2010
DOI: 10.1057/mel.2010.2
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Modeling the effects of port disasters

Abstract: A b s t r a c t Weather or terrorism-related disasters at seaports can lead to significant economic losses from vessel and cargo delays. In times of such disasters, port capacities and optimal shipment routings would change rapidly, requiring near real-time analyses for planning response operations. To address this challenge, we offer a decision support system to help port networks analyze disaster response scenarios. As part of the model, an algorithm routes arriving ships to ports to optimize the use of netw… Show more

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Cited by 47 publications
(42 citation statements)
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“…Without such work, the overall business case for slow steaming is ambiguous, and an acceptable trade-off between speed and cost will be difficult to determine. We address this gap below through an extension of a simulation-based model developed by Paul and Maloni (2010).…”
Section: Transit Timesmentioning
confidence: 99%
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“…Without such work, the overall business case for slow steaming is ambiguous, and an acceptable trade-off between speed and cost will be difficult to determine. We address this gap below through an extension of a simulation-based model developed by Paul and Maloni (2010).…”
Section: Transit Timesmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Following recent research (Luo and Grigalunas, 2003;Fan et al, 2009Fan et al, , 2010Paul and Maloni, 2010), we apply a simulation-based optimization approach to replicate a major ocean container lane under varying vessel speeds associated with slow steaming. Specifically, the model examines container flows to/from Asia through the Port of Los Angeles, the largest North American container port.…”
Section: E T H O D O L O G Ymentioning
confidence: 99%
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