Image de couverture de The Management of Transshipment Terminals Decision Support for Terminal Operations in Finished Vehicle Supply Chains
The Management of Transshipment Terminals Decision Support for Terminal Operations in Finished Vehicle Supply Chains
Titre:
The Management of Transshipment Terminals Decision Support for Terminal Operations in Finished Vehicle Supply Chains
ISBN (Numéro international normalisé des livres):
9780387308548
Auteur personnel:
Edition:
1st ed. 2006.
PRODUCTION_INFO:
New York, NY : Springer US : Imprint: Springer, 2006.
Description physique:
X, 178 p. 54 illus. online resource.
Collections:
Operations Research/Computer Science Interfaces Series, 34
Table des matières:
Automobile Production and Distribution -- Intermodal Vehicle Transshipment -- Management of Terminal Operations -- Modeling Terminal Operations -- Allocation of Storage Space -- Personnel Deployment -- IT-Integration of Planning.
Extrait:
1.1 Freight Transshipment We observe an ongoing trend towards globalized industrial produc­ tion. Multinational companies aim at strategic competitive advantages by distributing their activities around the globe. As a result, the in­ dividual supply chains become longer and more complex. Next to the supply chain reliability, companies try to keep supply chains cost effi­ cient and responsive, i.e. warrant short order fulfillment lead times (Siirie and Wagner, 2005). The above goals dictate low inventory levels at the stages of a supply chain as well as a high frequency of transports between the partners involved. Supply Chain Requirements. Detailed performance measures for a supply chain are provided by the Supply Chain Operations Refer­ ence (SCOR) model (Supply-Chain Council, 2002). The SCOR model provides four levels with increasing detail of process modeling. In accor­ dance to the process detail depicted SCOR metrics are defined for each level. Level 1 distinguishes metrics addressing the reliability of supply chains, their responsiveness, flexibility, cost and optionally their assets. On levels 2-4 these metrics are operationalized with respect to the pro­ cess types source, make and deliver. Thus, as substantial activities of the deliver process, transport and transshipment are evaluated as an integral part of the supply chain.
Auteur collectif ajouté:
Langue:
Anglais