Real-time hiring of vehicles for container transport

This study concerns the deployment of large numbers of container transporting vehicles on a network consisting of (dedicated) roads and logistic sites such as container terminals. Each site is managed autonomously by a site manager. The fleet of vehicles is deployed by a fleet manager. On request of...

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Main Author: Joseph J.M. Evers
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: TU Delft Open 2006-04-01
Series:European Journal of Transport and Infrastructure Research
Online Access:https://journals.open.tudelft.nl/ejtir/article/view/3432
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spelling doaj-bdccff2f322943f09f31b7f88d66bae12021-07-26T08:49:18ZengTU Delft OpenEuropean Journal of Transport and Infrastructure Research1567-71412006-04-016210.18757/ejtir.2006.6.2.34323031Real-time hiring of vehicles for container transportJoseph J.M. Evers0Delft University of TechnologyThis study concerns the deployment of large numbers of container transporting vehicles on a network consisting of (dedicated) roads and logistic sites such as container terminals. Each site is managed autonomously by a site manager. The fleet of vehicles is deployed by a fleet manager. On request of the site managers, the fleet manager allocates vehicles to be hired by the site managers. Next, within these allocations, each site manager issues transportation jobs and assigns these jobs to the allocated vehicles. The objective of the fleet manager is to avoid unpaid empty driving and to keep the size of its fleet just large enough the serve the demand for vehicles. The objective of the site managers is to minimize the operational costs. In this context a new coordination system is proposed to allocate vehicle capacity, operating on the basis of a win-win situation for all actors. The coordination takes place at two levels. One level concerns the drawing up of an adaptive fleet deployment plan. The other level resides under control of the individual site managers and concerns the assignment of transportation jobs to vehicles, given the allocations of the fleet deployment plan. Both use repetitive linear programming procedures. Small size simulation experiments show that the approach might be effective.https://journals.open.tudelft.nl/ejtir/article/view/3432
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Joseph J.M. Evers
spellingShingle Joseph J.M. Evers
Real-time hiring of vehicles for container transport
European Journal of Transport and Infrastructure Research
author_facet Joseph J.M. Evers
author_sort Joseph J.M. Evers
title Real-time hiring of vehicles for container transport
title_short Real-time hiring of vehicles for container transport
title_full Real-time hiring of vehicles for container transport
title_fullStr Real-time hiring of vehicles for container transport
title_full_unstemmed Real-time hiring of vehicles for container transport
title_sort real-time hiring of vehicles for container transport
publisher TU Delft Open
series European Journal of Transport and Infrastructure Research
issn 1567-7141
publishDate 2006-04-01
description This study concerns the deployment of large numbers of container transporting vehicles on a network consisting of (dedicated) roads and logistic sites such as container terminals. Each site is managed autonomously by a site manager. The fleet of vehicles is deployed by a fleet manager. On request of the site managers, the fleet manager allocates vehicles to be hired by the site managers. Next, within these allocations, each site manager issues transportation jobs and assigns these jobs to the allocated vehicles. The objective of the fleet manager is to avoid unpaid empty driving and to keep the size of its fleet just large enough the serve the demand for vehicles. The objective of the site managers is to minimize the operational costs. In this context a new coordination system is proposed to allocate vehicle capacity, operating on the basis of a win-win situation for all actors. The coordination takes place at two levels. One level concerns the drawing up of an adaptive fleet deployment plan. The other level resides under control of the individual site managers and concerns the assignment of transportation jobs to vehicles, given the allocations of the fleet deployment plan. Both use repetitive linear programming procedures. Small size simulation experiments show that the approach might be effective.
url https://journals.open.tudelft.nl/ejtir/article/view/3432
work_keys_str_mv AT josephjmevers realtimehiringofvehiclesforcontainertransport
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