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Introduction to ITS For Freight Movements

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( Caterpillar Tractor) Cost for required communication bandwidth and level of reliability ... of vehicle for non-company purposes. Asset Management. Schneider ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Introduction to ITS For Freight Movements


1
Introduction to ITS For Freight Movements
2
ITS Freight
  • Two major functions
  • More efficient business operations
  • More efficient regulatory enforcement

3
Business Efficiency
  • Heavily tied to development and use of
  • Electronic business systems
  • Just-in-time delivery of goods
  • Goods tracking
  • Employee performance monitoring

4
Business Efficiency
  • Goal is to manage business assets (particularly
    people and vehicles) more efficiently
  • Increase revenue, and/or
  • Decrease costs of operation
  • Increasing costs are OK, if revenue increase is
    even larger

5
Customer Supply Demand
  • Customer Supply Chain Management
  • Manufacturing
  • Inventory Control
  • Product Delivery
  • Carrier Asset Optimization
  • Technology
  • Infrastructure
  • Planning

6
Successful Business Model
  • Help customers meet goods movement needs
    (reliability, timeliness, capacity)
  • At a cost lower than the competition,
  • While generating a revenue that covers costs plus
    required profit

7
Business Efficiency
  • Manage/use assets more efficiently
  • Drive trucks fewest miles
  • Increase load factor (percent of time spent
    loaded)
  • Be able to respond to customer inquiries
    (customer service)
  • Correctly time arrival of trucks

8
Business Efficiency
  • Asset Management
  • Know where each vehicle is located
  • Know what its next destination is
  • Know how full it is
  • Know if it needs assistance, and if so, what
    assistance it needs
  • This allows selection of the best vehicle for
    picking up any given load, and reduces down time

9
Business Efficiency
  • Manage fleet more effectively
  • Direct routing
  • Avoiding congestion
  • More accurate trip time planning
  • Control labor costs more effectively
  • Pay tolls automatically
  • No need to give drivers cash

10
City Congestion Issues
11
Business Efficiency
  • What route does a vehicle take from origin to
    destination, and how long will the trip take?
  • Use a paper map?
  • Use electronic map (route guidance)?
  • Can the truck actually use those roads?
  • Are there size/weight restrictions?
  • Rest areas? Fuel?

12
Freight Route Selection
To Monowi, Nebraska (pop. 6) from Los Angeles,
California (pop. 15,608,886) Take I-10 East to
I-15 North to I-80 East Turn on U.S. 281 North
to State Route 12 East
13
Route Selection
To Monowi, NE from Los Angeles, CA) Take I-10
East to I-15 North to I-80 East Turn on U.S. 281
North to State Route 12 East
Net Effect 27.2 MPH
14
Route Selection Criteria
  • Safety
  • Regulatory Compliance
  • Customer Service Requirements
  • Asset Utilization

15
Technology Needed
  • Vehicle identification
  • Vehicle location
  • Where is the vehicle?
  • What road is at that location?
  • Wireless communication
  • Vehicle / load status
  • Driver identification (?)

16
Technology Selection
  • Vehicle Identification
  • Dumb tag
  • Static tag number
  • No other functionality
  • One-way communication
  • Smart tag
  • Static tag number
  • Additional data can be stored on the device
  • Two-way communication

17
Vehicle Identifiers
  • Automatic vehicle identification (AVI)
  • Also Automatic Equipment Identification (AEI)
    frequently the same basic technology
  • Can be placed on
  • Trucks
  • Trailers
  • Rail cars
  • Containers
  • Pallets, etc

18
Vehicle Identifiers
  • Smart Versus Dumb Tags
  • What other information is needed, and where do
    you want to store that information?
  • The concerns are centered around
  • Security
  • Accessibility
  • Response time
  • Power consumption

19
Vehicle Identifiers
  • Other differences in tag technologies
  • Size
  • Power (distance/speed of tag reading)
  • Communications technology
  • Cost
  • Longevity
  • Interference with/from other electronics sources

20
Vehicle Location
  • GPS
  • Global positioning system
  • Most common now, goes anywhere
  • Cellular telephone (E-911)
  • Signpost
  • Great for arrival processing
  • Dead reckoning
  • Some combination

21
Vehicle Location
  • All usually need to be associated with an
    electronic map of some kind
  • GIS (geographic information system)
  • Accuracy of that map?
  • Completeness
  • How is it updated?
  • How often is it updated?
  • Does it contain real time information?
    (Construction events? Accidents? Road closures?
    Congestion? Weather?)

22
Vehicle Location
  • Communication system required
  • What is geographic coverage required?
  • Local urban area? (Fed Ex delivery)
  • Regional? (Safeway)
  • National? (Schneider Freight)
  • International? (Caterpillar Tractor)
  • Cost for required communication bandwidth and
    level of reliability
  • Timing and frequency of communication required
  • One- or two-direction communication?

23
Vehicle Communications
  • New cell phone technologies tend to be
  • Lower cost
  • Faster
  • But limited in geographic availability
  • Subject to extinction (CDPD)
  • Thus they tend to be chosen by firms operating
    primarily in urban areas

24
Vehicle Communications
  • Satellite communications tends to be
  • More expensive
  • Available over a far wider geographic area
  • Tends to be selected for systems requiring very
    broad geographic coverage (international, or
    remote areas), and with either limited or high
    value data transfers

25
DSRC Communications
  • Tends to be arrival or departure oriented
  • I just arrived at the toll booth so bill me
  • I just arrived at the maintenance base, download
    my vehicle engine status information
  • My vehicle is now leaving the yard, change the
    database to show the shipment is now in transit

26
DSRC Communications
  • Can be a short, fast burst of data
  • This is my tag ID
  • Can be a long, significant stream of data
  • Here are all of my vehicle diagnostics

27
DSRC
  • Does not need location (i.e., GPS) information
  • The DSRC reader itself gives you the location of
    the vehicle
  • However, you still need a vehicle ID

28
Vehicle/Load Status
  • This is the information you need for making a
    control decision
  • This vehicle is full/empty
  • This vehicle has money in their account (or this
    is the account ID)
  • The engine status values are as follows
  • The manifest for this load is as follows

29
Vehicle/Load Status
  • Often requires a connection to an outside
    database
  • Vehicle manifest, which is also used for
  • Cargo (package) tracking
  • Billing
  • Insurance

30
Vehicle/Load Status
  • Other outside databases
  • Payroll system
  • Vehicle maintenance system
  • Toll payment accounts
  • Regulatory compliance (tax payment or mileage
    tracking)

31
Business Practice Changes
  • The change in business practice takes place using
    the information collected
  • Location and load information allows a dispatcher
    to re-route the driver of an empty truck to pick
    up a new load
  • Information that a load is leaving the yard is
    entered into a security (anti-theft) system and a
    cargo tracking system

32
Business Practice Changes
  • Vehicle/engine status information can be used for
    optimizing vehicle maintenance
  • Vehicle speed and location can be used for
    employee performance monitoring
  • Are they routinely speeding?
  • Are they exceeding the hours they are allowed to
    drive?
  • Are they making unauthorized stops?

33
Archives of These Data
  • Allows improved planning and review of business
    practice
  • History of route performance gives a better
    understanding of reliability of trip
  • This allows more efficient vehicle and driver
    scheduling
  • Eliminates use of vehicle for non-company purposes

34
Asset Management
  • Schneider Freight
  • Increased productivity by 25 through use of GPS
    and satellite communications
  • Truck reports location once per hour

35
Introduction to Regulation
36
Regulatory Functions
  • Two sets of laws
  • U.S. and state specific trucking regulations
  • A combination of state laws, and
  • Interstate commerce regulations
  • International Customs and Emigration requirements

37
US Trucking Regulations
  • Vehicle size and weight laws
  • Vehicle Taxation
  • Registration
  • Fuel tax
  • Weight distance taxes
  • Safety
  • Operating Authority
  • (used to be a bigger issue than it is now)

38
U.S. and State Trucking Regulations
  • Trucks pay vehicle registration taxes to all
    states in which they travel
  • Registration tax is based on how much weight they
    are allowed to carry (more registered weight
    bigger tax payment)

39
U.S. and State Trucking Regulations
  • Unlike your car, the taxes paid for a specific
    truck are divided between all of the states in
    which that truck operates
  • This is true for both registration taxes and fuel
    taxes

40
Multi-state Taxation
  • Taxes are computed based on the fraction of miles
    traveled in each state

41
Multi-state Taxation Example
  • Truck A travels
  • 100,000 miles in WA
  • 100,000 miles in OR
  • 200,000 miles in CA
  • Registration taxes owed
  • 100,000 / 400,000 WA tax rate
  • 100,000 / 400,000 OR tax rate
  • 200,000 / 400,000 CA tax rate

42
Multi-state Taxation
  • Fuel taxes are computed similarly
  • (/gallon in each state) (Miles/state) / mpg
  • Where mpg is computed based on total fuel
    purchased divided by total miles driven
  • Thus, in a truck, you still owe fuel taxes to the
    state you drive in, no matter where you actually
    bought the fuel

43
Multi-State Taxation
  • Tracking how many miles you drive in each state
    is a BIG deal
  • It is used to compute your tax burden in each
    state
  • Since tax rates change from state to state, where
    your miles are located can greatly change your
    tax burden

44
Furthermore
  • You are not allowed to drive a truck through a
    state unless you show you have paid the
    appropriate taxes
  • Can be done by purchasing a special trip permit

45
Regulatory Compliance
  • A great deal of effort goes into
  • Computing miles by state within the trucking
    firms
  • State staff auditing these records to make sure
    the companies are not cheating
  • Checking (on the road) to ensure that the trucks
    on the road have paid those taxes

46
Regulatory Compliance
  • The weigh stations you see beside the road are
    one way of checking for compliance with tax
    payments
  • Staff at weigh stations also check for
  • Drivers not having driven too long
  • Vehicle weights are OK
  • No safety violations are apparent

47
Regulatory Compliance and Weigh Stations
  • Continued Monday
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