Traffic Information and Dynamic Vehicle Routing in Forwarding Agencies

Author Sascha Wohlgemuth



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Sascha Wohlgemuth

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Sascha Wohlgemuth. Traffic Information and Dynamic Vehicle Routing in Forwarding Agencies. In Models and Algorithms for Optimization in Logistics. Dagstuhl Seminar Proceedings, Volume 9261, pp. 1-7, Schloss Dagstuhl – Leibniz-Zentrum für Informatik (2009)
https://doi.org/10.4230/DagSemProc.09261.32

Abstract

Freight transportation is essential for most economies. The main focus is on forwarding agencies handling less-than-truckload freight. In general, direct transportation from origin to destination would be too expensive. Therefore, the main idea is to consolidate enough small shipments to efficiently conduct transportation for the majority of the distance. In preparation of this transport it is necessary to pick up commodities from different customer locations in the origin region. At the transshipment point consignments with the same destination region are grouped on one truck heading for this region. Upon arrival they are transshipped again on smaller trucks and distributed to the customers. Nearly every transshipment point collects as well as rolls out goods. Thus, typical forwarding agencies perform pickups as well as deliveries conjoined on the same vehicle. They have to cope with hundreds of pickups and deliveries each day and a few tens of vehicles are necessary to service the customers in the local region. The performance is mainly influenced by two dynamic factors: First, due to developments in information and communication technology, the agencies receive pickup orders increased shortly before the actual pickup. Second, unexpected traffic situations are endangering the scheduled pickups, though traffic information is increasingly available. Surprisingly this information is hardly used in the forwarding industry, even though vehicle locations are available in real-time via global positioning systems. The consequence is that these companies are fighting lateness of shipments and poor utilization of vehicles. Therefore, the objective is to develop an intelligent planning system based on mathematical optimization heuristics to assist forwarding agencies in routing vehicles efficiently.
Keywords
  • Dynamic vehicle routing
  • pickup and delivery problem
  • forwarding agency
  • less-than-truckload freight
  • varying travel times
  • clustering
  • tabu search

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