Operations Header – Page 164

  • News

    CUSTOMERS WANT LEASING OPTION

    2004-11-01T00:00:00Z

    Dirk Groth says in the past the trend was to buy secondhand equipment but customers are now asking for the option of leasing which can be expensive, depending on country and/or the client, as banks and leasing companies have their own differing risk assessments for this country or that borrower. ...

  • News

    DON'T MENTION THE R WORD

    2004-11-01T00:00:00Z

    reports on the possibility of rationalisation in Singapore''s ports sector - both at home and abroad. The Republic''s new pm has recognised that competition is played out on the world stage, and the stakes are high.

  • News

    LOWER LIFTIME COSTS AND AUTOMATION GIVE THEM THE EDGE

    2004-11-01T00:00:00Z

    As with all cargo handling equipment, in theory at least, the bigger and more productive the machine, the lower the lifetime costs. VoestAlpine' Manfred Schaffer emphasises that in order to evaluate capital investment, lifetime costs and return on investment factors, you must compare the stacker reclaimer with alternative technologies - ...

  • Los Angeles: retailers moving to Southeast US
    News

    SHIPPING SURGE CREATES CONGESTION

    2004-11-01T00:00:00Z

    Despite relief efforts, congestion at the ports of Los Angeles and Long Beach, the largest port complex in the United States, was worsening as the holiday shipping season kicked into high gear. With the backlog at the ports expected to continue for the next several months, pressure to deliver holiday ...

  • Many are looking at covered storage . . .
    News

    CHINA AND INDIA DEMAND FUEL MARKET

    2004-11-01T00:00:00Z

    It is said that stockyard operations dictate the overall capability and efficiency of a bulk terminal.

  • Cappuccinos on the deck at Pier 35 in view of Coode Island chemical storage facility Immigrants disembarking at Melbourne, 1910 Vancouver Port offers a model for long-term planning to incorporate community concerns
    News

    THE CAPPUCCINO CONUNDRUM

    2004-10-01T00:00:00Z

    Melbourne''s Pier 35 with its nautical architecture housing a restaurant, retail and office accommodation, provides visual interest to the city''s waterfront scene. Commercial port operations meet the cafe crowd and yachting fraternity downstream of the emerging high-rise apartment precinct at Docklands, a phenomenon termed the " Cappuccinoisation" of Australia''s port ...

  • Smits twin spreader: first with both longitudinal and transversal adjustment
    News

    THE SHARP END

    2004-10-01T00:00:00Z

    Prolific innovation is helping to maintain strong competition between spreader manufacturers. Benedict Young explores the latest product developments which promise to enhance terminal operations.

  • New Terbergs for Thamesport
    News

    NUDGING OUT THE ROAD TRUCK

    2004-10-01T00:00:00Z

    Terminal tractors are consolidating their position as the logical choice for moving boxes and trailers around, edging the clumsier road truck out - particularly nowadays in Asia - and showing no great concern over the potential threat from alternative machines. In its march towards supremacy however, significant advances are also ...

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    News

    MORTAR IN THE WATER

    2004-09-01T00:00:00Z

    Another way to reinforce steel piling that has been subjected to ALWC is to use a reinforcing concrete. UK-based Flexcrete uses a wide range of purpose-designed marine mortars, sprayed mortars and unique cementitious coatings based on its advanced microsilica, polymer and fibre technology, to protect marine structures.

  • Flexcretes E942 being applied Reid: catastrophic consequences Regular inspections and surveys can detect ALWC in its early stages, allowing treatment to be instigated ALWC showing as a typical orange discolouration on a steel structure
    News

    SEEKING SOLUTIONS TO ALWC

    2004-09-01T00:00:00Z

    Despite extensive research now being undertaken, for the time being there is little comprehensive, independent, user-friendly guidance available about Accelerated Low Water Corrosion (ALWC), perhaps the most serious problem affecting steel piling in ports and harbours today. David Foxwell investigates.

  • Svetrucks 50150-57 with piggyback and combined 20-40 spreader attachment for handling containers and trailers
    News

    REACH OR LIFT WHAT'S IT TO BE?

    2004-09-01T00:00:00Z

    The debate rumbles on: is a reachstacker better suited to handling full containers in the yard than a forklift? Nick Elliott finds there are arguments for either solution.

  • News

    AND THE RETURN ON INVESTMENT?

    2004-09-01T00:00:00Z

    So how does it all stack up in terms of cost efficiency? Dan Pettersson, Kalmar' s product manager, says: " We' re not much into the argument between FLTs and reachstackers. Most of the world has recognised that the reachstacker is in most cases a more efficient and cost-effective handling ...

  • Crocket: serious questions to be answered
    News

    HORSES FOR COURSES

    2004-07-01T00:00:00Z

    What characterises the port planning consultant' s role today? Nick Elliott talks to some leading players and finds whilst each has its own particular perspective, some issues are common to all.

  • Most ports will run out of available land
    News

    THE CALIFORNIAN WAY

    2004-07-01T00:00:00Z

    Duane Kenagy and Larry Nye of US consultants Moffatt & Nichol (M& N) report on developments in California to ensure containers move quickly and cleanly through the port interface.

  • Kerrys Wong: contract logistics in China
    News

    LOGISTICS, LOGISTICS, LOGISTICS

    2004-07-01T00:00:00Z

    In contrast, the progress being made in development of Shanghai''s logistics industry is far quicker. 15 April saw the opening of China''s first logistics park, situated close to the city''s Waigaoqiao container terminals.

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    News

    CENTRE OF THE WORLD

    2004-07-01T00:00:00Z

    Shanghai is fast becoming the centre of the world, as far as the container shipping industry and the port companies which serve it are concerned. And the port''s current work-in-progress, the leviathan Yangshan project, promises only to reinforce that. Gavin van Marle reports.

  • Gottwald: even more potential for MCHs
    News

    CUSTOMER CAN GET IT WRONG

    2004-07-01T00:00:00Z

    Alex Hughes weighs up the pros, cons and respective market niches of gantry and mobile harbour cranes and examines how each stack up against the continuous ship unloader.

  • ECTs Gelderland: AGV/ASC economics and productivity excellent
    News

    ALTENWERDER AND DELTA COUNT COST OF AUTOMATION

    2004-07-01T00:00:00Z

    Tom Todd assesses the experiences of two of Europe''s leading terminals with automation.

  • News

    SEALING THE SUBSTRATE

    2004-06-01T00:00:00Z

    Although generally speaking more resistant to corrosion and other forms of degradation than steel piles or many other marine structures, over the course of time concrete may itself need additional protection.

  • A tug tows one of the immense concrete blocks for the new jetties at Cartagena into place
    News

    FROM BERTH TO BREAKWATER SOME VERY CONCRETE REASONS

    2004-06-01T00:00:00Z

    Concrete''s value within the port environment is almost unlimited. And fresh innovations incorporating its use are appearing all the time, as David Foxwell discovers.