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European Sea Ports Organisation (ESPO) Statistics Committee. History, Structure, Work Miltiadis Arvanitidis BSc Mathematics, MA Statistics, MBA Marketing Chairman ESPO Statistics Committee IMSF meeting, Singapore, April 2007. ESPO. Founded : 1993
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European Sea Ports Organisation (ESPO)Statistics Committee History, Structure, Work Miltiadis Arvanitidis BSc Mathematics, MA Statistics, MBA Marketing Chairman ESPO Statistics Committee IMSF meeting, Singapore, April 2007
ESPO • Founded: 1993 • Mission: to influence public policy in the EU to achieve a safe, efficient and environmentally sustainable European port sector, operating as a key element of a transport industry where free and undistorted market conditions prevail, as far as practicable. • Structure: General Assembly, Executive Committee, Four Committees and Secretariat. • Committees: Transport, Marine, Environment, Statistics, Port Security Expert Group
ESPO Statistics CommitteeHistory • Created as Community Port Working Group, Sub Group Statistics • First meeting April 27, 1989, Venice • Main task: EU Directive 95/64/EC of 8 December 1995, on statistical returns in respect of carriage of goods and passengers by sea • Became ESPO Statistics Committee at the ESPO General Assembly, January 23, 2001 • Meets twice a year at different European locations
Participants • Members: 1 member per member state plus observers (member and non member states) • Observers also include: • European Commission (DG TREN) • Eurostat • ECSA / UK Chamber of Shipping • DTMRF
Aims and objectives • Assist ESPO in achieving it’s goals, by providing expertise in data collection and use • Assist ports and the port community to improve their performance by following “techniques of best practice”, through port visits, presentations and studies • Assist other bodies (such as Eurostat (also check its data), DG TREN, World Bank and so on) in data collection and use • Networking between port and port community members
Data collection • Rapid data exchange system • Exchange data between ports using a standard format. Every port is welcomed to join • Initiated in the nineties. Since 2000, exchange in electronic form • Maintained by DTMRF - Direction des Transports Maritimes, Routiers et Fluviaux, France • Data collected on a quarterly basis, 10 weeks after the end of the quarter, dissemination 2 weeks later • Future plan: Creation of a yearly database on a restricted access basis
Data collection • EU Directive 95/64/EC (statistics for seagoing traffic - cargo, passengers, vessels): • Expertise in creation, improvement, implementation, port requirements, check • Participation in Eurostat’s Task Force (2006) for the update of the above directive
Data collection • Short Sea Shipping, EC-DG TREN: • Data provision, since 1995 • World Bank: Study on the added value of EU ports (2005) • Questionnaire design, dissemination, answer
Data collection • ESPO Statistics Committee: Fact finding European ports (2005) • Hinterland transportation (barge, rail, road) • Modal split (barge, rail, road, transhipment, pipeline) • Selected trades (Non containerised general cargo, ro-ro cargo, cars, fruit, iron and steel, forest products) • Container trade per area • Covered warehouse space
Data use • ESPO Web Site (suggestions for better appearance of Statistics section) • ESPO Annual Report (creation of templates) • ESPO Fact Finding Report • ITMMA (Institute of Transport and Maritime Management, Antwerp) Market Analysis Report for ESPO • Studies, surveys, exercises
Studies, Surveys, Exercises • ESPO Statistics Committee: EU Seaports,Added Value Study (1997-1999) • Inventory creation of available added value studies • Methodology used by each port and main results • Methodologies’ typology
Studies, Surveys, Exercises • ESPO Statistics Committee: Benchmarking EU ports (2000-2001) • Add value to the RDE and ESPO website data • Tool for comparison of port performance, ranking • Demonstrate efficiency of the EU port sector, promotion purposes
Studies, Surveys, Exercises • ESPO Statistics Committee: Survey of Port Trade Tonnage Forecasts (2001) • Information about different methodologies used (such as: purpose, initiator, body carrying out the exercise, length of time, data basis, regional cooperation) • Summary of present forecasts
Studies, Surveys, Exercises • ESPO Statistics Committee: Questionnaire on container tare weight and conversion into TEU (2002) • Standard value for tare weight (20, 30, 40 feet container: 2, 3, 4 tones respectively) • TEU conversion (20, 30, 40, over 40 feet container: 1, 1.5, 2, 2.25 TEUs respectively)
Studies, Surveys, Exercises • ESPO Statistics Committee: EU Freights Forecast (2005) • Seagoing traffic forecast of EU countries on a national basis • Coverage (12 countries), sources and tools • Data (1997-2003), forecast till 2010 • Multiple regression by country
Studies, Surveys, Exercises • ESPO Statistics Committee: Information gathering for statistical purposes (2004) • Parties from which the info is obtained from • Documents and messages used • Purpose uses of the obtained info • Documents and messages exchanged electronically • Statistical needs not covered by the directive
Studies, Surveys, Exercises • ESPO Statistics Committee: Port Capacity: Theoretical Framework(2006) • Defining Capacity • Planning Capacity • Managing Capacity – a model • Alternative Strategies • Implementation of Capacity • Designing Expansion • Further Economic Evaluation • Limitations to managing port capacity
Studies, Surveys, Exercises • ESPO Statistics Committee – ECSA – Lloyd’s Register Fairplay: Standardization of RO-RO unit (2006) • RO-Ro units: Cassettes, trailers, semi-trailers, flats, lorries, railwagons, ro-ro containers, new cars, sto-ro units, SECU • Port’s and vessel owner’s point of view • No standard RO-RO unit like the TEU for containers • Comparability between ports • Comparability between vessel/fleet capacity and utilization • Further study to be financed by DG-TREN
Studies, Surveys, Exercises • ESPO Statistics Committee – Eurostat: Port questionnaire (2006) • Port size (land area) • Direct employment • Number of ship to shore lo-lo gantry cranes • Quay length for lo-lo container handling • Maximum draught of container vessel able to enter port
Presentations–Reports to the Committee • National Bank of Belgium: The economic importance of the port of Antwerp (1997) • Policy Research Corporation: The importance of the Flemish ports (1997) • Port of Rotterdam: Port added value methodology (1997) • Port of Thessaloniki: The implementation of the maritime statistics directive (1999) • Port of Rotterdam: Competition of four European ports on the German market (1999) • Port of Rotterdam: 2020 report for the port of Rotterdam (1999) • Port of Antwerp: Truck traffic project in Antwerp (1999) • Port of Antwerp: Ranking of world ports (1999)
Presentations–Reports to the Committee • Port of Thessaloniki: The implementation of a container terminal management system (2001) • Community Network Services: The implementation of the Maritime Statistics Directive (2001) • Maritime Cargo Processing: Ports electronic commerce services (2001) • Port of Dublin: The port of Dublin (2002) • Port of Amsterdam: The need of statistical data port planning in practice (2002) • National Bank of Belgium: The economic importance of the Flemish Maritime Ports (2002 report) • Port of Amsterdam: The Dutch project ‘PortNet’ (2004) • ISL: Company presentation (2004)
Presentations–Reports to the Committee • Port of Antwerp: The Antwerp port master plan (2004) • AMARIS: The Antwerp Maritime Information Systems (2004) • Port of Amsterdam: Sources for Port Statistics – proposal for benchmarking (2004) • ISL: Port Container traffic forecasts – concept for a new approach (2005) • Global Insight: China’s impact on trade and the intermodal system (2005) • Global Insight: Trends in the world economy and trade, an analytical guide to global trade (2005) • Global Insight: Forecast of import and export trade for EU 25 for deep sea trade (2005) • ECSA: Survey on availability of statistical data (2005)
Presentations–Reports to the Committee • Lloyd’s Register Fairplay: Trends in world fleet changes – implications on port infrastructure and port development (2006) • The Port of Göteborg on the point of view of the oil harbour and its facilities (2006)
Participation of ESPO Statistics Committee to other statistics bodies • Eurostat (Directorate General of the European Commission for statistics) • ECSA (European Community Shipowners’ Associations) • IMSF (International Maritime Statistics Forum)
Additional future work • Collection of data on containerized cargo • Documents/information flows for hinterland statistics • Employment statistics • Updates on the EDI projects and plans at ports • Improvement of statistics toolkit
Additional future work • Intermodal transport statistics • Inventory of existing statistical sources on ports • Inventory of existing initiatives from other groups and list of best practices and problems to be solved • Cooperation with other groups
European Sea Ports Organisation (ESPO)Statistics Committee History, Structure, Work Miltiadis Arvanitidis BSc Mathematics, MA Statistics, MBA Marketing Chairman ESPO Statistics Committee IMSF meeting, Singapore, April 2007