Title :
The impact of ship size on its unit cost
Author :
Kassembe, Eliamin ; Gang, Zhao
Author_Institution :
Inst. of Transp., Shanghai Maritime Univ., Shanghai, China
Abstract :
In this paper, two fundamental aspects, as well as their relationship, have been discussed; these are vessel costs and ship size. The use of mathematical in addition to empirical methods has been employed to determine the relationship that exists between unit costs of running a ship and the corresponding vessel size. Through data analysis it has been established that the ship unit cost is proportional to optimal vessel (OVs) raised to 0.701. In the context of such hypothesis we confirm the existence of economies of scale in operating large vessels. The positive cash flow continues to be present as vessels continue to enlarge their size until when the optimal point is reached. Then from this point shipping business tends to experience a total negative cashflow, which is obviously caused by diseconomies of scale. Likewise, it has been confirmed that the optimal vessel size is directly proportional to the voyage length. This means that the optimal ship size for short sea shipping cannot be appropriate for a long deep sea voyages.
Keywords :
costing; economies of scale; pressure vessels; ships; transportation; data analysis; deep sea voyages; diseconomies of scale; economies of scale; negative cashflow; optimal ship size; optimal vessel size; positive cash flow; sea shipping; ship size impact; ship unit cost; shipping business; vessel costs; voyage length; Buildings; Economies of scale; Fuels; Marine vehicles; Mathematical model; Sea measurements; diseconomies of scale; economies of scale; optimal vessel size; unit cost;
Conference_Titel :
Transportation, Mechanical, and Electrical Engineering (TMEE), 2011 International Conference on
Conference_Location :
Changchun
Print_ISBN :
978-1-4577-1700-0
DOI :
10.1109/TMEE.2011.6199569