Title: TRANSPORTATION Largest cost component of logistics
1TRANSPORTATION Largest cost component of
logistics
2Six Modes of Transportation
- Water
- Rail
- Truck--motor carrier
- Air
- Pipeline
- Intermodal
3Intermodal
- Combined rail and truck
- takes advantage of
- low cost of rail (long haul) and
- on-time delivery by truck
4Components of Transport Cost
- Loading/Unloadingunrelated to mileage
- Travelrate per mile
Cost per unit
Transport cost fn
Distance, miles
5Benefits to Consumers of Improved Transport
- Direct--lower transport cost
- for inputs
- for final products
- Indirect--larger geographic markets
- greater competition
- goods available from markets once not feasible
- Producers can exploit economies of scale more
fully - decouple markets from production sites
- more intense use of facilities
- more labor specialization
6Cost-service Trade-off
- Determines shipping mode
- Cost per mile (in increasing order)
- water, rail, truck, air
- Service (starting with highest)
- air, truck, rail, water
- Railcheap long hauls
- coal unit trains and grain to export terminals
- Intermodal merchandise on destination trains.
7Truck vs. Rail
Transport cost functions
Cost per unit
Truck
Rail
400
Distance, miles
8BackhaulA Critical Consideration
- Goal minimize time equipment is not generating
revenue - Avoid running equipment empty
- Important source of savings
9Shipping Documents
- Freight bill
- Freight claims form
- Bill of lading
10Bill of Lading
- Legal contract between shipper and carrier for
movement to a specific destination, free of
damage - Purpose
- receipt for goods
- contract of carriage
- documentary evidence of title
11Two Forms of the Bill of Lading
- Straight bill of lading--nonnegotiable
- Order bill of lading--may be sold or traded by
endorsing to another
12Developments That Have Impacted Number and
Location of Plants
- Unit trains
- Intermodal and containers
- Deregulation
- Intra-firm competition on part of shippers
- Backhaul
- Trunk lines vs. branch lines
- Value-added logistics
13Regulation/Deregulation History
- Impetus for regulation
- monopoly power of railroads in 19th century
- concern for destructive competition--over
capacity - Regulation was based on providing adequate,
reasonably priced services to all on a
non-discriminatory basis. - Common carriage was the key principle
14Key Legislation
- Interstate Commerce Commission Act of 1887--
established ICC to regulate railroads - 1935 public truck transportation placed under ICC
- 1938 Civil Aeronautics Board (CAB) formed
15Characteristics of Regulation
- Service to all
- required cross subsidization from profitable
routes to unprofitable ones. - Control
- carrier entry and exit, carrier prices, service
offerings and mergers - Published rates
- no privately negotiated rates
16Costs of Regulation
- Operating and pricing inefficiencies
- NO intramodal competition
- Financial decline of railroads
- prevented restructuring
- protected unions
- failed to recognize that the major cost of
railroads was fixed--rail beds
17Deregulation
- 1977, air freight
- 1978, air passenger
- 1980, trucking
- 1980, rail--Staggers Rail Act.
18DEREGUATIONFreedoms Granted Carriers
- Pricing latitude
- Ability to enter long-term contracts with
shippers - more freedom to enter and exit a market
- easier to merge or consolidate
19Impacts of Deregulation
- Demise of Common Carrier concept
- Closer relationship between rate and cost to
provide the service - Slowed transport rate increases
- Increased, initially, number of motor carriers
- Increased merger activity
20Staggers Rail Act led to
- Shedding of branch lines
- Reduced rate regulation
- Zone of freedom-- rate/variable costs less than
or equal to 180 - More private contracts
- Coal 62 under contract--coal accounts for 44
tonnage and 22 of rail revenue - Grain 63 under contract, carriage related to
exports
21Motor Carrier Deregulation
- Transportation marketing important because of
route competition - Closer shipper/carrier relations
- deregulation allows it
- needed for JIT
- quality emphasis means process orientation
- more long-term contracts, less transactional
- Increase in ICC-regulated carriers
22Motor Carrier Dereg., continued
- Increased concentration in LTL industry
- Less commodity and regional restrictions for
carriers - Multitude of rate/service offering means
increased transaction cost for shippers seeking
best deal - Value-added carrier services
- Greater role for transport brokers
23Transport Broker
- Source of shipping information
- can audit shippers freight bills for correctness
- verify that carrier is certified, licensed
insured - track shipments
- handle damage claims
- provide storage /or local pickup
24Market-based Railcar Allocation
- COTS PERX
- shorter term, auction-based rate and car
guarantees - SWAPs GEEPs
- pool programs that provide longer term
contractual car guarantees
25COTS ( PERX)
- COTS is the BNS program
- Guarantee of freight and lock in rate
- Purchase service by corridor, unit size, by time
period--first or second half of month--and grain - Purchase certificate up to 6 months in advance
- Certificates may be resold
26Guarantees
- When shipper fails to use equipment, shipper
loses payment for certificate. - When carrier fails to place car, shipper
penalized 50 per car per day up to max of 400
per car - COT orders may be swapped among stations along
the same corridor at a cost of 30 per car
27Pool ProgramsSWAPS (BNS) and GEEPS (UP)
- Shipper leases rail cars to carrier for a
negotiated fee and a guaranteed number of trips
per month for the shipper (Annual contract) - Penalties for cancellation or nonperformance
- Applies to carrier and shipper
- Pool provides shipper options for strategically
integrating logistics and merchandising decisions
28Summary
- Note the changes in the transport industry and in
the regulation of the industry - New institutions are being developed to improve
market efficiency and enhance logistics operations