Title: Global Transportation
1Chapter 8
2THE BALANCING ACT SECURITY VERSUS GLOBAL COMMERCE
- Prior to 9/11, shipments could clear U.S. ports
and airports in hours. - Today there is more security, inspections,
paperwork that takes much longer. - Balance between security and global commerce.
- Tightened security measures are here to stay and
global shippers are adjusting their shipping
processes and inventories to allow for the added
transit times.
3EXTENT AND MAGNITUDE OF TRADE
- Overview of the North American Free Trade
Agreement (NAFTA) - NAFTA establishes free trade between Canada,
America and Mexico. - The Treaty states the objectives of the three
Countries is based on the principles of an
unimpeded flow of goods, most-favoured- nation
(MFN) status, and a commitment to enhance the
cross-border movement of goods and services.
4- South Africa is part of the SADC (Southern
African Development Community) and the African
Free Trade Zone which is similar to NAFTA.
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6GLOBAL TRANSPORTATION PROVIDERS
- Ocean Transportation
- Types of carriers liners, tramps, and private
vessels - LINERS
- Liners are ships that ply fixed routes on
published schedules. - Liner services are either container or break-
bulk types.
7Liners cont
- Freight must be moved to the liner companys
terminal at the port after the shipper has
arranged freight booking or reservation - Freight is loaded by machine if bulk, or crane if
containerized.
8Liners cont
- Container movement is gaining over the
traditional break-bulk (general cargo) method of
ocean carriage. - When goods have to be heavily crated and packaged
for break-bulk movement, a container often
provides much of that needed protection
9Liners cont
- Break-bulk ship might require many days to unload
and load its cargo by small crane and manpower - An entire container ship can enter, unload, load,
and clear a port in less than 12 hours - Such speed has brought about labour savings to
both the shipper and the liner company, as well
as increased ship (and capital) utilization. - Because a ship is only earning revenue at sea, it
is easy to see why containers have become a
dominant form of packaged-goods shipping.
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11Liners cont
- Container service, although saving port and ship
time, has brought about different operating and
management concerns for the ship company - This service requires a large investment in
containers at sea, delivered inland, loaded - Although a ship might carry 1,000 containers, an
investment of 1,500 to 2,500 containers is
necessary to support that ship
12Liners cont
- With inland movement of containers, control over
this land movement becomes a necessity. - The container itself is a large investment and is
attractive to thieves in areas of warehouse or
housing shortages.
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14Liners cont
- roll-on/roll-off ship, referred to as a RORO
ship. - These ships carry trucks, trailers, and
construction equipment much like a multilevel
ferryboat. - Especially effective when ports dont have cranes
(container with wheels dont a crane)
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16TRAMPS
- The tramp ship is one that is hired like a taxi
or leased auto. - That is, it is a bulk or tank ship that is hired
on a voyage or time basis. - Time charters are usually longer-term charters in
which the shipper will make or arrange for more
than a one-way move. - Such charters are made with or without crews
being provided by the shipowner.
17PRIVATE VESSELS
- Private ships are owned or leased on a long-term
basis by the firm moving the goods. - Many oil ships fit this category, as do
automotive and lumber vessels.
18SHIP REGISTRY
- Although a ship might be U.S.-owned and ply a
route between the United States and the Persian
Gulf, it might be registered in and fly the flag
of Liberia or Panama. These nations represent
what are called flags of convenience. - That is, the owners derive certain benefits of
taxes, manning, and some relaxed safety
requirements by being registered in those
countries, rather than in the United States,
Canada, or wherever. - The top flags of convenience nations include
Panama, Liberia, the Bahamas, Greece, and Malta.
19Air Carriers
- Air transportation offers the global
transportation user speed - Four types of air carriers are available for
international shippers air parcel post, express
or expedited service, passenger, and cargo.
20AIR PARCEL POST
- Air parcel post service is provided by the postal
service of a country and is designed to handle
small packages. - The postal service contracts with an air carrier
to pick up and deliver the item from one country
to another
21EXPRESS OR EXPEDITED SERVICE
- Express or courier service is provided by air
carriers and is generally restricted to small
shipments weighing less than 32 kg. - Speed is the essential characteristic of this
service, with next-day or second-day delivery a
standard service level. - Examples of major carriers providing this service
include Federal Express, United Parcel Service
(UPS), and DHL.
22PASSENGER CARRIERS
- Regularly scheduled international passenger
flights haul freight in the belly of the plane.
- These carriers focus on the movement of
passengers, but the excess capacity in the
nonpassenger compartment permits the transporting
of cargo along with passengers.
23ALLCARGO CARRIERS
- All-cargo carriers specialize in the movement of
freight, not passengers. - The air planes are outfitted with larger hatch
openings, cargo compartments, and floor- bearing
ratings. - Many air cargo planes have mechanized
materials-handling devices on board to permit the
movement of heavier cargo inside the plane.
24ALLCARGO CARRIERS cont
- Some of the larger planes are capable of
transporting a 40-foot container (FEU), trucks,
and other motor vehicles. - Generally, these carriers haul heavier shipments
weighing more than 32 kg. BAX Global, Federal
Express, and UPS Air are examples of U.S. all-
cargo carriers.
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26- Ancillary Services companies provide a variety of
functions that offer the user lower costs,
improved service, and/or technical expertise and
include air freight forwarders, international
freight forwarders, nonvessel operating common
carriers, ship brokers, and ship agents
27AIR FREIGHT FORWARDERS
- The air freight forwarder books space on an air
carriers plane and solicits freight from
numerous shippers to fill the booked space. - The air freight forwarder offers the shipper of
small shipments a rate savings resulting from the
advanced purchase of space
28INTERNATIONAL FREIGHT FORWARDERS
- These firms arrange movement for the shipper.
They do not necessarily act as consolidators or
earn their revenues in the manner like domestic
forwarders. - International freight forwarders act as agents
for shippers by applying familiarity and
expertise with ocean shipping to facilitate
through movement.
29INTERNATIONAL FREIGHT FORWARDERS cont
- They represent the shipper in arranging such
activities as inland transportation, packaging,
documentation, booking, and legal fees - They play an invaluable role for shippers who are
not familiar with the intricacies of shipping or
those who do not have the scale or volume to
warrant having in-house expertise in this area.
30NONVESSEL OPERATING COMMON CARRIERS (NVOCC)
- Nonvessel operating carriers assemble and
disperse less-than-container shipments and move
them as full-container shipments. - They serve much the same role as the domestic
freight forwarders. - A shipper moving a small item would otherwise
have to move it via break-bulk ocean carrier or
air freight.
31NONVESSEL OPERATING COMMON CARRIERS (NVOCC) cont
- The NVOCC consolidates this shipment with many
others and gains the economies of container
movement. - Some NVOCCs operate from inland cities, where
they unload inbound containers and distribute the
goods to consignees. - They in turn solicit outbound freight,
consolidate shipments into the containers, and
move them back to a seaport for outbound
movement.
32NONVESSEL OPERATING COMMON CARRIERS (NVOCC) cont
- The steamship line gains opportunities from
broadened territorial traffic, and it gains
services and control over containers from the
NVOCC solicitations. - Shippers and receivers gain from the shipping
expertise and processes of the NVOCC, as well as
from expanded and simplified import and export
opportunities.
33SHIP BROKERS
- These firms act as middlemen between the tramp
shipowner and a chartering shipper or receiver. - The brokers extensive exposure, contacts, and
knowledge of the overall ship market make them
valuable parties in these arrangements. - They are compensated on the basis of a percentage
of the chartering fees.
34SHIP AGENTS
- Ship agents act on behalf of a liner company or
tramp ship operator (either owner or charter
company) to represent their interests in
facilitating ship arrival, clearance, loading,
unloading, and fee payment while at a specific
port. - Liner firms will use agents when the frequency of
sailings are so sparse that it is not economical
for them to invest in their own terminals or to
have management personnel on site.
35LAND BRIDGES
- The "landbridge" is a generic term meaning use
the land freight as a means of transport
connection. - The landbridge is a way of transporting cargo
from a port or an inland point of origin in the
shipper's country to an inland point or a port of
final destination in the consignee's country
using a combination of usually sea and land, or
air and land, or air, land and sea transports
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37RATE MAKING IN GLOBAL TRANSPORTATION
- Rate making is presented from the standpoint of
three major transportation supply sources
available to shippers air, liners, and chartered
tramp ships.
38Shipping Conferences
- A steamship conference is a voluntary
organization of vessel-operating carriers whose
main function is to set acceptable rates for
steamships and shippers. - The goal of the conference is to maintain a
stable market and fair competition among
carriers. - Another important element of the steamship
conference is to administer operating rules that
guarantee the shipper a consistent level of
service from participating lines.
39Global Air
- AIR CARGO RATE
- Air cargo rates are based on the value of service
or the cost of service - The less sensitive cargo is to rates, the higher
the rate will be. - On traffic lanes where demand is strong and plane
capacity is limited, the air rates will be high,
and vice versa for traffic lanes where supply
exceeds demand.
40AIR CARGO RATE
- Products with high prices or emergency conditions
surrounding the move will be charged high rates
because the freight rate is a small portion (less
than 1 percent) of the landed selling price. - Cost factors enter into air carrier pricing of
cargo.
41AIR CARGO RATE
- Given the limited cargo- carrying capacity of a
plane, space is a premium. - The utilization of this space is related to the
density of the cargo, with low-density cargo
requiring more space per weight unit than
high-density cargo. - Rates are based on a product density
42AIR CARGO RATE cont
- Container rates are also available for cargo
shipped in a container. - The rate is cost based, rather than value of
service or commodity based. - The rate applies to a minimum weight in the
container
43LINER RATE MAKING
- Approximately 80 to 90 percent of total cost is
fixed and 10 to 20 percent is variable. - Liner companies tend to have large overhead costs
in the form of managements that are necessary for
solicitation purposes.
44LINER RATE MAKING cont
- A majority of the total costs of operating a ship
are fixed. - Because cargo loading, unloading, and fuel are
the only primary variable costs, the ships
operation cost is roughly the same regardless of
the commodity hauled.
45LINER RATE MAKING cont
- Ship operators will often determine unit costs in
terms of cost per cubic metre of ship space so as
to better evaluate and price for the range of
commodities handled. - There is a tendency to price according to the
principles of value of service. - That is, a floor of variable costs must be
covered as a minimum then the blend of high- and
low-value-per-kilogram commodities, as well as
the host of traffic elasticities, leads to
pricing according to what the traffic will bear
to maximize revenue.
46THE CONFERENCE OF RATE MAKING
- Liner firms have long banded together into
collective rate-making bodies called steamship
conferences. - Conferences comprise member liner firms only.
- The organization is international in scope
because liner firms of many nations will belong
to one. - They are also territorial in scope.
47THE CONFERENCE OF RATE MAKING cont
- Because ship operators experience a relatively
fixed cost per day, and weight is not necessarily
a variable cost expense, rates are constructed to
also accommodate the density of freight - Many rates are assessed on a weight basis.
- Products that might occupy more of a
proportionate share of space relative to their
weight are often charged on a weight or measure
(W/M) basis
48THE CONFERENCE OF RATE MAKING cont
- Time/volume rates are a rate feature new to ocean
shipping. - The service contract provides for a guaranteed
amount of tonnage or containers over a certain
time period. - The carrier or conference receives the benefit of
a larger or guaranteed amount of tonnage.
49Tramp Ship Cost Rate Factors
- COSTS
- Tramp ships are generally not controlled by a
specific route with a single commodity. - Large oil tankers that are built for time
charters for specific origin-destination markets
are the exception. - The basic tramp vessel might haul coal, grain,
fertilizers, and lumber in the same year
50Tramp Ship Cost cont
- Adaptability is necessary to minimize lost
revenue possibilities that will arise. - These vessels might not always be of low-cost,
optimal design for any of the movements, but that
is a basic trade-off to being flexible.
51Tramp Ship Cost cont
- A major consideration of tramp owners is the
nation in which the ship is registered. - The nation of registry requires the shipowner to
comply with specific manning, safety, and tax
provisions.
52TRAMP SHIP RATE MAKING
- A tramp shipowner experiences costs, like those
of the liner, that are largely fixed in nature. - Ownership costs present themselves in
depreciation and interest costs. - Fuel is not as greatly variable with the
commodity weight load, as is ship speed or at-sea
versus port time. - The key is that the shipowner minimizes empty
nonrevenue miles and days.
53TRAMP SHIP RATE MAKING cont
- Three primary forms of ship rental or chartering
systems are in use. These are the voyage, time,
and bareboat or demise charter
54TRAMP SHIP RATE MAKING cont
- The voyage charter is one in which the shipowner
mans, operates, and charters the vessel, similar
to a taxicab for a specific voyage. - Shippers seek voyage charters for primarily
one-way and sometimes two-way trips. - The owner is constantly seeking charters
subsequent to present charters to minimize empty
moves to the next charter.
55TRAMP SHIP RATE MAKING cont
- The time charter is one in which the shipowner
rents the vessel and crew to a shipper for use
over a period of time that often includes use for
several shipments. - The owner has his or her ship productively tied
up for a longer period of time than in the voyage
charter, and the shipper might judiciously
arrange the moves, making the time charter more
economical than several voyage charters.
56TRAMP SHIP RATE MAKING cont
- The bareboat or demise charter is one in which
the owner usually rents the vessel for a long
period of time while the chartering party
supplies the crew and performs the physical
operation of the vessel. - In this setting, the owner is seeking to recoup
capital and interest costs and to be assured that
the ship will be safely operated.
57ROLE OF PORT AUTHORITIES IN GLOBAL TRANSPORTATION
- The term port authority applies to a state or
local government that owns, operates, or
otherwise provides wharf, dock, and other
terminal investments at ports. - The primary reasons for the existence of these
organizations are to allow for comprehensive
planning, to provide the large physical
investment base, and to provide for certain
political needs within the area.
58- Port authorities roles includes
- Ownership of all waterfront rights and renting of
waterside access rights to shipping companies and
terminal firms. - Developing waterways and pier terminal facilities
and renting them to users short- and long-term
bases) who do not have the scale of operations to
support or perhaps do not wish to actually own
such assets.
59Port authorities roles includes cont
- This capital financing role is perhaps the major
benefit provided by these port authorities. - Port authorities also promote overall trade
through their port areas - This includes industrial development efforts, the
offering of favorable financing, representation
before regulatory bodies, and the encouragement
of adequate transportation facilities on land.
60Transnet National Ports Authority
- The national ports authority is responsible for
the safe, effective and efficient economic
functioning of the national port system, which it
manages in a landlord capacity. - The national ports authority provides port
infrastructure and marine services at the eight
commercial seaports in South Africa.
61Transnet National Ports Authority
- The core functions of the national ports
authority are as follows - To plan, provide, maintain and improve port
infrastructure - to provide or arrange marine-related services
- to ensure the provision of port services,
including the management of port activities and
the port regulatory function at all south African
ports and - to provide aids to navigation and assistance to
the maneuvering of vessels within port limits and
along the coast.
62FUTURE OF GLOBAL TRANSPORTATION
- Global transportation will grow in importance as
more manufacturing and merchandising firms become
involved in overseas sourcing and marketing. - The cloud on the global trade horizon is
nationalism. This ranges from tariff protection
to political constraints and home flag carrier
protection. ????
63FUTURE OF GLOBAL TRANSPORTATION cont
- Such nationalism tends to appear whenever a home
industry is threatened by foreign competition or
forces. - The Jones Act in the United States, which
requires domestic movements only by U.S. flag
ships and domestic airlines, is one such example,
though not a significant one on the world scene - END