Sea Freight

‘Lean’ Practices Improve Efficiency for APM Terminals Customers

70% of APM Terminals’ 22,000 employees have now been trained in and equipped to apply Lean and Kaizen methodologies

TLME News Service

In 2018, APM Terminals made a firm commitment to tap into the huge potential that a ‘Lean’ philosophy promises.

Four years on, the company is consistently breaking safety records, rolling out digital customer solutions faster than ever, and customers are benefitting from improved efficiency – including a 40% reduction in vessel idle times for one Shipping Line at APM Terminals Pipavav, India.

Known in APM Terminals as its ‘Way of Working’, it is an overarching philosophy - tried and tested for many years by companies well known for their efficiency, such as Toyota - that supports all of the strategic pillars that will help APM Terminals become the World´s Best Terminal Company.

70% of APM Terminals’ 22,000 employees have now been trained in and equipped to apply Lean methodologies.

APM Terminals Way of working helps create value from the customer´s perspective.

Every employee, from the CEO to front line workers are trained to look for opportunities, however small, to continually improve the value creation process by eliminating waste. And waste is not only materials waste.

The biggest gains in the shipping industry come from time – reduced waiting times – shorter port stays – or delays due to avoidable equipment breakdowns.

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APM Terminals has run almost 200 Kaizen’s this year alone. Simply put, Kaizen stands for continuous improvement. A Kaizen event pulls together people from all areas of the business for up to a week, to intensively work on an improvement goal.

The baseline for Kaizen is standardization, which means that the process is documented in detail before we start our improvement journey. Best practices are shared global across APM Terminals operations.

These opportunities have resulted in millions of dollars’ worth of savings for APM Terminals and its customers.

Furthermore, between 2019 and 2021, Net Promotor Score - used to measure customer satisfaction - showed a positive trend for both landside and shipping line customers, rising by 5 and 13 points respectively. It increased further still in the first quarter of 2022.

40% reduction in vessel idle time

A big focus of Kaizen Events this year has been saving Port Hours. A shorter port stay means our customers can maximise the use of their vessels, reduce emissions and lower costs. At the same time our terminals also reduced emissions in support of our industry-leading carbonization goal.

At APM Terminals Liberia, process improvements to improve idle times have reduced vessel arrival cycles from 1h42mins to 55mins and departure cycle from 4h39mins to 50mins, along with numerous other associated environmental, safety and supply chain benefits.

This year’s Kaizen Team of the year at APM Terminals Pipavav for example, worked together with shipping line customer ONE in a joint Kaizen workshop. The outcome has been an average 40% reduction in vessel idle time.

Bringing external parties together

APM Terminals Poti determined that 90% of vessel idle time was due to external stakeholders, such as Border Police, Customs, Shipping Lines, Vessel Agents, and Harbor Masters.

Once this was identified, all external stakeholders were involved in week long kaizen to tackle inefficiencies and improvements.

APM Terminals Callao meanwhile, is using Lean methodology to fast track a license application to allow them to recharge reefer gas on the terminal, so that customer’s don’t incur additional transport costs to move a reefer off-terminal for this service.

Many thousands of these small improvements and best practices can have a huge impact, especially when shared across the company’s 67 terminals.

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