The study evaluated optimization as a
quantitative approach to minimizing the costs of
terminal operations in comparison with the routine (trial
and error) approach found to be employed by terminal
operators in Nigerian ports. To carry out the
experimental survey, five-year throughput data of dry
and liquid bulk cargoes from a bulk terminal operator at
Port Harcourt NPA Port were collected from 2015 to
2019 to serve the routine approach purpose. In parallel
an objective function was modelled to minimize the costs
of cargo handling subject to identified constraints that
produced the optimal solutions for the optimized data. A
test of hypothesis was conducted to determine if the
means (µ) of the two sets of data (optimization and
routine)were significantly different from each other
using the student t-test statistic. At 95% level of
significance, degree of freedom (df) 4, the results
revealed that there was no significant difference between
the two data sets. The paper concluded with the
implications for the study and the need to train both the
terminal operators and the ports authority in the use of
the optimization techniques for an integrated to tackling
port operational challenges.
Keywords : Dry/Liquid Bulk, Cargo Throughput, Guaranteed Minimum Tonnage (GMT), Optimized Cost Projections, Technical Efficiency