Member companies and their representatives have a deep level of subject matter expertise relevant to the groups stated goal and hold positions of authority within their organizations. Committee members are experienced executives who hold positions of influence in their respective organizations and who have a high-level understanding of container terminal operation and its associated issues.Joining the Committee allows your organization to participate in the selection and implementation of standards that can transform the industry globally. Membership empowers you to apply your organization’s knowledge to enable the delivery of quality container terminal services and to become a force in the future of the industry. Group members, through their participation are providing their expertise to move the industry to adopt quality systems and standards that meet the industry’s needs. The Committee convenes in quarterly, face-to-face meetings, with additional interim teleconferences as needed. Interim communication takes place via email and web-based tools.
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“I think for many years we have been dealing with the issue of performance indicators for container terminals. We have done that in many various projects and each time we are facing the problem that the data collected by the various parties is not reliable, cannot be compared, it is not relative to what we are looking for and at the end of the day what we find is that everybody is circulating data that is of absolutely no use to the logistics community. Its’ only for some use for the person that is circulating the data because it’s just public relations. What you find typically is that they say “oh we have been doing 25 containers per hour” while we do not know whether that is true, we don’t know how they measured it, we don’t know whether there were 35 containers per hour during one hour or whether they were doing that for a shift or whether they are doing that vessel after vessel after vessel. What we find is that when you go to conferences where all our terminal operators are present, its like going into the pub after a day of fishing where the fishermen get together and say “my fish is bigger” and “my fish is biggest” and “no no my fish is still bigger” and you get the one with the biggest arm length having caught the biggest fish.
DR. GUSTAFF DE MONIE EXPLAINES CTQS
It’s a little bit the same with terminals. So that’s the idea maybe we need to do a little bit more about developing this lets say performance indicators or performance measurements for container terminals. Now with one of my very best friends and colleagues Dr. Brian Thomas, who was once a lecturer in Cardiff University, we were asked by the ILO in a program that is called Port Worker Development Program to develop specifically three units that had to do with performance measurement. This is part of a bigger program that contains about 30 modules that were made also to inform people about container terminal operators and to train the supervisory levels and below. So we made this program for supervisory levels and below.
But to our big surprise I have been using that program for the last ten years in academic circles for people that come to university and are taking courses on for example shipping and port management. The biggest disappointment is that although now we have a program with a certain amount of definitions what we find is that individuals are still using it as they like it. They use certain parts, they change the definitions if they do not like the definitions and at the end of the day we are back to square one. So that’s the situation. And I’m a bit afraid that if it goes on like this we’ll never know what are the good terminals and what are the bad terminals.
Competition is tight and container markets are emerging quickly. Time is scarce and your customers cannot wait for an expansion of your physical terminal capacity to resolve growing demand. It is time to act in order to avoid all collateral congestions effects: loss of time, frustration, long waiting-hours for ships and trucks, which ultimately leads to unhappy customers. There is abundant room for improvement.
MORE ABOUT THE CONTAINER TERMINAL QUALITY SYSTEM (CTQS)