its and freight transport - an urban perspective

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Stora Hamnkanalen by Mikael Tigerström on Flickr (CC-BY) ITS AND FREIGHT TRANSPORT - AN URBAN PERSPECTIVE Per Olof Arnäs Chalmers University of Technology @Dr_PO [email protected] about.me/perolofarnas Slides: slideshare.net/poar

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When it comes to urban freight, we face large challenges regarding ITS. This talk (45 minutes) presents a number of issues where the freight transport industry needs to upgrade/enter the 21st century and embrace developments like Big data.

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Page 1: ITS and freight transport - an urban perspective

Stora Hamnkanalen by Mikael Tigerström on Flickr (CC-BY)

ITS AND FREIGHT TRANSPORT - AN URBAN PERSPECTIVE

Per Olof Arnäs Chalmers University of Technology

@Dr_PO [email protected]

about.me/perolofarnas Slides: slideshare.net/poar

Page 2: ITS and freight transport - an urban perspective

Northern LEAD Logistics Research Centre

Founded by: Chalmers University of Technology

University of Gothenburg Logistics and Transport Society LTS

Page 3: ITS and freight transport - an urban perspective

Professors 10 Visiting Professors 6 Associate Professors 5 Post docs 6 Faculty 14 PhD students 32 Total 73

Five core research groups

Physical Distribution

Production Logistics

Industrial marketing & purchasing

Logistics & Transport

Optimization

Page 4: ITS and freight transport - an urban perspective

Demographic and social

change

Shift in economic

power

Rapid urbanisation

Technological breakthroughsClimate

change and resource scarcity

5 GLOBAL TRENDS

Page 5: ITS and freight transport - an urban perspective

Things are happening outside the freight industry

(and have been for some time)

Page 6: ITS and freight transport - an urban perspective

We are in the middle of a gigantic exponential development curve

beginning

Page 7: ITS and freight transport - an urban perspective

A new global eco system where new types of, knowledge based,

industries compete with traditional ones

http://jaysimons.deviantart.com/art/Map-of-the-Internet-1-0-427143215

Page 8: ITS and freight transport - an urban perspective

Startups don’t compete with airlines...

by purchasing a bunch of planeshiring a bunch of pilots

and locking up a bunch of terminals at airports.

Quote: bryce.vc/post/18404303850/the-problem-with-innovation Image: Connecting the community, my Twitter strategy, and American Airlines at DFW by Trey Ratcliff on Flickr (CC-BY,NC,SA)

Page 9: ITS and freight transport - an urban perspective

Startups compete with airlines by inventing videoconferencing.

Startups don’t compete with airlines...

by purchasing a bunch of planeshiring a bunch of pilots

and locking up a bunch of terminals at airports.

Quote: bryce.vc/post/18404303850/the-problem-with-innovation Image: Connecting the community, my Twitter strategy, and American Airlines at DFW by Trey Ratcliff on Flickr (CC-BY,NC,SA)

Page 10: ITS and freight transport - an urban perspective

ICT MaturityApp

"Multi-Touch" by DaveLawler on Flickr (CC-BY)

Page 11: ITS and freight transport - an urban perspective

Intelligent Transport Systems (ITS) are advanced applications which without

embodying intelligence as such aim to provide innovative services relating to different modes of transport and

traffic management and enable various users to be better informed and make

safer, more coordinated and ‘smarter’ use of transport

networks.

ITS DIRECTIVE 2010/40/EU

Page 12: ITS and freight transport - an urban perspective

In other words:

We use computers to make transportation better.

(That doesn’t sound so hard, does it?)

Page 13: ITS and freight transport - an urban perspective

RESOURCE UTILISATION LOW

Source: Kent Lumsden

Safety imbalance Variation in resource demand

Chain imbalance Caused by the chain

Technological imbalance E.g. mismatch in equipment

Operational imbalance Goods and resource flow not compatible

Structural imbalance Uneven transport demand

Page 14: ITS and freight transport - an urban perspective

RESOURCE UTILISATION LOW

Source: Kent Lumsden

Safety imbalance Variation in resource demand

Chain imbalance Caused by the chain

Technological imbalance E.g. mismatch in equipment

Operational imbalance Goods and resource flow not compatible

Structural imbalance Uneven transport demand

Several of these imbalances can be

reduced by reducing

uncertainties

Page 15: ITS and freight transport - an urban perspective

But the biggest problem in transportation is time.

There is not enough of it. Ever.

In S

ea

rch

Of

Lo

st T

ime

by

bo

ge

nfr

eu

nd

on

Flic

kr

Page 16: ITS and freight transport - an urban perspective

Strategic Tactical Operational Predictive

Time horizons Freight industry

Most (preferably all) decisions in the

transportation industry are made here. At the latest.

Uninformed, ad-hoc, and

probably non optimal,

decisions

Science fiction

Page 17: ITS and freight transport - an urban perspective

The transport industry does not like real-time decisions.

At all.

Batch-handling

Zip codes Zones

Time-tables

DSC_9073.jpg by James England on Flickr (CC-BY)

Page 18: ITS and freight transport - an urban perspective

Image: Alain Delorme, alaindelorme.com

The current model is focused on economy of scale and standardization

Page 19: ITS and freight transport - an urban perspective

The current paradigm

Page 20: ITS and freight transport - an urban perspective

Process improvement

Servic

e

developm

entInfrastructure

development

Customer controls last

mile

Faster and better

returns

Better delivery

experience

Secure identification on pickup/delivery

Distribution of food

Home delivery

Support companies that want to add E-commerce to their business

Collect-in-store

Local same-day delivery

Improved delivery note

Delivery and pickup during

weekends

Marketing of the E-channel

Sustainable and climate friendly

3PL targeted at E-commerce

Faster, more reliable and secure

deliveries in Europe

Better infrastructure on consumer side

Better security

Source: Svensk Digital Handel 2014 Bo Zetterqvist

Areas of development for logistics companies in relation to e-commerce

Page 21: ITS and freight transport - an urban perspective

Process improvement

Servic

e

developm

entInfrastructure

development

Customer controls last mile

Faster and better

returns

Better delivery

experience

Secure identification on pickup/delivery

Distribution of food

Home delivery

Support companies that want to add E-commerce to their business

Collect-in-store

Local same-day delivery

Improved delivery note

Delivery and pickup during

weekends

Marketing of the E-channel

Sustainable and climate

friendly

3PL targeted at E-commerce

Faster, more reliable and

secure deliveries in Europe

Better infrastructure on consumer side

Better security

Source: Svensk Digital Handel 2014 Bo Zetterqvist

Areas of development for logistics companies in relation to e-commerce

Digital development

needed in freight

transport

Page 22: ITS and freight transport - an urban perspective

Customer controls last mile

Faster and better

returns

Better delivery

experience

Secure identification

on pickup/delivery

Collect-in-store

Improved delivery note

Sustainable and climate

friendly3PL targeted at

E-commerce

Faster, more reliable and

secure deliveries in

Europe

Better security

Source: Svensk Digital Handel 2014 Bo Zetterqvist

Digital development needed in freight transport

Process improvement Use ICT to make the system more efficient

Real-time decision making, footprinting, better digital interaction between stakeholders

Service development Use ICT to create new services

Digital information enables new business models

Infrastructure development Use ICT to interact with infrastructure

Location Based Intelligence etc.

Page 23: ITS and freight transport - an urban perspective

Customer controls last mile

Faster and better

returns

Better delivery

experience

Secure identification

on pickup/delivery

Collect-in-store

Improved delivery note

Sustainable and climate

friendly3PL targeted at

E-commerce

Faster, more reliable and

secure deliveries in

Europe

Better security

Source: Svensk Digital Handel 2014 Bo Zetterqvist

Digital development needed in freight transport

Process improvement Use ICT to make the system more efficient

Real-time decision making, footprinting, better digital interaction between stakeholders

Service development Use ICT to create new services

Digital information enables new business models

Infrastructure development Use ICT to interact with infrastructure

Location Based Intelligence etc.

The freight industry has work to do…

Page 24: ITS and freight transport - an urban perspective

So…

What are we doing about all

this?

Page 25: ITS and freight transport - an urban perspective

Gartners Hype Cycle for Emerging Technologies

Augmenting humans with technology

Machines replacing humans

Humans and machines working

alongside each other

Machines better

understanding humans and

the environment

Humans better understanding

machines

Machines and humans

becoming smarter

Page 26: ITS and freight transport - an urban perspective

Gartners Hype Cycle for Emerging Technologies

Source: Gartner August 2014

Page 27: ITS and freight transport - an urban perspective

Could affect freight transport

Gartners Hype Cycle for Emerging Technologies

Page 28: ITS and freight transport - an urban perspective

Business processes Infrastructure

Paper based Phone

Papers

Road signsAnalogue

tools

RDS

Monitor fuel

cosnumption

Digitalisation version 0 0.5 1.0 1.5 2.0

E-m

ail

Fax

TMS

-

systems

Excel

Route planning

GPS for n

avigatio

n

Electro

nically

genera

ted

freig

ht docum

ents

Barcodes

RFI

D-t

ags

Simple order handling

Advanced order handling

Open interface

Web

based UI

Platform based

systems

Hardw

are-

oriented

Data collection

systems

(prop

rietary)

Com

munication w

ith

vehicles

E-invoice

Web based

booking

Route optimisation

Th

e so

cia

l web

Open connectivity

Integrated

prognosis

Data collection

systems (open)

Tolling

systems

Webservices with

traffic data

Dyn

amic

ro

utin

g sy

stem

s

Pe

rform

an

ce

Ba

sed

ac

ce

ss

Pe

rfo

rma

nc

e

Ba

sed

ac

ce

ss

Mas

hups

Mul

tiple

dat

a so

urce

s

Pro

be

dat

a

Individual

routin

g

inform

ation

Platooning

PlatooningExceptions handling

Sm

art g

ood

s

Manual

Computers

Software

Functions

Dis

trib

uted

deci

sion

m

akin

g

Goods as bi-

directio

nal

hyperlink

Paper based

CC-BY Per Olof Arnäs, Chalmers

Goods VehicleBarcodes  

RFID  Sensors

ERP systems  TMS systems  

E-invoices  Cloudbased

services

Order handling  Driver support  Vehicle economics

RDS-TMC  Road taxes  Active traffic support

Predictive

maintenance

2014-10-15

Page 29: ITS and freight transport - an urban perspective

Increasing freight transport demand

http://www.eea.europa.eu/data-and-maps/figures/freight-transport-activity-growth-for-eu-25

EU-25

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Focus on transportation!

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OpportunitiesDigitalisation Increasing goods volumes

New technology

Political

interest

Quad Aces by fitzsean on Flickr

Page 32: ITS and freight transport - an urban perspective

Strategic Tactical Operational Predictive

Time horizons

We are approaching this boundary

…and we are starting to move past it!

Real-time!

Page 33: ITS and freight transport - an urban perspective

Goods

Vehicles

Business processes

Infrastructure

Stra-tegic

Tac-tical

Opera-tional

Pre-dictiveWhat happens

when access to real-time data increases?

not quite clear on the concept by woodleywonderworks on Flickr (CC-BY)

Page 34: ITS and freight transport - an urban perspective

The Action of New York City by Trey Ratcliff on Flickr (CC-BY,NC,SA)

Need for speed

Data collection

Data processingData

exploitation

Page 35: ITS and freight transport - an urban perspective

En la cima! by Alejandro Juárez on Flickr (CC-BY)

3 mountaintops to climb…

Page 36: ITS and freight transport - an urban perspective

En la cima! by Alejandro Juárez on Flickr (CC-BY)

3 data types

Mountaintop #1

Collection of data in real-time

Fixed Historical Snapshot

Page 37: ITS and freight transport - an urban perspective

En la cima! by Alejandro Juárez on Flickr (CC-BY)

Mountaintop #1

Collection of data in real-time

5 data domainsVehicle CargoDriver Company

Infrastructure/facility

at leas

t…

Page 38: ITS and freight transport - an urban perspective

LengthWeightWidthHeight

Capacity+ other PBS-criteria

EmissionsFuel consumption

Route

PositionSpeed

Direction

WeightOrigin

Destination Accepted ETA

Temperature+ other state variables

Temperature + other state variables

Education/training

Speed (ISA)Rest/break schedule

Traffic behaviour Belt usage

Alco lock history

Schedule status (time to next break etc.)

Contracts/ agreements Previous interactions Backoffice support

Fixed Historical Snapshot

Vehicle

Cargo

Driver

Company

Infrastructure/facility

Map + fixed data layers Traffic history

Current traffic Queue

Availability

DATA MATRIX

Page 39: ITS and freight transport - an urban perspective

Mountaintop #2

Processing of data in real-time

En la cima! by Alejandro Juárez on Flickr (CC-BY)

Locals and Tourists #1 (GTWA #2): London by Eric Fischer on Flickr

Page 40: ITS and freight transport - an urban perspective

Mountaintop #2

Processing of data in real-time

En la cima! by Alejandro Juárez on Flickr (CC-BY)

Page 41: ITS and freight transport - an urban perspective

Mountaintop #3

Exploiting data in real-time

En la cima! by Alejandro Juárez on Flickr (CC-BY)

Connected. 362/365 by AndYaDontStop on Flickr (CC-BY)

Lisa for I/O Keynote by Max Braun on Flickr (CC-BY)

Fulham-Manchester United 24-02-2007 by vuhlser on Flickr (CC-

BY)

Page 42: ITS and freight transport - an urban perspective

Requirement

Transport 1

Transport 2

Page 43: ITS and freight transport - an urban perspective

Requirement

Transport 1

Transport 2

No access!

Full access!

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Smart access/guidance control

Page 45: ITS and freight transport - an urban perspective

Smart access/guidance control

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Smart access/guidance control

Page 47: ITS and freight transport - an urban perspective

Smart access/guidance control

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Requirements. Different.

Port area

City center

Freight terminal

Bridge

Page 49: ITS and freight transport - an urban perspective

CASES (MANY)

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CASES (MANY MORE)

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Big data in freight transport

Film by Foursquare. Google: checkins foursquare

Page 52: ITS and freight transport - an urban perspective

”Fast Up-and-Coming Movers Toward the Peak Are Fueled by Digital Business and Payments”

”…the market has settled into a reasonable set of approaches, and the new technologies and practices are additive to existing solutions” (regarding the decline of Big data on the curve)

Gartner, August 2014

Gartners Hype Cycle for Emerging Technologies

Page 53: ITS and freight transport - an urban perspective

So…

What is Big data?

80 by Phil Dragash on Flickr (CC-BY,NC,SA)

Page 54: ITS and freight transport - an urban perspective

2011 2013 2015

”Big data is an all-encompassing term for any collection of data sets so large and complex that it becomes difficult to process using on-hand data management tools or traditional data processing applications.”

- Wikipedia

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Jawbone measures sleep interruption during earthquake

https://jawbone.com/blog/napa-earthquake-effect-on-sleep/

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Not statistics

Exhausted by Adrian Sampson on Flickr (CC-BY)

just

Page 57: ITS and freight transport - an urban perspective

Not Business

Intelligence

Basingstoke Office Staff Desk "No computer" by John Sheldon on Flickr (CC-BY,NC,SA)

just

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http://dashburst.com/infographic/big-data-volume-variety-velocity/

Page 59: ITS and freight transport - an urban perspective

Human resources

Reduction in driver turnover, driver

assignment, using sentiment data

analysis

Real-time capacity availability

Inventory management

Examples of applications in freight (Waller and Fawcett, 2013)

Transportation management

Optimal routing, taking into account weather,

traffic congestion, and driver characteristics

Time of delivery, factoring in weather,

driver characteristics, time of day and date

Forecasting

Waller, M. A. and Fawcett, S. E. (2013), Data Science, Predictive Analytics, and Big Data: A Revolution That Will Transform Supply Chain Design and Management. JOURNAL OF BUSINESS LOGISTICS, 34: 77–84

Page 60: ITS and freight transport - an urban perspective

smile! by Judy van der Velden (CC-BY,NC,SA)

Speculative shipping

http://www.scdigest.com/ontarget/14-01-21-1.php?cid=7767

Page 61: ITS and freight transport - an urban perspective

http://www.scdigest.com/ontarget/14-01-21-1.php?cid=7767

Speculative shipping Package item(s) as a package for

eventual shipment to a delivery address

Associate unique ID with package

Select destination geographic area for package

Ship package to selected distribution geographic area without completely

specifying delivery address

Orders satisfied by item(s)

received?

Package redirected?

Determine package location

Convey delivery address, package ID to delivery location

Assign delivery address to package

Deliver package to delivery address

Convey indication of new destination geographic area and package ID to

current location

Yes

Yes

No

No

smile! by Judy van der Velden (CC-BY,NC,SA)

Page 62: ITS and freight transport - an urban perspective

7Big Data Best Practice Across Industries

Usage of data in order to:Increase Level of TransparencyOptimize ResourceConsumption Improve Process Qualityand Performance

Increase customersloyalty and retentionPerforming precisecustomer segmentationand targetingOptimize customerinteraction and service

Expanding revenuestreams from existingproductsCreating new revenuestreams from entirelynew (data) products

Exploit data for: Capitalize on data by:

New Business Models

Customer Experience

OperationalEfficiency

Use data to: • Increase level of

transparency• Optimize resource

consumption • Improve process quality

and performance

Exploit data to: • Increase customer

loyalty and retention• Perform precise customer

segmentation and targeting • Optimize customer interaction

and service

Capitalize on data by: • Expanding revenue streams

from existing products • Creating new revenue

streams from entirely new (data) products

New Business ModelsCustomer ExperienceOperational Efficiency

Figure 4: Value dimensions for Big Data use cases; Source: DPDHL / Detecon

2.1 Operational Efficiency

For metropolitan police departments, the task of tracking down criminals to preserve public safety can sometimes be tedious. With many siloed information repositories, casework often involves making manual connection of many data points. This takes times and dramatically slows case resolution. Moreover, road policing resources are deployed reactively, making it very difficult to catch criminals in the act. In most cases, it is not possible to resolve these challenges by increasing police staffing, as government budgets are limited.

One authority that is leveraging its various data sources is the New York Police Department (NYPD). By capturing and connecting pieces of crime-related information, it hopes to stay one step ahead of the perpetrators of crime.6 Long before the term Big Data was coined, the NYPD made an effort to break up the compartmentalization of its data ingests (e.g., data from 911 calls, investigation reports, and more). With a single view of all the informa-

tion related to one particular crime, officers achieve a more coherent, real-time picture of their cases. This shift has significantly sped up retrospective analysis and allows the NYPD to take action earlier in tracking down individual criminals.

The steadily decreasing rates of violent crime in New York7 have been attributed not only to this more effective streamlining of the many data items required to perform casework but also to a fundamental change in policing practice.8 By introducing statistical analysis and georaphical mapping of crime spots, the NYPD has been able to create a “bigger picture” to guide resource deployment and patrol practice.

Now the department can recognize crime patterns using computational analysis, and this delivers insights enabling each commanding officer to proactively identify hot spots of criminal activity.

6 “NYPD changes the crime control equation by the way it uses information”, IBM; cf. https://www-01.ibm.com/software/success/cssdb.nsf/CS/JSTS-6PFJAZ7 “Index Crimes By Region”, New York State Division of Criminal Justice Services, May 2013, cf. http://www.criminaljustice.ny.gov/crimnet/ojsa/stats.htm8 “Compstat and Organizational Change in the Lowell Police Department”, Willis et. al., Police Foundation, 2004; cf. http://www.policefoundation.org/

content/compstat-and-organizational-change-lowell-police-department

2.1.1 Utilizing data to predict crime hotspots

DHL 2013: ”Big Data in Logistics”

Page 63: ITS and freight transport - an urban perspective

Measure real-time

system behaviour

Emil Johansson - EJOH.SE

Page 64: ITS and freight transport - an urban perspective

http://blog.digital.telefonica.com/?press-release=telefonica-dynamic-insights-launches-smart-steps-in-the-uk

Vizualisation

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Created by Oliver O'Brien (UCL Geography/UCL CASA)

Page 66: ITS and freight transport - an urban perspective

Vizualisation/combination

Page 67: ITS and freight transport - an urban perspective

Vizualisation/combination

Page 68: ITS and freight transport - an urban perspective

Predict future events

Page 69: ITS and freight transport - an urban perspective

Manage complex systems

Image from: http://www.as-coa.org/watchlisten/ascoa-visits-rios-operations-center

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Avoid unpleasant surprises

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Domain knowledge critical!

See for instance: Waller, M. A. and Fawcett, S. E. (2013), Data Science, Predictive Analytics, and Big Data: A Revolution

That Will Transform Supply Chain Design and Management. JOURNAL OF BUSINESS LOGISTICS, 34: 77–84

Data scientists - the new superstars

"Data Science Venn Diagram" by Drew Conway - Own work. Licensed under Creative Commons Attribution-Share Alike 3.0 via Wikimedia Commons - http://commons.wikimedia.org/wiki/File:Data_Science_Venn_Diagram.png#mediaviewer/File:Data_Science_Venn_Diagram.png

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Challenges

The Challenger by Martín Vinacur on Flickr (CC-BY)

Page 73: ITS and freight transport - an urban perspective

Challenges

The Challenger by Martín Vinacur on Flickr (CC-BY)

Company

Page 74: ITS and freight transport - an urban perspective

Challenges

The Challenger by Martín Vinacur on Flickr (CC-BY)

Company

Supply chain, simple

Page 75: ITS and freight transport - an urban perspective

Challenges

The Challenger by Martín Vinacur on Flickr (CC-BY)

Company

Supply chain, simple

Supply chain, complex

Page 76: ITS and freight transport - an urban perspective

Challenges

The Challenger by Martín Vinacur on Flickr (CC-BY)

Company

Supply chain, simple

Supply chain, complex

Eco system

Page 77: ITS and freight transport - an urban perspective

Challenges

The Challenger by Martín Vinacur on Flickr (CC-BY)

Cross-disciplinary

Cross-industries

Cross-borders

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The Challenger by Martín Vinacur on Flickr (CC-BY)

Not all ideas age with grace

Page 79: ITS and freight transport - an urban perspective

The Challenger by Martín Vinacur on Flickr (CC-BY)

Not everyone will want to adopt new things…

Page 80: ITS and freight transport - an urban perspective

Customer controls last mile

Faster and better

returns

Better delivery

experience

Secure identification

on pickup/delivery

Collect-in-store

Improved delivery note

Sustainable and climate

friendly3PL targeted at

E-commerce

Faster, more reliable and

secure deliveries in

Europe

Better security

Source: Svensk Digital Handel 2014 Bo Zetterqvist

Digital development needed in freight transport

Process improvement Use ICT to make the system more efficient

Real-time decision making, footprinting, better digital interaction between stakeholders

Service development Use ICT to create new services

Digital information enables new business models

Infrastructure development Use ICT to interact with infrastructure

Location Based Intelligence etc.

Page 81: ITS and freight transport - an urban perspective

Customer controls last mile

Faster and better

returns

Better delivery

experience

Secure identification

on pickup/delivery

Collect-in-store

Improved delivery note

Sustainable and climate

friendly3PL targeted at

E-commerce

Faster, more reliable and

secure deliveries in

Europe

Better security

Source: Svensk Digital Handel 2014 Bo Zetterqvist

Digital development needed in freight transport

Process improvement Use ICT to make the system more efficient

Real-time decision making, footprinting, better digital interaction between stakeholders

Service development Use ICT to create new services

Digital information enables new business models

Infrastructure development Use ICT to interact with infrastructure

Location Based Intelligence etc.

The freight industry has work to do…

Page 82: ITS and freight transport - an urban perspective

Even if it hurts.

Page 83: ITS and freight transport - an urban perspective

It’s not business as usual.

This is the internet happening to freight

transport.

There is no ’usual’ anymore.

Hello Kitty Darth Vader by JD Hancock on Flickr (CC-BY)

Page 84: ITS and freight transport - an urban perspective

It’s not business as usual.

Get used to it.

This is the internet happening to freight

transport.

There is no ’usual’ anymore.

Hello Kitty Darth Vader by JD Hancock on Flickr (CC-BY)

Page 85: ITS and freight transport - an urban perspective
Page 86: ITS and freight transport - an urban perspective

Stora Hamnkanalen by Mikael Tigerström on Flickr (CC-BY)

ITS AND FREIGHT TRANSPORT - AN URBAN PERSPECTIVE

Per Olof Arnäs Chalmers University of Technology

@Dr_PO [email protected]

about.me/perolofarnas Slides: slideshare.net/poar