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Understanding the impact of e-commerce on last-mile light goods vehicle activity in urban areas: the case of London

Understanding the impact of e-commerce on last-mile light goods vehicle activity in urban areas: the case of London
Understanding the impact of e-commerce on last-mile light goods vehicle activity in urban areas: the case of London
Growth in e-commerce has led to increasing use of light goods vehicles for parcel deliveries in urban areas. This paper provides an insight into the reasons behind this growth and the resulting effort required to meet the exacting delivery services offered by e-retailers which often lead to poor vehicle utilisation in the last-mile operation, as well as the duplication of delivery services in urban centres as competitors vie for business. A case study investigating current parcel delivery operations in central London identified the scale of the challenge facing the last-mile parcel delivery driver, highlighting the importance of walking which can account for 62% of the total vehicle round time and 40% of the total round distance in the operations studied. The characteristics of these operations are in direct conflict with the urban infrastructure which is being increasingly redesigned in favour of walking, cycling and public transport, reducing the kerbside accessibility for last-mile operations. The paper highlights other pressures on last-mile operators associated with managing seasonal peaks in demand; reduced lead times between customers placing orders and deliveries being made; meeting delivery time windows; first-time delivery failure rates and the need to manage high levels of product returns. It concludes by describing a range of initiatives that retailers and parcel carriers, sometimes in conjunction with city authorities, can implement to reduce the costs associated with last-mile delivery, without negatively impacting on customer service levels.
1361-9209
Allen, J.
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Piecyk, Maja
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Piotrowska, Marzena
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Mcleod, Fraser
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Cherrett, Thomas
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Nguyen, Thuba
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Bektas, Tolga
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Bates, Oliver
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Friday, Adrian
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Wise, S
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Austwick, M
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Allen, J.
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Piecyk, Maja
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Piotrowska, Marzena
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Mcleod, Fraser
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Cherrett, Thomas
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Nguyen, Thuba
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Bektas, Tolga
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Bates, Oliver
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Friday, Adrian
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Wise, S
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Austwick, M
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Allen, J., Piecyk, Maja, Piotrowska, Marzena, Mcleod, Fraser, Cherrett, Thomas, Nguyen, Thuba, Bektas, Tolga, Bates, Oliver, Friday, Adrian, Wise, S and Austwick, M (2018) Understanding the impact of e-commerce on last-mile light goods vehicle activity in urban areas: the case of London. Transportation Research Part D: Transport and Environment. (doi:10.1016/j.trd.2017.07.020).

Record type: Article

Abstract

Growth in e-commerce has led to increasing use of light goods vehicles for parcel deliveries in urban areas. This paper provides an insight into the reasons behind this growth and the resulting effort required to meet the exacting delivery services offered by e-retailers which often lead to poor vehicle utilisation in the last-mile operation, as well as the duplication of delivery services in urban centres as competitors vie for business. A case study investigating current parcel delivery operations in central London identified the scale of the challenge facing the last-mile parcel delivery driver, highlighting the importance of walking which can account for 62% of the total vehicle round time and 40% of the total round distance in the operations studied. The characteristics of these operations are in direct conflict with the urban infrastructure which is being increasingly redesigned in favour of walking, cycling and public transport, reducing the kerbside accessibility for last-mile operations. The paper highlights other pressures on last-mile operators associated with managing seasonal peaks in demand; reduced lead times between customers placing orders and deliveries being made; meeting delivery time windows; first-time delivery failure rates and the need to manage high levels of product returns. It concludes by describing a range of initiatives that retailers and parcel carriers, sometimes in conjunction with city authorities, can implement to reduce the costs associated with last-mile delivery, without negatively impacting on customer service levels.

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Accepted/In Press date: 21 July 2017
e-pub ahead of print date: 29 July 2017
Published date: June 2018

Identifiers

Local EPrints ID: 412991
URI: http://eprints.soton.ac.uk/id/eprint/412991
ISSN: 1361-9209
PURE UUID: aecd8ac9-b781-484a-824e-02c718fa9a99
ORCID for Fraser Mcleod: ORCID iD orcid.org/0000-0002-5784-9342
ORCID for Thomas Cherrett: ORCID iD orcid.org/0000-0003-0394-5459
ORCID for Tolga Bektas: ORCID iD orcid.org/0000-0003-0634-144X

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Date deposited: 10 Aug 2017 16:30
Last modified: 16 Mar 2024 05:37

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Contributors

Author: J. Allen
Author: Maja Piecyk
Author: Marzena Piotrowska
Author: Fraser Mcleod ORCID iD
Author: Thomas Cherrett ORCID iD
Author: Thuba Nguyen
Author: Tolga Bektas ORCID iD
Author: Oliver Bates
Author: Adrian Friday
Author: S Wise
Author: M Austwick

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