Track: Transportation
Abstract
Evidence suggests that road transportation has become an important factor of international trade and supply chains performance (US Department of Transportation, 2011; Subsecretaría de Transporte, 2013; European Commission, 2011), and that it is generally considered an inefficient operational activity (McKinnon et al., 1999; US Department of Transportation, 2009; Instituto Mexicano para la Competitividad, 2004). In the last decade, an emerging movement to improve road transport operations has emerged. This movement represents an extension of the lean production approach that advocates the application of its principles and tools to road transport operations. Previous works related to transportation waste have focused on the elimination of efficiency wastes (Simmons et al., 2004; Villarreal 2012; Villarreal et al., 2012, Villarreal et al., 2013). These types of wastes are related to the improvement of the Operational Vehicle Effectiveness (OVE) and Total Operational Vehicle Effectiveness (TOVE) proposed by Simmons et al. (2004) and Villarreal (2012) respectively. Villarreal, et al., (2015) present a systematic method for improving road transport operations based on the elimination of the Seven Transportation Extended Wastes (STEW) proposed by Sternberg et al. (2013). It will be of interest to conduct a preliminary exploration about the possible inter-relationships between the Simmons et al. (2004) and Villarreal (2012) waste schemes with the STEWs and explore the possibility of using them for building more effective improvement procedures. This paper is intended to carry out such study and provide a potential scheme that consider the identification and elimination of both type of wastes.