Contestability between Road and Rail for Non-bulk Freight
(2012)- Abstract
- This scoping study is a first step in determining a way to examine contestability of freight flows to rail and road in Australia. It The study reviews current freight and commodity modelling practice to identifying the most effective model for further study. A four-step commodity flow approach was first identified being most suitable and a proposed model was scoped. However, lack of available data made the preferred model impractical. The relatively new spatial computable general e(SCGE) model is recommended as the most suitable alternative approach; it requires less data than the four-step commodity flow approach and performs well in technically. It is proposed to test this model for determining non-bulk freight contestability for the... (More)
- This scoping study is a first step in determining a way to examine contestability of freight flows to rail and road in Australia. It The study reviews current freight and commodity modelling practice to identifying the most effective model for further study. A four-step commodity flow approach was first identified being most suitable and a proposed model was scoped. However, lack of available data made the preferred model impractical. The relatively new spatial computable general e(SCGE) model is recommended as the most suitable alternative approach; it requires less data than the four-step commodity flow approach and performs well in technically. It is proposed to test this model for determining non-bulk freight contestability for the East Coast corridor that links Melbourne and Brisbane. This scoping study includes extracts from a proposal for a full study to be
undertaken under the leadership of Professor Edward Chung. (Less)
Please use this url to cite or link to this publication:
https://lup.lub.lu.se/record/45fbb720-3d84-461f-b97e-3f783c2c2f23
- author
- Weatherby, Robert ; Reid, Stuart LU and Wang, Jian
- publishing date
- 2012-09-03
- type
- Book/Report
- publication status
- published
- subject
- keywords
- Rail Freight, Freight Modelling, Economic models, Railway, Freight transportation
- pages
- 64 pages
- publisher
- CRC for Rail Innovation
- language
- English
- LU publication?
- no
- id
- 45fbb720-3d84-461f-b97e-3f783c2c2f23
- alternative location
- http://www.railcrc.net.au/project/project/contestability_between_road_and_rail_for_nonbulk_freight
- date added to LUP
- 2017-10-27 15:26:01
- date last changed
- 2018-11-21 21:35:39
@techreport{45fbb720-3d84-461f-b97e-3f783c2c2f23, abstract = {{This scoping study is a first step in determining a way to examine contestability of freight flows to rail and road in Australia. It The study reviews current freight and commodity modelling practice to identifying the most effective model for further study. A four-step commodity flow approach was first identified being most suitable and a proposed model was scoped. However, lack of available data made the preferred model impractical. The relatively new spatial computable general e(SCGE) model is recommended as the most suitable alternative approach; it requires less data than the four-step commodity flow approach and performs well in technically. It is proposed to test this model for determining non-bulk freight contestability for the East Coast corridor that links Melbourne and Brisbane. This scoping study includes extracts from a proposal for a full study to be<br/>undertaken under the leadership of Professor Edward Chung.}}, author = {{Weatherby, Robert and Reid, Stuart and Wang, Jian}}, institution = {{CRC for Rail Innovation}}, keywords = {{Rail Freight; Freight Modelling; Economic models; Railway; Freight transportation}}, language = {{eng}}, month = {{09}}, title = {{Contestability between Road and Rail for Non-bulk Freight}}, url = {{https://lup.lub.lu.se/search/files/33919343/R1.135_Non_bulk_Freight_Final_Report_Updated.pdf}}, year = {{2012}}, }