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Performance Measures for Freight Transportation

Performance Measures for Freight Transportation. National Cooperative Freight Research Program Project 03 Gordon Proctor. Project Objectives. Unpublished To develop measures to gauge the performance of the freight transportation system To support Investment Operations Policy decisions

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Performance Measures for Freight Transportation

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  1. Performance Measures for Freight Transportation National Cooperative Freight Research Program Project 03 Gordon Proctor

  2. Project Objectives • Unpublished • To develop measures to gauge the performance of the freight transportation system • To support • Investment • Operations • Policy decisions • By public and private sectors NCFRP 03

  3. Areas of Emphasis • Efficiency • Effectiveness • Capacity • Safety • Security • Infrastructure condition • Congestion • Energy • The Environment • At the local, regional national and global levels NCFRP 03

  4. Broad Areas of Emphasis • Reflective of society’s diverse interests in freight • Reflective of foundational nature of the research project NCFRP 03

  5. Literature Lessons • Forward looking, leading indicators are preferred • Juxtapose competing values into a Balanced Score Card • Use composite measures for ‘rolling up’ and ‘drilling down’ • Provide interpretation • Develop an architecture • Expect metrics to evolve NCFRP 03

  6. What Does the Private Sector Want? • Although private logistics companies use performance measures intensely, they expressed little interest in a suite of government-provided metrics • Two-thirds said they never had sought publicly provided metrics • Trade associations were the exception NCFRP 03

  7. Private Sector Measurement Needs • Their costs • Their timeliness • Their reliability • Their performance • This includes their vendors • Were very interested in costs of logistics • Also, performance of national transport networks NCFRP 03

  8. Public, Private Interests Contrast • Rankings between public and private sector respondents were very different • Costs drove private sector • Network performance of public networks were of most interest to the public stakeholders • Public stakeholders were Balkanized – each was interested in its sphere of responsibility NCFRP 03

  9. Little Cross-Sector Concurrence • When interviewed, private sector respondents voiced little commonality in which measures they use • While general areas of cost and performance were common, specific measures they said they used varied significantly • Public sector also highly variable • Military said it could not identify just one suite of measures • Ports were skeptical of comparative measurement NCFRP 03

  10. Focus on Data • Examined data availability • Data quality • Date consistency • Data sustainability or presence of an ‘architecture’ NCFRP 03

  11. Case Studies of TSI, FAF • FAF phase 1 and 2 cost about $1.6 million • TSI initially required a staff of 22 and now is sustained with a staff of five NCFRP 03

  12. Major Constraints to Measurement • Ambiguous national goals • No single agency with the broad span and scope to compile and publish measures across all topic areas • No budget • No common data, definitional protocols across all agencies for reporting in a common format NCFRP 03

  13. Need for Interpretation • For policy and investment decisions, metrics are not sufficient • Interpretation is required to understand trends and context • Also, ‘good’ performance is relative to the goal which is desired • To use metrics, context and an understanding of goals is important NCFRP 03

  14. Cost of Logistics Example NCFRP 03

  15. Opportunities for Measurement • Society has many ‘inferred’ performance metrics for freight • Air quality measurement • Safety measurement • Hazardous materials measurement • Customs and trade volume measurements NCFRP 03

  16. Externality Measurement • Air quality effects are included in ‘conformity’ analyses • Rail injuries for vehicles and pedestrians are closely monitored • Truck safety is measured NCFRP 03

  17. Private Sector Contributions • AAR publishes data • ATA publishes extensive metrics • Publicly traded RRs all produce SEC filings • CSCMP Cost of Logistics Report NCFRP 03

  18. Cooperative Opportunities • AAR cooperates on a long-standing website of performance metrics • Austroads’ effort is well over a decade old • Corps of Engineers, EPA, Commerce, RITA, US DOT all produce important metrics and reports which are pertinent • ATA, CSCMP and others could contribute NCFRP 03

  19. What is possible? • A first generation, cooperative Freight System Report Card • Modeled on AAR and Austroads sites • Could compile major metrics and reports into a dash board of • Efficiency • Effectiveness • Cost • Externalities • Forecasts NCFRP 03

  20. Example NCFRP 03

  21. Possible Format • 10 year past performance • Forecast of future performance • Brief thumbnail narrative • Link to summary • Further linkage to in-depth report NCFRP 03

  22. Possible Tiers of Insight NCFRP 03

  23. What Would Society Learn? • That freight volumes have grown dramatically • That freight system performance has been stressed and its future is uncertain • Progress has been made in safety • Progress has been in made in air quality • Greenhouse emissions have not seen progress • Infrastructure is aging • Investment is lacking • Future performance is uncertain NCFRP 03

  24. Impediments • A needed consensus to begin with what we have • Some budget and staff to compile the information into a common portal and Report Card • A willingness of the contributing agencies to participate • A consensus to emulate AAR and Austroads to begin a cross-departmental reporting process NCFRP 03

  25. Potential Rewards • A consistent, reliable source of information • Potential for significant expansion • Lowest cost option available • Most easily available format for producing metrics which cover the broad scope of freight performance envisioned by the project statement • Increased recognition of freight’s role in most areas of society NCFRP 03

  26. Thank you! NCFRP 03

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