Measuring lean ports performance.

Author(s)
Marlow, P.B. & Casaca, A.C.P.
Year
Abstract

Ports have traditionally made use of quantitative measures to assess performance. While contributing towards ranking a port in the worldwide context or even classifying ports according to their size, these provide little information about the quality of the services being offered. The trends in contemporary logistics and the emergence of the new economy mean that successful ports can no longer sustain this approach. It is therefore suggested that ports become agile. Agile ports entail a new approach to measuring port performance. Because its development requires the implementation of a 2-stage integration process, internal and external, it is proposed that a 2-tiered measurement of port performance indicators also be developed. These port measurement indicators, besides considering quantitative aspects, will also focus on qualitative issues as they bring increasing visibility to the port environment and along the transport chain, enhancing a better integration of all supply chain logistics elements. Qualitative performance indicators are at the heart of lean ports and consequently of port networking. Additionally, they support a total quality port management system implementation encouraging continuous improvements. The aim of this paper is to suggest a set of new port performance indicators that measure lean port performance and sustain subsequent development of agile ports.

Request publication

2 + 0 =
Solve this simple math problem and enter the result. E.g. for 1+3, enter 4.

Publication

Library number
TRIS 00977893
Source

International Journal of Transport Management. 2003. 1(4) Pp189-202 (6 Fig., 5 Tab., Refs.)

Our collection

This publication is one of our other publications, and part of our extensive collection of road safety literature, that also includes the SWOV publications.