The impact of sea-air mode on air cargo transport

The following research looks into the concept of sea-air intermodality, a combination of two or more modes of transport for the carriage of goods from origin to destination. The study examines why and how this form of transport evolved to become a viable alternative to the conventional single modes...

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Main Author: Al-Hajri, Ghanem Mohamed
Other Authors: Doganis, R.
Language:en
Published: Cranfield University 2009
Online Access:http://hdl.handle.net/1826/3259
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spelling ndltd-CRANFIELD1-oai-dspace.lib.cranfield.ac.uk-1826-32592013-04-19T15:25:08ZThe impact of sea-air mode on air cargo transportAl-Hajri, Ghanem MohamedThe following research looks into the concept of sea-air intermodality, a combination of two or more modes of transport for the carriage of goods from origin to destination. The study examines why and how this form of transport evolved to become a viable alternative to the conventional single modes of ocean and air transport. The viability of the sea-air mode depends on various equally important factors which are analysed in depth, with a special emphasis on the sea-air transfer port. fn this context, research findings of the world's existing sea-air hubs are recorded and evaluated in terms of their present and future trends. At a sea-air transfer hub, ocean cargo is converted to direct air freight, thus adding new volumes of air cargoes. In this respect, sea-air plays a positive role in the present and future development of the air freight industry. The impact of the sea-air mode can be most clearly seen in the case study analysis in Chapter 10 of this thesis, whereby the potential for 'convertibility' of large portions of low density ocean cargoes to the sea-aix mode, is successfully demonstrated.Cranfield UniversityDoganis, R.2009-03-12T15:36:52Z2009-03-12T15:36:52Z1997-04Thesis or dissertationDoctoralPhDhttp://hdl.handle.net/1826/3259en
collection NDLTD
language en
sources NDLTD
description The following research looks into the concept of sea-air intermodality, a combination of two or more modes of transport for the carriage of goods from origin to destination. The study examines why and how this form of transport evolved to become a viable alternative to the conventional single modes of ocean and air transport. The viability of the sea-air mode depends on various equally important factors which are analysed in depth, with a special emphasis on the sea-air transfer port. fn this context, research findings of the world's existing sea-air hubs are recorded and evaluated in terms of their present and future trends. At a sea-air transfer hub, ocean cargo is converted to direct air freight, thus adding new volumes of air cargoes. In this respect, sea-air plays a positive role in the present and future development of the air freight industry. The impact of the sea-air mode can be most clearly seen in the case study analysis in Chapter 10 of this thesis, whereby the potential for 'convertibility' of large portions of low density ocean cargoes to the sea-aix mode, is successfully demonstrated.
author2 Doganis, R.
author_facet Doganis, R.
Al-Hajri, Ghanem Mohamed
author Al-Hajri, Ghanem Mohamed
spellingShingle Al-Hajri, Ghanem Mohamed
The impact of sea-air mode on air cargo transport
author_sort Al-Hajri, Ghanem Mohamed
title The impact of sea-air mode on air cargo transport
title_short The impact of sea-air mode on air cargo transport
title_full The impact of sea-air mode on air cargo transport
title_fullStr The impact of sea-air mode on air cargo transport
title_full_unstemmed The impact of sea-air mode on air cargo transport
title_sort impact of sea-air mode on air cargo transport
publisher Cranfield University
publishDate 2009
url http://hdl.handle.net/1826/3259
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