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TRANSPORT MANAGEMENT. RENUKA MEHRA LECTURER B.B.A.III GCCBA-42. INTRODUCTION. Transportation is the main artery of logistics and supply chain management. Transportation means movement of goods and persons from one place to another.
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TRANSPORT MANAGEMENT RENUKA MEHRA LECTURER B.B.A.III GCCBA-42
INTRODUCTION • Transportation is the main artery of logistics and supply chain management. • Transportation means movement of goods and persons from one place to another. • Transportation plays a significant role in supply chain processes because products are rarely produced and consumed in the same locations.
Definition • According to Marshal, “ The transport industries, which undertakes nothing mere movements in persons and things from one place to another, have constituted one of the most important activities of men in every stage is advanced civilization.”
Features of Transport System • Transport infrastructure is capital intensive • Creation of transport infrastructure requires time • Involves huge cost • Provide linkage between production and consumption • Effective use of energy is a critical aspect of transport sector
Transport Cost Elements • Tariff of transport mode • Transit time cost • Obsolescence cost • Packaging cost • Insurance cost • Breakage • Miscellaneous Cost
Role of Transportation • Widening of market • Economies of large scale production • Transport increases the economic efficiency or resources • Increases the mobility of labour and capital • Transport curbs monopoly of the traders • Stability in prices
Contd. • Transport is the basic service for increasing national income • Transport helps to create new economic activity • Specialization and division of labour • Transport enlarges the trading activities of a country • Increases employment oppurtunities
Parties in Transportation • Common Carrier • Contract carries • Exempt carriers • Private carriers
Basic elements of Transportation • Vehicle or carrier to carry passengers or goods • Route or path • Terminal facilities for loading and unloading of goods and passengers from carriers • Involvement of time • Involvement of cost • Prime mover or energy • Cargo
Main task in transportation management • An assessment of the transport requirement is made • The mode of transport is selected by the distribution manager by considering the cost factors, the product to be transported and the market to be tapped • The distribution manager decides the route • A detailed operational plan is developed for each product and supply warehouse
Modes of Transport • Land Transport • Water Transport • Air Transport • Pipe-lines
1) Land Transport Land transport can be further be classified in to- • Pathways • Roadways • Tramways • Railways
2) Water Transport • Inland water transport consist of river and canal transport • Ocean transport
Selection of mode of transport • Speed • Cost • Flexibility • Regularity • Safety • Nature of commodity • Special service • Distance • Versatility • Transit time
Transport pricing • Pricing plays a major role in transport in many countries. • Efficiency leads to the rule that prices are based on marginal social cost implying that the marginal benefits of transport activities equal the marginal social costs.
Contd. • These social costs usually depends on four elements • Cost related to time • Cost of inputs acquired via the private market • Costs related to the services rendered by the public sector • External costs imposed on others
Methods of Transport Pricing • Cost based pricing • Pricing method based on competition • Distance based pricing
Transport infrastructure in India • Railways. Indian Railways is one of the largest railways under single management. • It carries some 17 million passengers and 2 million tonnes of freight a day in year 2007 and is one of the world’s largest employers. • The railways play a leading role in carrying passengers and cargo across India's vast territory. However, most of its major corridors have capacity constraint requiring capacity enhancement plans.
Roads • Roads are the dominant mode of transportation in India today. • They carry almost 90 percent of the country’s passenger traffic and 65 percent of its freight. • The density of India’s highway network -- at 0.66 km of highway per square kilometer of land – is similar to that of the United States (0.65) and much greater than China's (0.16) or Brazil's (0.20).
Contd. • However, most highways in India are narrow and congested with poor surface quality, and 40 percent of India’s villages do not have access to all-weather roads.
Ports • India has 12 major and 187 minor and intermediate ports along its more than 7500 km long coastline. • These ports serve the country’s growing foreign trade in petroleum products, iron ore, and coal, as well as the increasing movement of containers. • Inland water transportation remains largely undeveloped despite India's 14,000 kilometers of navigable rivers and canals.
Aviation • India has 125 airports, including 11 international airports. • Indian airports handled 96 million passengers and 1.5 million tonnes of cargo in year 2006-2007, an increase of 31.4% for passenger and 10.6% for cargo traffic over previous year. • The dramatic increase in air traffic for both passengers and cargo in recent years has placed a heavy strain on the country's major airports. • Passenger traffic is projected to cross 100 million and cargo to cross 3.3 million tonnes by year 2010.
Challenges • India’s roads are congested and of poor quality • Rural areas have poor • The railways are facing severe capacity constraints • Urban centres are severely congested • Ports are congested and inefficient
Key Government Strategies • Increasing public funding for transportation in its Five Year Plans. • Launching the ambitious National Highway Development Program which has seven phases and is expected to be completed by 2012. It includes improved connectivity between Delhi, Mumbai, Chennai and Kolkata, popularly called the Golden Quadrilateral, in the first phase, North- South and East- West corridors in phase two, four laning of more than 12,000 km in phase three, two laning of 20,000km and six laning of 6,500 km respectively in phase four and five, development of 1,000km of expressway in phase six and other important highway projects in phase seven. Total expected investment is INR 2.2 trillion.
Contd. • Accelerated Road Development Program for the North East Region to provide road connectivity to all State capitals and district headquarters in the region. • Financing the development and maintenance of roads by creating a Central Road Fund (CRF) through an earmarked tax on diesel and petrol. • Operationalising the National Highway Authority of India (NHAI) to act as an infrastructure procurer and not just provider.
Contd. • Improving rural access by launching the PradhanMantri Gram SadakYojana (Prime Minister’s Rural Roads Program). • Reducing the congestion on rail corridors along the highly trafficked Golden Quadrilateral and improving port connectivity by launching the National Rail VikasYojana (National Railway Development Program) • The development of two Dedicated Freight Corridors from Mumbai to Delhi and Ludhiana to Dankuni.
World Bank Support • National Highway Development Project • Rural Roads Program: • State Roads Projects • Mumbai Urban Transport Project • Sustainable Urban Transport Project