The Rail Freight Challenge for Emerging Economies : How to Regain Modal Share

Moving more freight by rail and waterways would reduce greenhouse gas emissions, truck-induced congestion, and noise pollution and contribute to the integrated logistics that are now a hallmark of global supply chains. The timing for the shift is right, because many emerging economies are making sig...

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Bibliographic Details
Main Author: Aritua, Bernard
Format: Book
Language:English
Published: Washington, DC: World Bank 2018
Subjects:
Online Access:https://documents.worldbank.org/en/publication/documents-reports/documentdetail/590151546248249963/the-rail-freight-challenge-for-emerging-economies-how-to-regain-modal-share
http://hdl.handle.net/10986/31089
id okr-10986-31089
recordtype oai_dc
spelling okr-10986-310892021-04-23T14:05:00Z The Rail Freight Challenge for Emerging Economies : How to Regain Modal Share Aritua, Bernard CLIMATE CHANGE RAILWAYS LOGISTICS DECARBONIZING MODAL SHIFT RAIL FREIGHT FREIGHT TRANSPORT CARBON POLICY DISRUPTIVE TECHNOLOGY SUPPLY CHAIN DIGITAL PLATFORM EMERGING MARKET ECONOMIES TAXATION SUBSIDIES MULTIMODAL TRANSPORT Moving more freight by rail and waterways would reduce greenhouse gas emissions, truck-induced congestion, and noise pollution and contribute to the integrated logistics that are now a hallmark of global supply chains. The timing for the shift is right, because many emerging economies are making significant investments in railways and shippers are responding to public sentiment to reduce the negative impacts of road-related logistics. In the past, most railway organizations adopted a “build and they shall come” approach, modeled on the proposition that lower rail transportation costs would inevitably lead to modal shift. That approach is no longer viable. Successful railways now focus on understanding the logistics of targeted freight and positioning rail transport services as part of an overall logistics system aimed at meeting customers’ needs. By responding to new trends in logistics and partnering with road haulers, port operators, forwarders, intermodal terminal operators, and third-party logistics companies to provide the seamless service delivery required by changing supply chains, rail freight organizations in Europe and North America have regained modal share or reversed a trend of falling shares. Emerging economies can learn from their experience. The Rail Freight Challenge for Emerging Economies presents examples and lessons of good (and not-so-good) practice. It summarizes what successful rail freight organizations have done to increase market share and provides options for policy makers. The report is intended not to prescribe solutions but to inform decisions and broaden the discussion of options open to policy makers and senior officials in rail organizations in their country contexts. 2018-12-28T21:12:45Z 2018-12-28T21:12:45Z 2019 Book https://documents.worldbank.org/en/publication/documents-reports/documentdetail/590151546248249963/the-rail-freight-challenge-for-emerging-economies-how-to-regain-modal-share 978-1-4648-1381-8 http://hdl.handle.net/10986/31089 English International Development in Focus; CC BY 3.0 IGO http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/3.0/igo World Bank Washington, DC: World Bank Publications & Research Publications & Research :: Publication
repository_type Digital Repository
institution_category Foreign Institution
institution Digital Repositories
building World Bank Open Knowledge Repository
collection World Bank
language English
topic CLIMATE CHANGE
RAILWAYS
LOGISTICS
DECARBONIZING
MODAL SHIFT
RAIL FREIGHT
FREIGHT TRANSPORT
CARBON POLICY
DISRUPTIVE TECHNOLOGY
SUPPLY CHAIN
DIGITAL PLATFORM
EMERGING MARKET ECONOMIES
TAXATION
SUBSIDIES
MULTIMODAL TRANSPORT
spellingShingle CLIMATE CHANGE
RAILWAYS
LOGISTICS
DECARBONIZING
MODAL SHIFT
RAIL FREIGHT
FREIGHT TRANSPORT
CARBON POLICY
DISRUPTIVE TECHNOLOGY
SUPPLY CHAIN
DIGITAL PLATFORM
EMERGING MARKET ECONOMIES
TAXATION
SUBSIDIES
MULTIMODAL TRANSPORT
Aritua, Bernard
The Rail Freight Challenge for Emerging Economies : How to Regain Modal Share
relation International Development in Focus;
description Moving more freight by rail and waterways would reduce greenhouse gas emissions, truck-induced congestion, and noise pollution and contribute to the integrated logistics that are now a hallmark of global supply chains. The timing for the shift is right, because many emerging economies are making significant investments in railways and shippers are responding to public sentiment to reduce the negative impacts of road-related logistics. In the past, most railway organizations adopted a “build and they shall come” approach, modeled on the proposition that lower rail transportation costs would inevitably lead to modal shift. That approach is no longer viable. Successful railways now focus on understanding the logistics of targeted freight and positioning rail transport services as part of an overall logistics system aimed at meeting customers’ needs. By responding to new trends in logistics and partnering with road haulers, port operators, forwarders, intermodal terminal operators, and third-party logistics companies to provide the seamless service delivery required by changing supply chains, rail freight organizations in Europe and North America have regained modal share or reversed a trend of falling shares. Emerging economies can learn from their experience. The Rail Freight Challenge for Emerging Economies presents examples and lessons of good (and not-so-good) practice. It summarizes what successful rail freight organizations have done to increase market share and provides options for policy makers. The report is intended not to prescribe solutions but to inform decisions and broaden the discussion of options open to policy makers and senior officials in rail organizations in their country contexts.
format Book
author Aritua, Bernard
author_facet Aritua, Bernard
author_sort Aritua, Bernard
title The Rail Freight Challenge for Emerging Economies : How to Regain Modal Share
title_short The Rail Freight Challenge for Emerging Economies : How to Regain Modal Share
title_full The Rail Freight Challenge for Emerging Economies : How to Regain Modal Share
title_fullStr The Rail Freight Challenge for Emerging Economies : How to Regain Modal Share
title_full_unstemmed The Rail Freight Challenge for Emerging Economies : How to Regain Modal Share
title_sort rail freight challenge for emerging economies : how to regain modal share
publisher Washington, DC: World Bank
publishDate 2018
url https://documents.worldbank.org/en/publication/documents-reports/documentdetail/590151546248249963/the-rail-freight-challenge-for-emerging-economies-how-to-regain-modal-share
http://hdl.handle.net/10986/31089
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