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Projects: Projects for Investigator
Reference Number EP/N02222X/1
Title Freight Traffic Control 2050: transforming the energy demands of last-mile urban freight through collaborative logistics
Status Completed
Energy Categories Energy Efficiency(Transport) 40%;
Not Energy Related 60%;
Research Types Basic and strategic applied research 100%
Science and Technology Fields SOCIAL SCIENCES (Economics and Econometrics) 30%;
SOCIAL SCIENCES (Town and Country Planning) 20%;
SOCIAL SCIENCES (Business and Management Studies) 20%;
PHYSICAL SCIENCES AND MATHEMATICS (Statistics and Operational Research) 20%;
ENGINEERING AND TECHNOLOGY (Architecture and the Built Environment) 10%;
UKERC Cross Cutting Characterisation Not Cross-cutting 75%;
Systems Analysis related to energy R&D (Other Systems Analysis) 25%;
Principal Investigator Dr TJ Cherrett
No email address given
Faculty of Engineering and the Environment
University of Southampton
Award Type Standard
Funding Source EPSRC
Start Date 01 April 2016
End Date 30 August 2019
Duration 41 months
Total Grant Value £1,161,862
Industrial Sectors Energy; Transport Systems and Vehicles
Region South East
Programme Energy : Energy
 
Investigators Principal Investigator Dr TJ Cherrett , Faculty of Engineering and the Environment, University of Southampton (99.995%)
  Other Investigator Dr M Zaltz Austwick , Centre for Advanced Spatial Analysis, University College London (0.001%)
Dr M I Piecyk , Sch of Management and Languages, Heriot-Watt University (0.001%)
Professor N Davies , Computing, Lancaster University (0.001%)
Dr AJ Friday , Computing, Lancaster University (0.001%)
Professor T Bektas , Southampton Management School, University of Southampton (0.001%)
Web Site
Objectives
Abstract CONTEXT OF THE RESEARCH: Freight transport accounts for 16% of all motorised road vehicle activity in British towns and cities and is therefore a major consumer of fossil fuels and contributor to CO2 and air pollution. In London, road freight transport accounts for 23%, 36% and 39% of total road-based CO2, NOx and PM10 emissions respectively. Van traffic is forecast to grow strongly as a result of:1) Growing demand for new ways of buying goods and fulfilling deliveries including online shopping.2) Expanding urban populations through greater levels of urbanisation and migration patterns.3) Urban de-industrialisation and the rise of the service-based economy.4) Increasing demand for outsourced servicing functions such as the provision of utilities and construction.5) Logistics sprawl, with warehouses relocated to the edge of the urban area result in longer journeys.Unlike many other sectors, the freight industry has few barriers to new entrants and is a highly competitive marketplace characterised by low-profit margins and a proliferation of operators. Due to the fierce competition that exists, these carriers traditionally operate in isolation of each other with poor vehicle utilisation rates and delivery rounds that overlap, leading to increased traffic congestion, pollution and demands for energy.Aims and Objectives: Our research vision is to understand the extent to which closer operational collaboration between parcel carriers offers the potential to reduce urban traffic and energy demand whilst still maintaining customer service levels, and to what extent such relationships can develop naturally within a commercial setting or whether a 3rd party 'Freight Traffic Controller' (FTC) would be instrumental to ensure the equitable distribution of demand across an urban area. Our key research objectives are to:1. Investigate the collective transport and energy impacts of current parcel carrier activities;2. Create a database to gather and interrogate collection and delivery schedules supplied by different carriers;3. Use the data with a series of optimisation algorithms to investigate the potential transport and energy benefits if carriers were to share deliveries and collections more equitably between them and develop tools to help visualise those benefits;4. Evaluate what business models would be needed to enable carriers to collaborate in this way;5. Investigate the role a 3rd party 'Freight Traffic Controller' could play in stimulating collaboration between carriers to reduce energy demand and vehicle impacts across a city;6. Identify the key legal and privacy issues associated with the receipt, processing and visualisation of such collaborative schedules. POTENTIAL APPLICATIONS AND BENEFITS: Our research outcomes will be trialled by TNT and Gnewt Cargo as part of the project and will provide them and other carriers with evidence of the tangible benefits from adopting collaborative collection and delivery schedulemanagement for better utilising their vehicles in urban centres. Should the business models prove successful, they will be transferable to other important sectors of urban freight transport (e.g. construction, waste, food and service-based logistics). We will also provide policy insight to Transport for London and other urban planning authorities into the merits of the FTC concept for controlling freight vehicles entering their urban centres and aiding their directive of introducing CO2 free city logistics by 2030. System designers looking to commercially develop the FTC concept will benefit from our approaches for integrating, modelling and visualising vast data sets for collaborative decision support, and how to navigate the commercial and privacy issues associated with handling multi-client data. The Operational Research community will benefit from the optimisation and gaming models as they will give a new insight into how such tools can be effectively used with very large data sets
Publications (none)
Final Report (none)
Added to Database 23/08/16