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PortEconomics
  • September 28th, 2025
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    Investments and financing challenges of the EU’s port managing bodies; findings from a comprehensive survey

    Investments and financing challenges of the EU’s port managing bodies; findings from a comprehensive survey

    Evaluating customer satisfaction with clearing and forwarding agents:  Kuwait Shuwaikh Port

    Evaluating customer satisfaction with clearing and forwarding agents: Kuwait Shuwaikh Port

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    Stakeholders’ attitudes toward container terminal automation

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    Toward green container liner shipping: joint optimization of heterogeneous fleet deployment, speed optimization, and fuel bunkering

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    Port reform: World Bank publishes the third edition of its port reform toolkit

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    When will we admit that maritime transport will not be decarbonised by 2050?

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    Digital technologies for efficient and resilient sea-land logistics

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    Newly-upgraded IAPH World Ports Tracker identifies major sustainability and market trends

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    PortEconomics members among best-performing scholars globally

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    Portgraphic: fleet capacity (owned/chartered) of container shipping lines

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    In a tight spot: American ports in global supply chains

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    Cruise industry in 2025 at a glance

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    The box that makes the world go around: container terminals and global trade

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    Antwerp-Bruges surpasses Rotterdam in Q1 2025: a structural shift or short-term fluctuation?

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Beyond the landlord: port authority strategies around the globeContainers

Beyond the landlord: port authority strategies around the globe

November 3rd, 2015 Containers, Featured, PortStudies

READ ALSO

Portgraphic: fleet capacity (owned/chartered) of container shipping lines
Portgraphic: fleet capacity (owned/chartered) of container shipping lines

Are port authorities limiting their activities to the landlord functions? If not, which other strategies do they develop? And to what extend are they different in different parts of the world?

Up to now, strategic management perspectives to port authorities (PAs) are limited and mostly consists of specific case studies or comparative analyses of Port Authorities in a specific geographical area.

In response, the port study of PortEconomics co-director Peter De Langen, PortEconomics associate member Larissa Van der Lugt joineed by Lorike Hagdorn (VU Amsterdam), published in the latest issue of the International Journal of Shipping and Transport Logistics, offers a worldwide survey of 94 PAs. The results of  the survey address their strategic scope, i.e., the set of activities, these PAs undertake.

While many PAs are described as ‘landlords’, they often provide services that are not generally associated with this landlord role. A factor analysis of the survey results shows consistent and recurring patterns of strategic activities. Statistical analysis, explores the relationship between PA’s institutional position and strategic scope, indicates that PAs with more autonomy and a more business-like structure and have a wider strategic scope and more business-like goals. At the same time, this might imply a shift in focus from goals at the macro level to goals at the firm level, as well as PAs moving from a more facilitating role towards a more entrepreneurial role.

The authors’ version of the study is available for free downloading @PortEconomics.

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Sep 18th 3:40 PM
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Portgraphic: fleet capacity (owned/chartered) of container shipping lines

Sep 12th 3:48 PM
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Investments and financing challenges of the EU’s port managing bodies; findings from a comprehensive survey

Aug 12th 2:18 PM
Thematic Area

Port reform: World Bank publishes the third edition of its port reform toolkit

Jul 21st 11:51 AM
Thematic Area

Evaluating customer satisfaction with clearing and forwarding agents: Kuwait Shuwaikh Port

Jul 11th 1:40 PM
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When will we admit that maritime transport will not be decarbonised by 2050?

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