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Ports in a Supply Chain. By: Kari Butler Alexis Crawford Matt Richardson Joanna Schmidt Dan Scholz. MAP. What are ports?. Sites for transshipment of goods from one mode of transport to another. Provide link between maritime and inland transport.
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Ports in a Supply Chain By: Kari Butler Alexis Crawford Matt Richardson Joanna Schmidt Dan Scholz
What are ports? • Sites for transshipment of goods from one mode of transport to another. • Provide link between maritime and inland transport. • Interface between the sea, rivers, roads and railways. • Work in several directions: • Account for requirements by both senders and receivers
Why are Ports Important? • Transport is an integral part of the entire supply chain • 60% of cross border trade moves via water • Competitive position due to supply chain links • Support raw material acquisition, manufacturing and distribution of finished products • Objectives • Create synergies • Converge interests between port community players to guarantee: • Reliability • Continuous Service • Good Productivity Level
Raw Materials COTTON Group 1 • Export Papers • Certificate of Origin • Work permits • Bill of Lading • SED (Shipper’s Export Declaration • Export license • Commercial Invoice • Insurance Certificate • Export Packing List • Inspection Certificate • Dock & Warehouse Receipt • Destination Control Statement • Conditions • Container conditions • Perishable items
Transport TRAIN Group 2 • Infrastructure • Double-Stacked Trains • Congestion Problems • Micro-bridge: routing by rail of a container between a port and an inland point • Costs • $0.60 and $1.10 per mile
Port New Orleans, LA Group 4 • IAPH and Security • IAPH (International Association of Ports and Harbors) • Non-profit & non-governmental • Headquarters in Tokyo • 2001 – handled 85% of container traffic • 2002 – 60% of world sea trade • Security • Federal ID system • Container Inspection • Natural Disasters • Hurricane Katrina and Hurricane Rita • Opened earlier than expected afterwards • Cause bottlenecks at all ports and all transportation connections • Effects ripple across the world
Ship Group 5 • Infrastructure • Canals • Provide water linkages between bodies of water separated by land, tunnels, and bridges • Panama Canal • Tunnels • Bridges • Speed of Container Ships and Increased Costs
Port Shanghai Group 6 • Choosing a Port • Efficiency • Port Competition • Costs of a Poor Choice • Mega-Ports • Capacity • Cargo Compatibility • Mexican Grain Import
Transport TRUCK Group 7 • Infrastructure • US • Highway Weight Restrictions • China • Lack of Roadways • Costs • Teamster: $1.25 & $1.30 per mile • Non Teamster: $0.90 & $1.25 per mile
Factory THREAD Group 8 • Import Papers • Bill of Lading or Transport Document • Invoice • Bill covering Freight Charges • Certificate of Origin • Import License • Confirmation of Authorization for Special Customs Treatment • Certificates
Manufacturing T-SHIRT Group 9 • Export Papers • Certificate of Origin • Work permits • Bill of Lading • SED (Shipper’s Export Declaration • Export license • Commercial Invoice • Insurance Certificate • Export Packing List • Inspection Certificate • Dock & Warehouse Receipt • Destination Control Statement • Packaging Requirements • Packages must be in correct volume that will remain safe and are acceptable for the packed product for the consumer. • Must be recoverable in according to specific requirements. • Packages shall have as minimal amounts that are safe of noxious or hazardous material contained within them. • IMO (International Maritime Organization)
IMO (International Maritime Organization) • Created in Geneva, 1948 • Focus on improving safety of life at sea • Each government implements treaties differently • Measures concerning: • Safety of containers • Bulk cargoes • Liquefied gas tankers • Crew standards • Training • Certification • Watchkeeping • Global Maritime Distress and Safety System
Retailer Group 10 • Tariffs/Free Trade Zones • Tariff – tax policy to encourage or discourage particular types of consumption or production in the jurisdiction. • FTZ – areas where tariffs and quotas are eliminated and bureaucratic requirements are lowered.
Customer Professor Pagell
Sources • Carbone, Valentina. "The changing role of ports in supply-chain management: an empirical analysis." Marit.Pol. MGMT. Vol. 30, No. 4October-December 2003 305-320. 21 Apr 2006 <http://www.tand.co.uk/journals>. • "Mineta Underscores Role of Ports in Global Transportation; U.S. Transportation Secretary Delivers Keynote Address at IAPH Meeting ." PrimeZone Media Network 07 Oct 2005 http://lexis-nexis.com.oasis.oregonstate.edu. 23 Apr 2006. • "World Ports Association." IAPH: International Association of Ports and Harbors. 2001. 15 04 2006 <http://iaphworldports.org/top.htm>. Hughes, David. "WTO stresses role of ports, calls for coherent policies." The Business Times Singapore 23 Sep 2004 http://lexis-nexis.com.oasis.oregonstate.edu. 23 Apr 2006. • IMO: International Maritime Organization. 2002. 15 04 2006 <http://www.imo.org/home.asp>. Associated Press, "Port workers, officials wary of federal ID system." Duluth News Tribune 23 Apr 2006 <http://duluthsuperior.com/mld/duluthsuperior/business/14410575.htm>. 27 Apr 2006 • Wood, Donald F., Anthony P., Barone and Paul R., Murphy and Daniel L., Wardlow. International Logistics.2nd ed. New York: AMACOM: American Management Association, 2002. • "ISSB: Iron and Steel Statistics Bureau." 20 04 2006. 17 04 2006 <http://www.issb.co.uk/>. • BUSS Ports + Logistics. 28 04 2006. 28 04 2006 <http://www.buss-group.de/41.0.html>. • "The World Bank Group." Ports & Logistics Overview. 17 04 2006 <http://www.worldbank.org/transport/prt_over.htm>. • Transport and Tourism Division . Commercial Development of Regional Ports as Logistics Centres. 2002 Transport and Tourism Division . Commercial Development of Regional Ports as Logistics Centres. 2002 • Export.gov. 17 04 2006 <http://www.export.gov>.