Bulk Transport and SCM
Bulk Transport and SCM
Bulk Transport and SCM
by
Paul O. Roberts
In-Process
Inventory
Usage Forecast
Sales Forecasts
Orders
Supplier/ Manufacturer/ Orders Retailer/User
Vendor Distributor
Transportation
Transportation
2
The key decisionmaker in a supply
chain is downstream
3
The very simplest of logistics activities...
Supplier Customer
4
…generates an enormous amount of
logistics activity
Catalog Price Receive price, specs. And
List SKU no.
Place order
Receive acknowledgment
Quote a price or Trace shipment
publish a catalog Receive shipment
of prices Pay invoice
Shipper Functions
Carrier Receiver Functions
Network Planning
Demand Planning
Demand Planning
Transportation Planning Established
Transportation Planning
Transportation Mgt. Rates
Inventory Mgt.
Freight Accounting
Freight Accounting
Carrier Functions
Product Flow Warehouse Mgt.
Transportation Planning
Information Flow Transportation Mgt.
Freight Accounting
5
A few key relationships drive the
economics of most supply chains
2
4
5
2
1 3
1 Vendor
2 Transportation
3 Storage
4 Outbound distribution
5 Store
6
The choice of vendor is an important
determinant of final delivered cost
7
There is a dramatic reduction in cost
with increased shipment size
parcel 1000
LTL truck
100
truckload
Transport Charges
carload ($/ton)
multi-car
10
unit train
barge load
1
11 1,000 40,000 100,000 600,000 100,000,000 200,000,000
8
Holding costs depend upon shipment
size and rate of usage
9
Transport charges and capital carrying
costs are only two of the cost elements
10
Bulk goods have typical characteristics
11
Bulk handling and storage are major
reasons why rates are typically low
z Transfer costs
y Solids - overhead cranes, conveyors
y Liquids - pumps, gravity flow
y Particulates - gravity flow, augers, conveyors
y Gases - compression, liquefaction
z Storage costs
y Open
y Covered
y Temperature controlled
y Tank or hopper
12
Another type of holding cost involves
the use of safety stock
13
Delivering small amounts of product to
many retail points is a challenge
Supplier 4 User 3
Supplier 5
User 4
14
Finally, there are costs at the point of
sale (or use) of the product
15
Most products are sold in highly
competitive markets…to realize savings
you must be able to control inventory, ...
Which requires you to:
1. Forecast demand
2. Control transport
3. Trace delivery
4. Manage order entry
5. Monitor inventory
6. Manage the process
16
The annual use of an input is managed
by an inventory control system
17
Inventory can be managed in one of
two ways...
Comparison of Quantity-Driven versus Frequency-Driven Inventory Schemes
1 10
11
12
13
14,934
6,028
9,262
7,958
4,947
48,920
39,657
31,699
50000 1,003
20,972
11,710
19,042
25,997
15,290
2
14 7,501 24,198 11,541 15,459
Specify Q Specify F
15 5,075 19,123 21,925
16 5,916 13,207 16,009 10,991
17 8,451 4,756 50000 18,549
18 10,552 44,205 7,997 19,003
19 11,367 32,837 15,633
20 11,998 20,839 3,635 23,365
21 14,822 6,017 50000 12,178
22 11,446 44,571 732 26,268
23 14,854 29,717 12,146
24 9,692 20,025 2,454 24,546
25 7,831 12,194 19,169
26 8,895 3,300 50000 10,275 16,725
27 8,577 44,723 18,423
28 6,097 38,626 12,326 14,674
29 10,715 27,911 16,285
30 14,033 13,877 50000 2,252 24,748
31 14,083 49,794 12,917
32 11,594 38,200 1,323 25,677
33 12,799 25,402 14,201
34 12,909 12,492 1,292 25,708
35 12,903 (410) 50000 14,097
36 13,197 36,392 900 26,100
37 9,220 27,173 17,780
38 6,881 20,292 10,899 16,101
39 6,448 13,844 20,552
40 8,730 5,114 50000 11,823 15,177
41 13,506 41,608 13,494
42 13,555 28,053 (62) 27,062
43 7,255 20,798 19,745
44 5,809 14,989 13,936 13,064
45 7,438 7,551 50000 19,562
46 14,121 43,430 5,441 21,559
47 11,275 32,155 15,725
48 14,303 17,852 1,422 25,578
49 10,733 7,119 16,267
50 6,591 528 50000 9,676 17,324
51 7,446 43,082 19,554
52 13,082 29,999 6,471 20,529
Total 520,001
Average 10,000
18
Quantity-determined systems order
the same amount each time
50000
Order/On-Hand
40000 On Hand
30000 Order
20000
10000
0
1 4 7 10 13 16 19 22 25 28 31 34 37 40 43 46 49 52
-10000
Week
19
Frequency-determined systems order
on the same day each time period
25000
Order Size/Stock-On-
20000
15000 On-Hand
Hand
Order
10000
5000
0
1 3 5 7 9 11 13 15 17 19 21 23 25 27 29 31 33 35 37 39 41 43 45 47 49 51 53
-5000
Week
20
These two inventory control systems
serve different needs
z Quantity-determined systems work best for:
y A single item from one vendor
y Significant input to the process
y Vendor direct to warehouse
y Order size is full truckload or carload
z Frequency-determined systems handle:
y Multiple items from the same vendor
y Minor inputs to the process
y Movements from mixing warehouse to the stores
y Order size is what was used since the last order
21
That covers the 5 cost points, but it is
useful to note that...
22
To minimize total logistics cost
a hierarchy of decisions must be made
23
Inbound to the DC is in bulk…outbound is
typically in less than full load quantities
Vendor 1
Vendor 2
Distribution Center
100 miles
90% LTL
400 miles
50% LTL
Vendor 3
800 miles
30% LTL
Vendor 5
24
A central question is how many DCs to
have and where they should be located?
DC 3
DC 2
Hub
DC 4
DC 3
DC 5
25
A second question is should shipments
from vendors be direct…or through a hub?
DC 3
Vendor DC 2
Hub
DC 4
DC 3
DC 5
26
A Network Logistics Planning Process can
be used to answer these planning questions
Model Components
Inbound
Cost
Vendor Module
Database
On-Line
Transfer
Cost
Data SKU-Level
Module
Model
Output
Store Distribution
Center Cost
Database Module
Summary
Output
Outbound
Cost
Module
27
In a study for a food distributor the optimal
scenario had 6 hubs and 20 centers
Hub
Regional Center
28
Results from the Logistics Cost Model
for some typical bulk rail moves
z Wheat - Kansas City to Mexico City 1736 miles
y Annual use = 10,500 tons
y Density 144lbs/cuft, value $.06/lb, life 900 days
y TransCost Rail = $3974 Truck = $3888
y TotLogCost Rail = $33/ton Truck = $163/ton
z Sodium Compounds -Ft Worth TX to Queretaro MX
1039 miles
y Annual use = 9,000 tons
y Density 101lbs/cuft, value $.04/lb, life 900 days
y TransCost Rail = $1087 Truck = $2382
y TotLogCost Rail = $10/ton Truck = $101/ton
29
Results from the Logistics Cost Model
for some typical truck moves
z Misc electronic components - Springfield IL to San
Luis Potosi 1753 miles
y Annual use = 1,000 tons
y Density 12lbs/cuft, value $37.78/lb, life 900 days
y TransCost Rail = $5465 Truck = $2166
y TotLogCost Rail = $720/ton Truck = $366/ton
z Frozen vegetables - Saltillo MX to Baltimore MD
1980 miles
y Annual use = 200 tons
y Density 27lbs/cuft, value $.37/lb, life 180 days
y TransCost Rail = $3083 Truck = $2477
y TotLogCost Rail = $134/ton Truck = $127/ton
30
A big part of the difference is in the
amount of product used annually
31
Transportation services incur costs at
different points in time
32
Costs are most easily accounted for
on a mileage basis
33
Repositioning costs account for moving the
vehicle to a point where it can be reused
z For short trips this may be the home base, but for
long trips it is important to find another load
z If the trip home is empty, the entire cost of the
trip must be borne by the original load
z If a load can be found to pay part of the costs of
the trip home, the balance of the trip costs must
be borne by the outbound load
z This all means that costs cannot be fully assigned
until the trip is completed
z One approximation is to use the ratio of loaded
miles to total miles, referred to as the load ratio
34
Repositioning strategies differ for
longhaul and shorthaul transportation
35
For a fleet, where to move empty vehicles
can be solved by math programming
36
The transportation problem has a dual
problem which is just as interesting
37
Break-bulk terminals (hubs) are used
to lower costs in “thin” markets
38
Costs for rail movement are more
difficult to determine
39
The short haul problem is also solvable
40
41