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Sustainable Transport and Reliable Supply Chains Jari Kauppila Economist F&L Working Group meeting, Paris, 2 July 2013

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Sustainable Transport and Reliable Supply Chains Jari Kauppila Economist F&L Working Group meeting, Paris, 2 July 2013. Related work at the ITF/OECD. Improving Reliability on Surface Transport Networks (ITF/OECD 2010) http ://www.internationaltransportforum.org/Pub/pdf/10Reliability.pdf - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

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Page 1: Related work at the ITF/OECD

Sustainable Transport and Reliable Supply Chains

 Jari KauppilaEconomist

F&L Working Group meeting, Paris, 2 July 2013

Page 2: Related work at the ITF/OECD

Related work at the ITF/OECD• Improving Reliability on Surface Transport Networks (ITF/OECD 2010) http

://www.internationaltransportforum.org/Pub/pdf/10Reliability.pdf• Managing Urban Congestion, ITF/OECD (2007)

http://www.internationaltransportforum.org/Pub/pdf/07Congestion.pdf• Internalisation of External Effect in European Freight Corridors

http://www.internationaltransportforum.org/jtrc/DiscussionPapers/DP201310.pdf• Road Haulage Taxes and Charges, Summary analysis and  data tables 1998-2012

http://www.internationaltransportforum.org/jtrc/DiscussionPapers/DP201308.pdf (related database available at http://www.internationaltransportforum.org/statistics/taxation/index.html)

• Measurement of National Level Logistics Costs and Performance http://www.internationaltransportforum.org/statistics/taxation/index.html

• All ITF/OECD work on shipping http://internationaltransportforum.org/jtrc/maritime/index.html

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Page 3: Related work at the ITF/OECD

Related work at the ITF/OECD• Statistics Brief on Global Trade and Transport

http://www.internationaltransportforum.org/statistics/StatBrief/2013-04-Global-Trade-Transport.pdf  

• Spending on Transport infrastructure 1995-2011 http://www.internationaltransportforum.org/statistics/index.html

• Moving Freight with Better Trucks (Summary document) http://www.internationaltransportforum.org/jtrc/infrastructure/heavyveh/TrucksSum.pdf

• Charges for the Use of Railway Infrastructure http://www.internationaltransportforum.org/Pub/pdf/08RailCharges.pdf

• Workshop and presentations on Information and Communications Technologies for Innovative Global Freight Transport Systems http://www.internationaltransportforum.org/Proceedings/Genoa2010/index.html

• Workshop and presentations on Innovation in Road Transport: Opportunities for improving efficiency http://www.internationaltransportforum.org/Proceedings/Lisbon2009/index.html

• Workshop and presentations on Overcoming Border Crossing Obstacles http://www.internationaltransportforum.org/Proceedings/Border2009/index.html

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Page 4: Related work at the ITF/OECD

Key messages

Take into account all elements of sustainability

Focusing on reliability can improve sustainability of supply chains

Reliability should be incorporated into transport policy

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Page 5: Related work at the ITF/OECD

Sustainability Economic viability

Efficiency is key in contributing to growth

Social welfare Safe and equitable access to jobs, education, healthcare Impact on cost of goods

Environmental carrying capacity Transport consumes massive amounts of finite resources Should not surpass key environmental thresholds >

limit opportunities for future generations

5

Sustainability and transport

Page 6: Related work at the ITF/OECD

Sustainability and supply chains: challenges Economic viability

Uncertainties (Volatility in oil prices, slack demand)

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Page 7: Related work at the ITF/OECD

Global freight volumes suggest continuous uncertainty

7

-13%

-5% -6%

Sep-

10

USA external trade by sea, total (tonnes)(% change from pre-crisis peak)

Jul-08 June-12

-14%

-3% -1%

Sep-

10

EU27 external trade by sea, total (tonnes)(% change from pre-crisis peak)

Jul-08 June-12

Source: International Transport Forum statistics

Page 8: Related work at the ITF/OECD

Global air freight as a lead indicator

8

-20%

-1% -1%

Sep-

10

USA external trade by air, total (tonnes)(% change from pre-crisis peak)

Jul-08 Jun-12

-21%

16%

-3% -1%

Sep-

10

EU27 external trade by air, total (tonnes)(% change from pre-crisis peak)

Jul-08 Jun-12

Source: International Transport Forum statistics

Page 9: Related work at the ITF/OECD

Supply chains and sustainability challenges Economic viability

Uncertainties (Volatility in oil prices, slack demand) Congestion

9

Page 10: Related work at the ITF/OECD

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Road Congestion

Continued dependency on road freight Options for shifting to other modes limited

Infrastructure investments necessary but not sufficient

Significant impact on efficiency

Unmanaged road capacity no longer an option Identify & target strategic bottlenecks Regional planning key in port-hinterland networks

Focus on managing networks for reliability, users’ needs

Page 11: Related work at the ITF/OECD

Supply Chains and Sustainability Challenges Economic viability

Uncertainties (Volatility in oil prices, slack demand) Congestion

Social welfare Supply chain contribution to cost of goods Impacts on safety

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Page 12: Related work at the ITF/OECD

Safety

http://www.team-bhp.com/forum/commercial-vehicles-india/39265-container-truck-toppled-traffic-junction.html

Road safety

Around 1.3 million people die on roads every year 20-50 million injured

Truck involvement 10-25% in OECD countries Up to 70% in developing economies

Multiple causes, including speed, non-respect of traffic laws, over-loading and equipment failure

Huge cost for society and impact for well-being

Page 13: Related work at the ITF/OECD

Supply chains and sustainability challenges Economic viability

Uncertainties (Volatility in oil prices, slack demand) Congestion

Social welfare Supply chain contribution to cost of goods Impacts on safety

Environmental carrying capacity Energy use/GHG and air pollution (land and sea)

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Page 14: Related work at the ITF/OECD

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Air pollution

Transport key contributor to the overall air pollution

Control strategies are known but implementation lagging in non-OECD countries

Need to address concentration of air pollutants in port cities and port areas

Page 15: Related work at the ITF/OECD

Responses Regulatory

E.g. mode-specific emission and energy efficiency agreements and standards

Reorganization of supply chains Shifts in production composition Relocating production (especially for low value goods where

transport component is large) Operational

Slow steaming

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Page 16: Related work at the ITF/OECD

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Supply chains are slowing down

“There is this big, ugly thing in the middle of the supply chain slowing down” –Ron Widdows,

CEO Rickmers Holdings

Page 17: Related work at the ITF/OECD

Supply chains are slowing down - impacts

Logistics business with inability to deliver goods on time

Inventory levels affected – more stocks are held in compensation for uncertainties

Companies need to adapt their operations either through the way they operate or building in buffer stocks

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Page 18: Related work at the ITF/OECD

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Reliability carries a premium

“We like speed but spend most of our time making the supply chain predictable” –Jeff Langenfeld,

VP, International Logistics,

Walmart

Page 19: Related work at the ITF/OECD

Reliability carries an premium

Reliability may matter more than speed Cost of unreliability rival those of congestion

Users often face delays at interfaces

Reliable but slow can be also greener

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Page 20: Related work at the ITF/OECD

Shift in policy focus

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Travel time

Current focus in reducing average travel time

Future focus in reducing also variability

Page 21: Related work at the ITF/OECD

Choosing the low-hanging fruit

A key policy challenge to create incentive structures that encourage cost-effective solutions

Improvements can be delivered by both users and network providers

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Page 22: Related work at the ITF/OECD

Transport is a component of process speed

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0%

5%

10%

15%

20%

25%

30%

35%

Owncompany

action

Problem atdelivery

point

Trafficcongestion

Problem atcollection

point

Lack ofdriver

Vehiclebreakdown

Huboperation

% o

f tot

al d

elay

tim

e

McKinnon et al (2009).

Easier to pay someone to move goods faster than to change the procedures within the company

“Own company actions” the most important source of delays

Page 23: Related work at the ITF/OECD

PIMP your transport policy

Provision: Increase physical capacity either through supplying extra capacity or improving the quality of existing infrastructure

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Page 24: Related work at the ITF/OECD

Provision

Physical growth through new, expanded or upgraded facilities (mostly bottleneck removal)

Higher network standards can deliver higher reliability E.g. long-life pavements reducing need for maintenance

Providing additional capacity in infrastructure has limited remaining scope in traditional corridors Time consuming, costly and politically difficult

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Page 25: Related work at the ITF/OECD

PIMP your transport policy

Provision: Increase physical capacity either through supplying extra capacity or improving the quality of existing infrastructure

Information: Informing users enabling them to mitigate the adverse effects of poor predictability

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Page 26: Related work at the ITF/OECD

Information Monitoring reliability is a policy signal and needed to inform policy

Diverge information is needed for different users1. Government to design cost effective policies2. Network managers to enhance service provision3. Users (carriers) to adapt behaviour accordingly or to mitigate

adverse effects of poor reliability4. Logistics managers handling the total trip not just part of the

trip (supply chain)

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Page 27: Related work at the ITF/OECD

“Fluidity index” by Transport Canada

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Source: Transport Canada – Economic Analysis & Research

Evidence-based information leads to greater accountability and transparency in the supply chain and will benefit all gateway users

Page 28: Related work at the ITF/OECD

PIMP your transport policy

Provision: Increase physical capacity either through supplying extra capacity or improving the quality of existing infrastructure

Information: Informing users enabling them to mitigate the adverse effects of poor reliability

Manage: Better management of existing infrastructure

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Page 29: Related work at the ITF/OECD

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Managing existing infrastructure

“Before building new infrastructure, we need to make sure the existing works as it was meant”

– Catharina Elmsäter-Svärd, Minister of Infrastructure, Sweden

Page 30: Related work at the ITF/OECD

Managing existing infrastructure Pro-active management Active management

Government can have a facilitating role Managing interfaces

Ports and hinterland connections Borders Network providers Organizational interfaces

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Page 31: Related work at the ITF/OECD

PIMP your transport policy

Provision: Increase physical capacity either through supplying extra capacity or improving the quality of existing infrastructure

Information: Informing users enabling them to mitigate the adverse effects of poor reliability

Manage: Better management of existing infrastructure

Price: Charging directly for reliability to achieve more efficient levels of reliability

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Page 32: Related work at the ITF/OECD

Price-reliability spectrum, with circle size illustrating traffic volume (USA)

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Source: Derived from The Tioga Group (2003).

Page 33: Related work at the ITF/OECD

Conclusions Take into account all elements of sustainability Focusing on reliability can improve sustainability of

supply chains Improves efficiency Reduces congestion, cost of goods and environmental footprint

Focus on interfaces and better management Governments may have a facilitation role Enhanced interface coordination and corridor management

Provide information for all users

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Page 34: Related work at the ITF/OECD

Future and on-going work at the ITF/OECD Workshop on Supply Chain Resilience

APEC Supply Chain Resilience Workshop, Bali, 26-28 July 2013 Follow-up early 2014, jointly with APEC

Measurement of national-level logistics costs and performance (two post-docs)

Supply chain performance ways to better measure and benchmark their supply chain

performance (APEC priority) Working Group on Infrastructure Adaptation to Extreme

Weather and Climate Change (on-going)

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Page 35: Related work at the ITF/OECD

Thank youJari KauppilaT +33 (0)1 45 24 97 21E [email protected]

Postal address 2 rue Andre Pascal75775 Paris Cedex 16