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Inland Infrastructure : Bulk to Container

Inland Infrastructure : Bulk to Container. Jean-Paul Rodrigue Associate Professor, Dept. of Global Studies & Geography, Hofstra University, New York, USA Van Horne Researcher in Transportation and Logistics, University of Calgary, Canada. Inland Infrastructure: Bulk to Container.

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Inland Infrastructure : Bulk to Container

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  1. Inland Infrastructure: Bulk to Container Jean-Paul Rodrigue Associate Professor, Dept. of Global Studies & Geography, Hofstra University, New York, USA Van Horne Researcher in Transportation and Logistics, University of Calgary, Canada

  2. Inland Infrastructure: Bulk to Container

  3. Developing Inland Infrastructure: A Taxonomy of Logistics Zones

  4. The Insertion of Inland Ports in North America: Basic Requirements Rail Corridor to the Gateway Intermodal Rail Terminal Inland Port Co-location Core Tenants Real estate Drayage Agglomeration Logistics Activities

  5. Northwest Ohio Intermodal Terminal, CSX 2011; An Inland “Port”

  6. Main Advantages of Co-location

  7. Intermodal Terminals and Recent Co-Located Logistic Zones Projects Every rail operator involved. Partnership with a major real estate developer.

  8. Containerization Growth Factors

  9. Growth Factors behind the Containerization of Commodities

  10. IMF All Commodity Index and Baltic Dry Index, 2000-2010 (2000=100)

  11. IMF All Commodity Index and Average Container Shipping Rates, 2000-2010 (2000=100)

  12. Bulk and Containerized Commodity Transportation: Dichotomy or Complementarity?

  13. Bulk and Containerized Commodity Chains Bulk Commodity Chain Supplier Customer Port Point-to-Point Consolidationcenter Complementarity Container port Pendulum Services Intermodal terminal Containerized Commodity Chain

  14. From Bulk to Containers: Breaking Economies of Scale

  15. Commodity Group and Containerization Potential

  16. Challenges for the Containerization of Commodities

  17. Containerized Cargo Flows along Major Trade Routes, 1995-2009 (in millions of TEUs)

  18. Maritime Freight Rates (Nominal USD per TEU), 1993-2009

  19. American Foreign Trade by Maritime Containers, 2009 (in TEUs)

  20. The Complexities of Inland Logistics: The “Last Mile” in Freight Distribution Massification Atomization Frequency Capacity REGIONAL LOCAL HINTERLAND GLOBAL Shipping Network Segment Corridor 1 2 Customer “Last Mile” Inland Terminal Distribution Center Gateway Inventory at terminal Inventory in transit 1 2

  21. Distribution based on two gateways Distribution based on RDCs Distribution based on local DCs Distribution based on tiered system

  22. Asymmetries between Import and Export-Based Containerized Logistics Customer Distribution Center Inland Terminal Import-Based Gateway • Many Customers • Function of population density. • Geographical spread. • Incites transloading. • High priority (value, timeliness). Repositioning Supplier Export-Based • Few Suppliers • Function of resource density. • Geographical concentration. • Lower priority. • Depends on repositioning opportunities.

  23. Conclusion: The Flipside of Reverse Logistics

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