Download Future of supply chain logistics and implications for LG

Survey
yes no Was this document useful for you?
   Thank you for your participation!

* Your assessment is very important for improving the workof artificial intelligence, which forms the content of this project

Document related concepts
no text concepts found
Transcript
The Future of Supply Chain
and Logistics – Implications
for Local Government
National LG Infrastructure & Asset
Management Conference 14 May 2015
Dr Hermione Parsons, Director ISCL
VU Associate Professor
ISCL’s Strategic Focus
Supply Chain Information Unit (SCIU):
Data Modelling, Analytics & Forecasting
Whole-of-Chain
Integration
Public Policy
and Regulatory
Reform
Industry
Research
Thought
Leadership
Capability
Building
Harmonisation
Studies
Intermodal
Connectivity
Supporting Sustainable Public and Private
Sector Decision Making
2
What is freight
transport?
What is Transport?
Point B
Point A
The physical movement of goods
What is Logistics?
What is logistics?
Point of
Consumption
Point of Origin
Systematic organisation of goods
and/or services
What is supply chain?
Supply
Demand
The interdependent organisation of supply and demand,
including forecasting and strategic asset investment
Supply Chain Complexity Involves:
Systems Thinking
Labour
Oil and alternative energy
Transport
Logistics
Finance
Business Processes
Transaction Systems
Supply
Information Technology
Procurement /Purchasing Sourcing
Supply Chain Management
Commercial Power
Legal and Regulatory Systems
People /Relationship/ Resistance to Change
Strategic Asset Investment
Global, Political Economy
Demand
Global forces
1. Urbanisation
2. Global
connectivity
3. Accelerated
technology
4. Ageing
population
(McKinsey 2015)
.
7
1. Urbanisation
• China’s industrial revolution - creating cities
• 60% of the world’s population lives in 700
congested cities
• In the next decade, 50% of GDP will occur in
440 new cities - in newly emerging cities and
new markets
• The city logistics challenge is everywhere and
involves amenity, efficiency, sustainability and
productivity gain
8
2. Global connectivity
• Global capital flows expanded 25 times between
1980 and 2007
• New flows of capital, people and information;
constant geographic change, and volatility
• The focus is on complex webs of interaction
connecting emerging markets
• We are now in a new and dynamic phase of
globalisation …. that we ignore at our peril
9
Top 10 port cities
2004
Hong Kong
Singapore
Shanghai
Shenzhen
Busan
Kaohsiung
Rotterdam
Los Angeles
Hamburg
Dubai
2014
Shanghai
Singapore
Shenzhen
Hong Kong
Busan
Ningbo-Zhoushan
Qingdao
Gaungzhou
Dubai
Tianjin
10
3. Accelerated technology
• Digital life and mobile electronic commerce
(meCommerce) is here
• The “Internet of Things” and big data usage
now drives supply chain thinking
• New technologies, logistics assets, processes
and people are required
• Entry level requirements in supply chain and
logistics > digital literacy is fundamental
11
meCommerce users Australia
Source: ACMA www.acma.gov.au
12
The Internet of Things (IoT)
13
IoT Growth Perspective
50
50
Billion
“Things” per person
40
SmartObjects
Billions of Devices
Rapid adoption rate of digital infrastructure
5 x faster than electricity & telephony
30
20
Inflection Point
10
0
World Population
6.307
2003
6.721
6.894
7.347
7.83
2008
2010
2015
2020
Cisco IBSG projections, UN Economic & Social Affairs http://www.un.org/esa/population/publications/longrange2/WorldPop2300final.pdf
Automation and robotics
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=eSIkRdAEF0g
DHL sortation equipment
Linfox’s robotics (Kellogs)
15
Daimler’s driverless trucks
Volvo’s truck driverless convoy in Europe – think Hume Freeway?
https://www.youtube.com/watch?t=80&v=zAiTySwWTiQ
Rio Tinto’s driverless mining trucks
16
4. Ageing populations
• Australia's “2015 Intergenerational Report”
o Greater need for more efficient aged service delivery
models
• 60% of the world’s population lives in countries
where the fertility rate is less than population
replacement
o E.g. China’s labour force peaked in 2012
• Increasing reliance on automated logistics
• Higher productivity is now critical to operate
17
Servicing an ageing population
18
What do these global trends mean for
Local Government Managers?
• Urgent need: to take a global perspective and to
understand that supply chain and logistics are
economic and social enablers
• Strategic plans need to be articulated across and
between each level of government
• Smarter land use planning and regulation is needed
• Flexibility and responsiveness is needed – to survive
• Local training and employment is needed in SC&L
• We need to help business deal with constant transition
19
Source: Jones Lang Le Salle 2014
20
Source: Jones Lang Le Salle 2014
21
New Asset Investment
Toll Group
AUS $150m sorting facility close to Melbourne Airport
• Dedicated e-commerce parcel delivery service
• 35,000 parcels per hour
• About 500 employees will be based at the facility, with
staff expected to be relocated from existing sites in
Altona and Dandenong
Source: Toll Group, 2014
Last mile challenge
24
Strategic planning must be integrated
25
East & SE
Suburbs
Productivity gain is essential
• Logistics and freight transport are changing
– there is higher granularity
e.g. larger vehicles (HPFVs) and smaller multi-product
delivery vans (LCVs)
• Optimisation – determines investment
Across the whole supply chain
And locally e.g. cross-docking; delivery systems;
automated pick and pack processes
27
Land use planning & regulation
• Change is needed to reflect and enable supply
chain reconfiguration and reality:
o More loading docks and cross-docking sites
o Parcel hubs
o Activity centre access
o Out-of-hours delivery
o Recycling surplus assets and industrial areas
 Importer/exporter SME business success
depends on it
28
Raising awareness
• Strategic asset management and ‘enabling’
regulation are as important as protecting hard
infrastructure investment
• Promote SC&L as enablers of economic activity
and local wellbeing
• 14.7% of GDP is involved in delivering freight
• Work with industry to enable their ‘flexibility’
• Local government has a critical role in
understanding and supporting how SMEs can
survive and prosper
29
Supply chain and logistics success checklist:
How does your local area score?
 Land
 Labour
 Services
 3PL and 4PL expertise
 Access
 Value add logistics suppliers
 Regulatory environment for
business
 Infrastructure
 Business investment climate
 Community support
 Leasable industrial
properties
 Education & Research
Thank you