How Container Ports Work: Logistics of Intermodal Transport - YouTube

Channel: Ticket To Know

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If you’re like me, you’ve seen wharfs and ports and been fascinated by the huge
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ships, cranes, trucks and most of all by the containers stacked like building blocks.
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But what are the processes of container ports like this?
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How are containers unloaded, where do they go, and what happens next?
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We’re going to find out if containerisation is as orderly as it seems, or if there is
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some chaos in these neatly stacked rows – and what opportunity and challenges automation
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has brought to the shipping industry.
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Containerisation has changed the world.
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Previously ships would hold multiple smaller loads all jumbled together into a cargo hold
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– now the sorting of cargo into containers is done before the cargo is loaded.
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This allows ships to have a greater efficiency when loading and unloading cargo.
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But is has also brought new challenges for organisation, as gigantic ships dock in large
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ports and need to unload hundreds or thousands of containers at a time.
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Container terminals are hubs of intermodal transport.
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That means that the containers are switching modes of transport, from a ship, which travels
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on the sea, to either road or rail.
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Containers can also be moved by air – but this is not usually the focus of container
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ports.
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Switching modes of transport is not quite as simple as loading a cargo container from
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a ship onto a truck – multiple steps and organisational challenges are involved before
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the container rolls out of the freight yard.
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First – the container must be unloaded from the ship.
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This is achieved with huge gantry cranes that are able to lift the several tonnes of container
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and its cargo.
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Cranes can be hinged to allow for passage of large ships beneath, or can be fixed, to
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reduce airspace being taken up.
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Freight terminal cranes are either semi-automated, or fully-operated by a human, and some ports
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have a mix of both.
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Cranes connect to containers by their corner fittings – which, like most other parts
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of a container are standardised throughout the world, by the International Organisation
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for Standardisation.
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Another international standard is the unique identifier number which helps to keep track
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of each container.
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The containers are typically loaded onto Terminal Tractors.
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These funny-looking trucks are meant for short-distance haulage, in order to get the container from
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beside the ship, into the storage yard where the containers wait to be picked up by a truck
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or a train.
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In order to move containers around a storage yard, and onto trucks and trains, there are
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several options for machinery – 2 of the most interesting are reach stackers and rubber-tyre
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gantries.
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Rubber-tyre gantries have wheels, and are cranes that are able to fully straddle containers.
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Larger versions may run on tracks, rather than tyres, and can straddle multiple rows
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of containers.
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Reach-stackers have a long arm that can easily be used to stack containers several rows deep,
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or to negotiate them onto semi-trailers and rail cars.
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Every step of the process described so far has the capacity to be fully- or semi-automated.
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And in fact, at some of the terminals at the Port of Rotterdam in the Netherlands – they
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all are, at least partially.
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At this port, a crane operator remotely operates the gantry crane via computer software that
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unloads containers from a ship.
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The container onto a fully automated terminal truck which drives it to the storage area
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to be unloaded by an automated stacker crane.
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This is one area where logical planning augmented by computers can provide a huge benefit.
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Knowing exactly what date and time a container needs to be picked up, a computer can plan
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the most efficient way to stack containers.
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This ensures the container isn’t buried too deep in the stacks when its time comes
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to leave the yard, reducing the number of operations required to access the required
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container.
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There are still some storage yards around the world that used a paper-based tracking
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system.
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For some of these yards, this means that containers are simply stacked according to when they
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are brought in to the storage yard – so that when the time comes to take them out
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again, they might be at the bottom of a stack of containers.
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Like many other industries, computerised automation provides some unique benefits over human-operation,
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such as accuracy of repetitive tasks and logical planning of efficient processes – until
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something goes wrong and many hours are spent trying to troubleshoot and fix the issue.
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For now at least, humans maintain the advantage of adaptability over fully-automated machines.
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Automating a container port is very expensive, but ports implementing this technology hope
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to gain benefits such as increased productivity, and increased safety.
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Of course, even at ports where automation exists, humans are still employed to oversee
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and maintain the machines and rectify problems as they arise.
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As automation continues, concerns about job-losses are always on the forefront of debate.
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There is also the real cost to society with a smaller income tax revenue stream to fund
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things like roads and rail – the very things the transport industry relies on.
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Ideas have been put forward for a robot tax to help subsidise this loss.
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However these problems are dealt with in the future, it is clear for now that the inevitable
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march of the machines will continue.
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Perhaps the solution lies balanced somewhere in the middle.
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With human operators and overseers able to quickly adapt to unforeseen problems, but
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with machines performing dangerous tasks for us, and with organisational systems augmented
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by computerised calculations.
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Thanks for watching this video about how a shipping container port works.
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Be sure to subscribe to the channel for more videos, leave me a thumb, and let me know
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what you thought of the video in the comments.
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Thanks for watching.