Investigating potential effects of IA in road freight transportation and port- terminal logistics
Publicerad
Författare
Typ
Examensarbete för masterexamen
Master's Thesis
Master's Thesis
Modellbyggare
Tidskriftstitel
ISSN
Volymtitel
Utgivare
Sammanfattning
This thesis explores the application of current and future information standards , information systems,
and data security standards to enable Intelligent Access (IA) for road freight transport as well as
port-terminal logistics. IA ensures that the right vehicle, with the right load, is on the right road at the
right time and is a key enabler for efficient, safe, as well as eco-friendly logistics. With increasing
freight volumes as well as increasing demands from regulators, demand for holistic digital access
solutions for European logistics chains has been evident.
The research encompasses a broad set of technologies and infrastructures, including information
standards, for instance, eFTI, eCMR, RFID, and DATEX II; information systems, for instance, Port
Community Systems (PCS), Transport Management Systems (TMS), and Truck Appointment
Systems (TAS); and data security, for instance, GDPR, Zero Trust Architecture (ZTA), and
blockchain-based verification protocols. The research applies a two-scenario analysis approach to
contrast current practice (0-1 year) with future innovation (5-10 years), explaining how these tools
together facilitate real-time coordination, reduce inefficiencies, as well as increase compliance in
multimodal supply chains.
The findings shows that although much of the logistics system continues to be underused and
fragmented especially by small and medium hauliers, the emerging digital infrastructures offer the
promise of bringing new levels of interoperability, automation, and cybersecurity. The thesis
highlights the strategic value of aligned standards and also trusted data-sharing frameworks in
releasing IA's potential.
The research theoretically frames IA as a technology integration and governance problem and
provides policymakers, infrastructure regulators, and logistics providers with concrete
recommendations to drive digital access control. Empirical testing of IA models, cross-border case
studies of implementation, and regulation to encourage scale-up and inclusive digitalization of
logistics can represent future research directions.
