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Chemical Rail Transport: The Benefit of Reliability

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Chemical Rail Transport: The Benefit of Reliability Closs et al. (2003) Introduction Transit time and reliability important in rail (Rail mergers may be deteriorating ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Chemical Rail Transport: The Benefit of Reliability


1
Chemical Rail Transport The Benefit of
Reliability Closs et al. (2003)
  • Introduction
  • Transit time and reliability important in rail
    (Rail mergers may be deteriorating these service
    factors).
  • Chemical industry utilizes rail substantially,
    more than other industries.
  • Companies in chemical industry tends to own rail
    cars (75,000 equipment with annual maintenance
    of 5,000).
  • Yet, the companies do not pay much attention to
    fleet management issues.
  • The industry is rather poor for managing rail car
    inventory, and chemical inventory, so that there
    is room for improvement (e.g., rail car cycle
    time, reliability).
  • Use data of more than 62,000 rail cars to analyze
    chemical rail transport characteristics and
    problems.

2
  • Study Objective
  • Identify factors that impact rail transit time
    and reliability.
  • Assess impact of rail transit time and
    reliability on customer (consignee) inventory
    requirements.
  • Give implications for shippers and carriers to
    improve transit time and reliability.
  • Focus on Stages 2 and 4 (see Figure 1).
  • Data Analyses
  • Analysis 1 Factors affecting rail transit time
    and reliability (see Tables 1-6)
  • Analysis 2 Effect of transit time and
    reliability on inventory (see Tables 7-8).

3
  • Implications from Analysis 1
  • Possible factors examined (1) rail car type
    (hopper and tanker), (2) lane, (3) number of
    carriers, (4) distance.
  • Transit time longer for hopper cars than for
    tankers.
  • CV is higher for hopper cars than for tankers.
  • Transit time is longer if multiple carriers are
    used.
  • Distance affects transit time, but primarily due
    to fixed time for pickup and drop-off.
  • Fixed-time effect not equal between hoppers and
    tankers.
  • More room for improvement for hopper cars than
    for tankers.
  • 10-16 of variation in transit time explained by
    distance.
  • Approx. 550 miles per day on in motion (both for
    hopper cars and tankers).
  • Table 6 indicates that the impact of multiple
    carriers on transit time changes as distance
    increase (opposite effect for hopper cars and
    tankers).

4
  • Implications from Analysis 2
  • Several scenarios are tested see Tables 7-8.
  • Implication (1) reliability reduction has
    stronger impact on inventory than transit time
    reduction.
  • Implication (2) Reduction of rail car assets can
    be attained by improving reliability, and
    possibly transit time.

5
  • Conclusions
  • Rail car impact (transit time longer for hopper
    cars than for tankers)
  • Lane effect
  • Impact of number of carriers used in shipment.
  • Safety stock implications of transit time and
    reliability.
  • Transit time and reliability improved ? rail cars
    can be reduced ? less congestion ? improved
    transit time.
  • Shippers should review the process of
    loading/unloading to reduce transit time
    variability by car type.

6
  • Discussion questions
  • 1. Transit time for rail is longer than truck
    because of fixed dwell time at origin or
    destination. Is this statement true? If this
    fixed time can be eliminated, the transit time of
    rail is faster than or equal to trucks. It this
    true? Why?
  • 2. How dose reducing rail car inventory help
    railroads, and shippers?
  • 3. Why do chemical firms mostly own railcars?
    Does leasing or renting from railroads help
    reduce inventory?
  • 4. Why transit time variability have more impact
    on inventory than the time itself?
  • 5. If you are the railroad, how do you address
    this issue (reducing transit time variability)?
    What about from the shippers perspective?
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