260 likes | 689 Views
Transmodal Rail Operations and the Thruport Concept. Jean-Paul Rodrigue, Hofstra University, New York John Zumerchik, Mi-Jack Products Inc. “There’s no business like flow business”. Email: ecojpr@hofstra.edu Paper available at: http://people.hofstra.edu/faculty/Jean-paul_Rodrigue.
E N D
Transmodal Rail Operations and the Thruport Concept Jean-Paul Rodrigue, Hofstra University, New York John Zumerchik, Mi-Jack Products Inc. “There’s no business like flow business” Email: ecojpr@hofstra.edu Paper available at: http://people.hofstra.edu/faculty/Jean-paul_Rodrigue
Integrated Transport Systems: From Fragmentation to Coordination
Value Per Ton of U.S. Freight Shipments by Transportation Mode, 2002
Integrated Transport Systems • Resurgence in rail transportation (competitive advantages) • Substantial growth in international trade: • Particularly imports from Asia (China). • Interface between global supply chains and national distribution; national gateways. • Growth in long distance shipments at the international and national levels. • Rail productivity: • Decrease in rail freight rates (35% decline between 1980 and 2000). • Increase in trucking transport costs (wages, fuel, insurance, congestion). • Capacity constraints at gateways: • Containerization growing rapidly. • Large volumes at gateways create capacity constraints. • Intermodal rail offers a shipping alternative to the capacity constraints of trucking.
Cargo Handled by the Top 5 US Container Ports, 1984-2005 (in TEUs)
Freight in North America: Between a Gateway and a Hard Place: Major Maritime and Land Gateways, 2004
Integrated Transport Systems • Transshipments • Between (intermodal) modes and within (transmodal) modes. • Benefits accrued at the terminals. • ITS expanded the demands on intermodal and trans-modal transportation alike. • Trans-modal component of growing importance. • The geography of transshipments • Connect different parts of the transport system (ITS). • Enabling different freight markets and forwarders to better interact. • Conventionally at load break locations; gateways. • Now at “logistically suitable” locations (plus added value).
Time Dependant Transport Transshipment Flows Intermodal Terminal
Transmodal Transportation • Why transmodal shipments take place? • Market fragmentation. • Supply chain fragmentation. • Ownership fragmentation. • Requirements for a high throughput trans-modal facility • Thruport concept • Coined by an intermodal equipment manufacturer (Mi-Jack). • “Seamless transfer of freight”. • Reduce handling and the number of container movements. • Analogy with air transport hubs: • Consolidation and redistribution. • Passengers “reposition” themselves.
Transmodal Transportation and Market Fragmentation • Market fragmentation • Mainly retail / consumption related. • National distribution and global production. • Single origin; through a gateway and several destinations (DC). • Thruport: reconcile the high volume requirements of markets with the time sensitive requirements of distribution. Thruport Markets Gateway
Transmodal Transportation and Supply Chain Fragmentation • Supply Chain fragmentation • Contemporary supply chains involve a complex sequence of trips. • Specialization and comparative advantages. • Different stages (parts, manufacturing, distribution); each of which could use a Thruport. • Potential Thruport impact on the locational behavior of production and distribution activities. Thruport 1 4 1 4 2 3 3 2 4 4 Distribution Parts & raw materials 1 2 3 4 Customers Manufacturing Supply Chain
Transmodal Transportation and Ownership Fragmentation • Ownership fragmentation • Rail companies have their facilities and customers. • They have their own markets along the segments they control. • Interchange is the major problem. • The Thruport creates multiplying effects. • The distribution potential of each operator is expanded. • Network alliances like in the airline industry (constrained by the spatial fixity of rail networks). Gateway D C Thruport A B
Minneapolis / St. Paul Chicago Kansas City St. Louis Memphis Dallas / Fort Worth 13.98 M TEU
Transmodal Transportation and Ownership Fragmentation • Local Rail Terminals Location • Fragmentation at transmodal Interchange. • Requires cross-town hauling of containers between terminals. • Takes place within a metropolitan area. • Contributes to congestion. • Negative feedback undermines the reliability of the transport chain. • The construction of new terminal facilities in suburban areas exacerbate the problem. Metropolitan Area CBD
Sequence of Transmodal Rail Container Operations: Before and After Thruport Rail terminal Inbound Storage Yard Rail terminal Outbound Storage Yard Cross-town 7 Container 1 4 6 2 5 3 Rail Operator A (inbound) Rail Operator B (outbound) Thruport 1 Chassis brought trackside of inbound operator A. 2 Container unloaded from the train and loaded on chassis. Chassis/container brought to the outbound storage yard of the inbound terminal operator A for delivery to outbound rail operator B. 3 4 Cross-town operations. Outbound rail operator B picks up the container/chassis at the storage area and brings it trackside for outbound loading. 5 6 Crane unloads container from the chassis and loads into the double stacked car. After the container is loaded on to the double stacked car, chassis removed from trackside and stored in an empty chassis area. 7
The Thruport Concept • Characteristics • Neutral facility (preferably): • Joint venture (rail companies, terminal operators). • A local consortium? • Location and setting: • At the junction of long distance rail corridors. • Linear structure of about 2.25 miles (3.6 km) in length. • Minimal interface with trucking (could be a road / rail facility). • A Thruport does not necessarily require to be located nearby a metropolitan area. • Performance: • No container truck chassis and hostlers required. • About 250 containers per hour (4,500 per day).
The Thruport Concept • Thruport implementation stages • Impossible to fully reconcile rail distribution strategies: • Different carriers having their own schedules and frequency of service. • Long distances involved. • Possibilities of disruptions. • Uncertainties inherent to freight distribution. • A “buffer” of temporary container storage will always be required, even at a Thruport. • First stage: • Temporary buffer due to the lack of synchronization of unit trains. • Some carriers experiment with synchronized services. • Second stage: • The Thruport becomes part of the operational planning of rail carriers. • “Thruport shuttles”; unit trains assembled specifically at major gateways for transmodal operations.
Costs/ Benefits • Costs • Construction costs are expected to range from $400 to $500 million. • Benefits • Shippers’ Savings • Labor Productivity • Energy Consumption • Emission Reductions/Health Care • Congestion • Rail Capacity
Quantifying Benefits Will Require Baseline Terminal Performance Metrics? • Transmodal performance metrics • The benefits of the Thruport would be more quantifiable. • Indicators • Percentage of TEU volume that is interchange. • Average throughput velocity: • rubber tire interchange • steel wheel interchange • Average time in-terminal for dredgeman: • peak • off-peak
Temperature-Sensitive Freight Although there is a shortage of active temperature controlled containers, passive protection has proven to be a highly effective alternative in reliable freight transport corridors, and a major cost saver for companies making the modal shift to rail: Food Paints Beer Adhesives Wine Chemicals Confectionary Coatings
Conclusion: Towards a “$100 per barrel” Logistics? • The Thruport concept and Inland Freight Distribution • Containerization insured a global freight distribution market. • Rail bound to play a greater role; a continental ITS strategy. • Reduce congestion for all modes by exploiting their comparative advantages. • The Thruport would service a niche market (transcontinental containerized freight distribution). • “$100 per barrel” logistics may be upon us. • Thruport could mitigate energy cost increases. • Unique opportunity to build more efficient intermodal relationships between rail and truck transport systems. “In the 20th Century, it was said, ‘distance was conquered.’ In the 21st Century, distance shall have her revenge, and the world will become a much bigger place.”