1 / 23

ECT - European Gateway Services 24 June 2013

ECT - European Gateway Services 24 June 2013. Agenda. Introduction Supply Chain Trends Synchromodality European Gateway Services COMCIS-project. 1. Introduction. Europe Container Terminals (ECT) founded in 1966 3 deep sea terminals in the Port of Rotterdam 2.200 employees ( 2012)

peta
Télécharger la présentation

ECT - European Gateway Services 24 June 2013

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. ECT - European Gateway Services24 June 2013

  2. Agenda Introduction Supply Chain Trends Synchromodality European Gateway Services COMCIS-project

  3. 1. Introduction • Europe Container Terminals (ECT) founded in 1966 • 3 deep sea terminals in the Port of Rotterdam • 2.200 employees (2012) • Volume in 2012: 7,7 million TEU • Member of Hutchison Port Holdings (HPH)

  4. 1. Introduction

  5. 1. Introduction • Rotterdam • 10.500 ha • 40 km length • 11 million TEU

  6. 1. Introduction Euromax Terminal City Terminal Delta Terminal

  7. 1. Introduction Hamburg – Le Havre range Highly competitive market with 1 hinterland

  8. 1. Introduction • mln TEU 2012 • Rotterdam 11.848 30% • ECT 7.702 19% • Hamburg 8.89022% • Antwerp8.630 22% • Bremen/Bremerhaven 6.100 15% • Le Havre 2.3106% • Zeebrugge1.960 5% • Total 39.738

  9. 1. Introduction Direct hinterland Rotterdam

  10. Moerdijk Duisburg Willebroek 1. Introduction Venlo-rail Venlo-barge

  11. 2. Supply Chain Trends • Port Developments • Growing call-sizes due to Ultra Large Container Ships • Modal split obligations by Port Authorities • Low utilization of European transport systems (road, waterways and railways) • European transport system (infrastructure) reachedits maximum • Competition between ports: overcapacity HLH-range expected • Increasing competition within Rotterdam: Maasvlakte 2 • Supply Chain Trends • Increasing importance of performance requirements • Awareness of environment (CO2) and carbon footprint • More focus on security (a.o. ISPS, AEO)

  12. 3. Synchromodality

  13. 3. Synchromodality Synchromodality: making optimal use of all modes of transport and available capacity, at all times, as an integrated transport solution. Key aspects: • Mode free booking • Dynamic planning and routing • Switching modes of transport in real time • Information availability and visibility • Decision making based on network utilization • Combining transport flows • Cooperation

  14. 4. European Gateway Services • ECT develops a network of inland terminals (ECT Extended Gate®) and bundles • containers on the main corridors from/to its deep sea terminals • Daily and dedicated barge and rail connections by EGS and partners • Scheduled, planned, operated on both sides of the inland supply chain • Developing additional services to support the supply chain

  15. 4. European Gateway Services

  16. 4. European Gateway Services Building blocks Emission Supports reduction of CO2 emission Visibility Track & trace as part of EGS web services Security Integrated secure lane (ISPS level) Customs Document free chain (paperless) Logistics Scheduling, planning, transport

  17. 5. COMCIS topics Carrier release + customs release + physical availability  hinterland • Postponing the commercial release to a hinterland gate • ‘Pushing containers to the hinterland’ using EGS • Improvedprediction of physical container availability after discharge, allowingforimproved hinterland planning. • More awareness of the hinterland transport links. • Combining container data, EGS-booking data and hinterland transport data. Paperless service (customs) Extended Line Release Discharge Predictor Synchromodal Dashboard

  18. Oneintegrated dashboard, withconsolidated data, ready foroperationaluseto manage sea-hinterland operations 5. COMCIS Data Consolidation Build on top of results of Integrity: aggregate data of terminals, carriers, customs, hinterland operations. Data Standardization Standardize data across ECT and EGS: onebooking, one status, one container release, etc. Data Aggregation

  19. 5. COMCIS: Results • Extended Line Release • Carrier release + customs release + physical availability  hinterland • Development of company-wide release management as part of IT-architecture • Tried & tested; further roll-out beyond COMCIS • Interest confirmed by carriers for carrier-haulage containers: Improvement possible for 46% of containers or 12% if paperless customs service is used) • Significant reduction in time spent at the terminal • -33% for all containers -74% when combined with paperless customs service • Attractiveness of Rotterdam as Gateway to Europe confirmed using statistical analysis (TNO World Container Model™) • +2,5% increase in volume over competitors • Further legal and commercial agreements required • High-impact on IT and operations

  20. 5. COMCIS: Results • Discharge predictor • Carrier release + customs release + physical availability hinterland • Reduction in lead time of up to 42 hours • Data aggregation: load plans, crane planning, carrier ETA • Tried & tested; further roll-out beyond COMCIS • 95%+ accurate predictions • 97% accuracy in operations (no removal from load-list) • Reduction in administrative effort by operators/planners confirmed • Currently being rolled-out as part of the ECT/EGS IT-architecture • Used internally; future option: external use in e-services

  21. 5. COMCIS: Results • Synchromodal dashboard • Carrier release + customs release + physical availability  hinterland • The synchromodal dashboard consolidates data on carrier release, customs release, availabilityand planned hinterland transport. • Used as an operational tool by European Gateway Services. • Currently being implemented and evaluated • Concept matches ECT expectations

  22. 5. Summary • European Gateway Services as a strategic development within ECT • COMCIS provides enhanced visibility to ‘push’ containers to the hinterland • Extended Line Release  take away the commercial release barrier • Discharge Predictor  physical availability • Synchromodal Dashboard  linking terminal and hinterland operations • Concepts proven within COMCIS; further commercial roll-out already started

  23. Thank you for your attention

More Related