An integrated shipment planning and storage capacity decision under uncertainty: A simulation study

© 2015, Emerald Group Publishing Limited. Purpose – In transportation and distribution systems, the shipment decisions, fleet capacity, and storage capacity are interrelated in a complex way, especially when the authors take into account uncertainty of the demand rate and shipment lead time. While s...

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Main Authors: Nyoman Pujawan, Mansur Maturidi Arief, Benny Tjahjono, Duangpun Kritchanchai
Other Authors: Institut Teknologi Sepuluh Nopember
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Published: 2018
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Online Access:https://repository.li.mahidol.ac.th/handle/123456789/35686
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spelling th-mahidol.356862018-11-23T16:53:17Z An integrated shipment planning and storage capacity decision under uncertainty: A simulation study Nyoman Pujawan Mansur Maturidi Arief Benny Tjahjono Duangpun Kritchanchai Institut Teknologi Sepuluh Nopember Cranfield University Mahidol University Business, Management and Accounting © 2015, Emerald Group Publishing Limited. Purpose – In transportation and distribution systems, the shipment decisions, fleet capacity, and storage capacity are interrelated in a complex way, especially when the authors take into account uncertainty of the demand rate and shipment lead time. While shipment planning is tactical or operational in nature, increasing storage capacity often requires top management’s authority. The purpose of this paper is to present a new method to integrate both operational and strategic decision parameters, namely shipment planning and storage capacity decision under uncertainty. The ultimate goal is to provide a near optimal solution that leads to a striking balance between the total logistics costs and product availability, critical in maritime logistics of bulk shipment of commodity items. Design/methodology/approach – The authors use simulation as research method. The authors develop a simulation model to investigate the effects of various factors on costs and service levels of a distribution system. The model mimics the transportation and distribution problems of bulk cement in a major cement company in Indonesia consisting of a silo at the port of origin, two silos at two ports of destination, and a number of ships that transport the bulk cement. The authors develop a number of “what-if” scenarios by varying the storage capacity at the port of origin as well as at the ports of destinations, number of ships operated, operating hours of ports, and dispatching rules for the ships. Each scenario is evaluated in terms of costs and service level. A full factorial experiment has been conducted and analysis of variance has been used to analyze the results. Findings – The results suggest that the number of ships deployed, silo capacity, working hours of ports, and the dispatching rules of ships significantly affect both total costs and service level. Interestingly, operating fewer ships enables the company to achieve almost the same service level and gaining substantial cost savings if constraints in other part of the system are alleviated, i.e., storage capacities and working hours of ports are extended. Practical implications – Cost is a competitive factor for bulk items like cement, and thus the proposed scenarios could be implemented by the company to substantially reduce the transportation and distribution costs. Alleviating storage capacity constraint is obviously an idea that needs to be considered when optimizing shipment planning alone could not give significant improvements. Originality/value – Existing research has so far focussed on the optimization of shipment planning/scheduling, and considers shipment planning/scheduling as the objective function while treating the storage capacity as constraints. The simulation model enables “what-if” analyses to be performed and has overcome the difficulties and impracticalities of analytical methods especially when the system incorporates stochastic variables exhibited in the case example. The use of efficient frontier analysis for analyzing the simulation results is a novel idea which has been proven to be effective in screening non-dominated solutions. This has provided the authors with near optimal solutions to trade-off logistics costs and service levels (availability), with minimal experimentation times. 2018-11-23T09:53:17Z 2018-11-23T09:53:17Z 2015-01-01 Article International Journal of Physical Distribution and Logistics Management. Vol.45, No.9-10 (2015), 913-937 10.1108/IJPDLM-08-2014-0198 09600035 2-s2.0-84942239828 https://repository.li.mahidol.ac.th/handle/123456789/35686 Mahidol University SCOPUS https://www.scopus.com/inward/record.uri?partnerID=HzOxMe3b&scp=84942239828&origin=inward
institution Mahidol University
building Mahidol University Library
continent Asia
country Thailand
Thailand
content_provider Mahidol University Library
collection Mahidol University Institutional Repository
topic Business, Management and Accounting
spellingShingle Business, Management and Accounting
Nyoman Pujawan
Mansur Maturidi Arief
Benny Tjahjono
Duangpun Kritchanchai
An integrated shipment planning and storage capacity decision under uncertainty: A simulation study
description © 2015, Emerald Group Publishing Limited. Purpose – In transportation and distribution systems, the shipment decisions, fleet capacity, and storage capacity are interrelated in a complex way, especially when the authors take into account uncertainty of the demand rate and shipment lead time. While shipment planning is tactical or operational in nature, increasing storage capacity often requires top management’s authority. The purpose of this paper is to present a new method to integrate both operational and strategic decision parameters, namely shipment planning and storage capacity decision under uncertainty. The ultimate goal is to provide a near optimal solution that leads to a striking balance between the total logistics costs and product availability, critical in maritime logistics of bulk shipment of commodity items. Design/methodology/approach – The authors use simulation as research method. The authors develop a simulation model to investigate the effects of various factors on costs and service levels of a distribution system. The model mimics the transportation and distribution problems of bulk cement in a major cement company in Indonesia consisting of a silo at the port of origin, two silos at two ports of destination, and a number of ships that transport the bulk cement. The authors develop a number of “what-if” scenarios by varying the storage capacity at the port of origin as well as at the ports of destinations, number of ships operated, operating hours of ports, and dispatching rules for the ships. Each scenario is evaluated in terms of costs and service level. A full factorial experiment has been conducted and analysis of variance has been used to analyze the results. Findings – The results suggest that the number of ships deployed, silo capacity, working hours of ports, and the dispatching rules of ships significantly affect both total costs and service level. Interestingly, operating fewer ships enables the company to achieve almost the same service level and gaining substantial cost savings if constraints in other part of the system are alleviated, i.e., storage capacities and working hours of ports are extended. Practical implications – Cost is a competitive factor for bulk items like cement, and thus the proposed scenarios could be implemented by the company to substantially reduce the transportation and distribution costs. Alleviating storage capacity constraint is obviously an idea that needs to be considered when optimizing shipment planning alone could not give significant improvements. Originality/value – Existing research has so far focussed on the optimization of shipment planning/scheduling, and considers shipment planning/scheduling as the objective function while treating the storage capacity as constraints. The simulation model enables “what-if” analyses to be performed and has overcome the difficulties and impracticalities of analytical methods especially when the system incorporates stochastic variables exhibited in the case example. The use of efficient frontier analysis for analyzing the simulation results is a novel idea which has been proven to be effective in screening non-dominated solutions. This has provided the authors with near optimal solutions to trade-off logistics costs and service levels (availability), with minimal experimentation times.
author2 Institut Teknologi Sepuluh Nopember
author_facet Institut Teknologi Sepuluh Nopember
Nyoman Pujawan
Mansur Maturidi Arief
Benny Tjahjono
Duangpun Kritchanchai
format Article
author Nyoman Pujawan
Mansur Maturidi Arief
Benny Tjahjono
Duangpun Kritchanchai
author_sort Nyoman Pujawan
title An integrated shipment planning and storage capacity decision under uncertainty: A simulation study
title_short An integrated shipment planning and storage capacity decision under uncertainty: A simulation study
title_full An integrated shipment planning and storage capacity decision under uncertainty: A simulation study
title_fullStr An integrated shipment planning and storage capacity decision under uncertainty: A simulation study
title_full_unstemmed An integrated shipment planning and storage capacity decision under uncertainty: A simulation study
title_sort integrated shipment planning and storage capacity decision under uncertainty: a simulation study
publishDate 2018
url https://repository.li.mahidol.ac.th/handle/123456789/35686
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