supplemented through extensive research of articles and opinions from newsletters and reports from reliable maritime and media sources. The second section utilises an analytic hierarchy process (AHP) modelling method to derive a weighted evaluation of factors concerning the establishment of a hub port from the surveys gathered from industry professionals. The various countries within four targeted regions are evaluated based on the top three priorities of overall cost, political stability and port efficiency to identify best countries to establish hub ports. The findings reveal that current trends and events within the container industry could influence the OBOR’s decision-making policy by requiring them to build multiple ports per region that cater to both mega vessels and container shipping alliances. It also shows that Vietnam, Sri Lanka, India and Tanzania are the best locations to set up hub port in the South East Asian, Bay of Bengal, Arabian Sea and East African respectively. Limitations of the research are the lack of suitable interviewees, up-to-date data concerning certain factors.
author2 Chiu Sai Hoi, Benson
author_facet Chiu Sai Hoi, Benson
Ravikumar, Avinash
format Final Year Project
author Ravikumar, Avinash
author_sort Ravikumar, Avinash
title The impact of "Maritime Silk Road" on trade between China and OBOR countries
title_short The impact of "Maritime Silk Road" on trade between China and OBOR countries
title_full The impact of "Maritime Silk Road" on trade between China and OBOR countries
title_fullStr The impact of "Maritime Silk Road" on trade between China and OBOR countries
title_full_unstemmed The impact of "Maritime Silk Road" on trade between China and OBOR countries
title_sort impact of "maritime silk road" on trade between china and obor countries
publishDate 2016
url http://hdl.handle.net/10356/68208
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