Abstract
By 1990 express shuttle container ships will dominate the USA/North European and USA/Pacific trades. The pattern is already apparent in the Pacific. These will touch only a few ports such as Halifax, New York and Virginia on the Atlantic and Los Angeles/Long Beach, Oakland and Seattle/Tacoma in the West. Their low costs and good services will capture over 80% of available general cargo. Round the world systems will be left with lucrative fringe business in the Mediterranean, US Gulf/South Atlantic, Singapore, India and Arab countries.
Progress will be sensitive to twelve trends. Most important of these will be labour resistance and management concerns about rapid obsolescence of ships and terminals. Rail and ship costs have been rationalized and are not as flexible as terminal costs. The ultimate terminal will consume about one third of the time and money presently needed.
This paper is chiefly intended to suggest a forecasting methodology.
†Paper presented at the Annual Transportation Research Forum. Amelia Island, Florida, USA, 14 November 1985.
†Paper presented at the Annual Transportation Research Forum. Amelia Island, Florida, USA, 14 November 1985.
Notes
†Paper presented at the Annual Transportation Research Forum. Amelia Island, Florida, USA, 14 November 1985.