Performance improvements in container terminals through the bottleneck mitigation cycle

Journal Article (2022)
Author(s)

Coen H.H. van Battum (TNO)

B Wiegmans (Provincie Noord-Holland)

Bilge Atasoy (TU Delft - Transport Engineering and Logistics)

Erwin van Wingerden (TBA B.V.)

Arjen de Waal (TBA B.V.)

Lorant A. Tavaszzy (TU Delft - Transport and Planning, TU Delft - Transport and Logistics)

Research Group
Transport Engineering and Logistics
Copyright
© 2022 Coen H.H. van Battum, B. Wiegmans, B. Atasoy, Erwin van Wingerden, Arjen de Waal, Lorant Tavasszy
DOI related publication
https://doi.org/10.1057/s41278-022-00245-7
More Info
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Publication Year
2022
Language
English
Copyright
© 2022 Coen H.H. van Battum, B. Wiegmans, B. Atasoy, Erwin van Wingerden, Arjen de Waal, Lorant Tavasszy
Research Group
Transport Engineering and Logistics
Issue number
1
Volume number
25
Pages (from-to)
174-195
Reuse Rights

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Abstract

Container terminal capacity is often limited by (in)efficiency bottlenecks. This paper provides the design and proof of concept for the bottleneck mitigation cycle (BMC), consisting of three steps: bottleneck classification, detection and alleviation. While, often, the literature only focuses on alleviation of a single bottleneck and ignores bottleneck detection and interdependencies, this research uses the shifting bottleneck method and thereby considers a variety of possible infrastructural and operational bottlenecks. An empirical approach is adopted to find the cause of the detected bottleneck and to suggest suitable alleviation measures. Application of the BMC to a simulation model of the Fergusson Container Terminal in the Port of Auckland resulted in productivity improvements of 2–6%. To further improve the BMC, future research directions are to improve the empirical approach used for bottleneck alleviation and to apply the BMC in real-time.

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