Tag Archives: chassis pools

IANA panel: Intermodal chassis squeeze easing, but it’s far from over

Chassis have always been an Achilles’ heel of container or intermodal transport.

Chassis utilization is now about 90%, a high figure. And a chassis is essential to move a container. So people are holding on to chassis so they can reuse them, say for a reverse load. But that means the dwell time for the chassis is higher than it should be.

Some of the holding is due to the shortages; it’s too hard to get another chassis, so I’ll hold onto the one I just got, and even pay the dwell fee to have it for my outbound load.

If containerized cargo goes down from its current heights, the chassis situation will improve. But that would mean a reduction in cargo, and probably a recession; certainly decreased demands. For demand at this level, we definitely need a larger buffer of chassis, so there is some liquidity in the system.

One interesting point mentioned is the pressure ‘gray pools’, which hold chassis from multiple vendors near a large port or logistics hub, are seeing. We’ll find out if the cooperative approach can hold up under this stress.

Essentially, the pools provide a single shared inventory to a number of users. If a user, or a group of them, holds chassis on their own without sending them back, they are separating from the coalition, and they’re probably doing it because they see it as more favorable than returning the units. The separating group sees that they can do better by separating rather than remaining in the pool.

It’s a classic example of a breakdown in a cooperative game from operations research. Inventory pools have been studied for quite a while, by me and many others. The success of the cooperative scheme requires a ‘fair’ allocation of the benefits. If an individual participant, or some group of participants, are not seeing a better allocation of the gains than they would get separating, they will stay apart. This definition of fairness is called the ‘core’ of the cooperative game for the inventory pool. Under some fairly generous assumptions, we find there is always a core set of allocations, in which every group does better with the allocation than it does separately.

And a core allocation can be computed (there may be many of them), which will be fair. However, it’s virtually impossible to define a core allocation by using a pricing scheme for the use of the chassis. It’s almost never fair. There have to be subsidies beyond the price to make the groups stay in the pool.

That’s what is happening when the pools need to badger firms to return chassis, or when they charge dwell fees.

This would make a good project for an operations researcher, to study the rewards of using a pool over time, and examine how disruptions would affect the reward schemes that are in use now.

To find a fair allocation for a given pool is a good task, but once found, it’s probably not readily explainable to the participants. So they would be skeptical of their rewards, and might still split off. Hard computational results don’t always get the job done; the adopted solution must be ‘explainable’ or ‘interpretable’. There’s a growing body of literature on interpretable results, but not much on interpretable results for cooperative inventory games like this.

John Kingston Friday, September 16, 2022

IANA panel: Intermodal chassis squeeze easing, but it’s far from over – FreightWaves

Grim outlook for intermodal as an alternative to ‘maxed-out’ US truck market

This article outlines why intermodal is not such a good option for US distribution. Though the trucking market is ‘maxed-out’, meaning it is hard to get a trucking firm to move a container, rail is having its own congestion and shortage difficulties.

And chassis remain a problem area. Most leasing companies, who own the chassis, prefer large long-term deals with ocean carreirs rather than shorter term deals for local movements in the US. The article refers to the trucker-owned chassis pool in the Midwest, which seems to be shunned by the leasing companies, creating a shortage of chassis for containers.

Today, we can’t find any area of logistics that isn’t suffering over something. A far cry from a year or two ago.

By Ian Putzger, Americas correspondent 02/09/2021

Grim outlook for intermodal as an alternative to ‘maxed-out’ US truck market – The Loadstar

Truckers seek $1.8B from ocean carriers for alleged chassis overcharges

Once again intermodal container chassis become a bone of contention.Ocean carriers brought this on themselves by trying to escape liability for accidents caused by defective chassis. They created a system in which they could retain shadow control over chassis availability while not appearing as the responsible party.

The problem today, with declining intermodal shipping, is with the chassis pools created to give cargo owners a place to obtain a chassis when a shipment needs one. The pools were supposed to provide maintenance services on the units to assure they would be in good repair when they were picked up, reducing the chance of accident. However, there have been many trucker problems with the nature of the chassis use agreements; where they must be dropped off, and when. The words in the story are “denying truckers choice of equipment providers at ports and inland locations”.

I don’t think they will win on that claim. But it’s quite possible that there have been undercharges to ocean carriers and overcharges to truyckers. And since OCEMA, the chassis pool operator, was founded by ocean carriers, it’s probable the charges were arranged in carriers’ favor whenever possible.

There’s no question the truckers, who are on the low end of the totem pole, bear the brunt of the problems. And they have very few ways to try to right things. This is one attempt. There will be more until treatment of truckers is economically fair to them. It may never happen.

Chris Gillis Thursday, August 20, 2020

https://www.freightwaves.com/news/truckers-seek-18b-from-ocean-carriers-for-alleged-chassis-overcharges

Thanks to my good friend Chris Clott, ABS Professor of Logistics and Supply Chain at SUNY Maritime, I’m posting a copy of the complaint.