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Studying port selection on liner routes: An approach from logistics perspective

Nguyen Khoi Tran

Research in Transportation Economics, 2011, vol. 32, issue 1, 39-53

Abstract: The research aims to study the port selection in liner shipping. The central work is to set up a model to deal with port choice decisions. The model solves three matters: ports on a ship’s route; the order of selected ports and loading/unloading ports for each shipment. Its objective is to minimize total cost including ship cost, port tariff, inland transport cost and inventory cost. The model has been applied in real data, with cargo flows between the USA and Northern Europe. Afterwards, two sensitive analyses are considered. The first assesses the impact of a number of port calls on the total cost which relates closely to the viability of two service patterns: multi ports and hub & spoke. The second analyzes the efficiency of large vessels in the scope of a logistics network. The overriding result of this research is to indicate the influence of logistics factors in the decision of port choice. The research emphasizes the necessity to combine different factors when dealing with this topic, or else a result can be one-sided.

Keywords: Port selection; Liner route; Network optimisation; Mega vessel; Maritime logistics; Container shipping (search for similar items in EconPapers)
Date: 2011
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Citations: View citations in EconPapers (19)

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DOI: 10.1016/j.retrec.2011.06.005

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