Optimization of Urban Rail Transportation in Emerging Countries Using Operational Research Techniques ()
Received 29 March 2016; accepted 20 June 2016; published 23 June 2016
1. Introduction
Emerging countries are developing countries which have achieved individual capacity and are on the path to becoming industrialized countries [1] . The list of emerging countries according to the World Bank index (May 2010) [2] includes: Afghanistan, Albania, Algeria, American Samoa, Angola, Argentina, Armenia, Azerbaijan, Bangladesh, Belarus, Belize, Benin, Bhutan, Bolivia, Bosnia and Herzegovina, Botswana, Brazil, Bulgaria, Burkina Faso, Burundi, Cambodia, Cameroon, Cape Verde, Central African Republic, Chad, Chile, China, Colombia, Comoros, Congo, Dem. Rep., Congo, Rep., Costa Rica, Côte d’Ivoire, Croatia, Cuba, Djibouti, Dominica, Dominican Republic, Ecuador, Egypt, Arab Rep., El Salvador, Eritrea, Ethiopia, Fiji, Gabon, The Gambia, Georgia, Ghana, Grenada, Guatemala, Guinea, Guinea-Bissau, Guyana, Haiti, Honduras, India, Indonesia, Iran, Islam, Rep., Iraq, Jamaica, Jordan, Kazakhstan, Kenya, Kiribati, Korea, Dem. Rep. , Kyrgyz Republic, Lao PDR, Latvia, Lebanon, Lesotho, Liberia, Libya, Lithuania, Macedonia, FYR, Madagascar, Malawi, Malaysia, Mali, Marshall Islands, Mauritania, Mauritius, Mayotte, Mexico, Micronesia, Fed. Sts., Moldova, Mongolia, Montenegro, Morocco, Mozambique, Myanmar, Namibia, Nepal, Nicaragua, Niger, Nigeria, Pakistan, Palau, Panama, Papua New Guinea, Paraguay, Peru, Philippines, Poland, Romania, Russian Federation, Rwanda, Samoa, São Tomé and Principe, Senegal, Serbia, Seychelles, Sierra Leone, Solomon Islands, Somalia, South Africa, Sri Lanka, St. Kitts and Nevis, St Lucia, St. Vincent and the Grenadines, Sudan, Suriname, Swaziland, Syrian Arab Rep., Tajikistan, Tanzania, Thailand, Timor-Leste, Togo, Tonga, Tunisia, Turkey, Turkmenistan, Uganda, Ukraine, Uruguay, Uzbekistan, Vanuatu, Venezuela, RB, Vietnam, West Bank and Gaza, Yemen, Rep, Zambia, Zimbabwe, and few other.
A lot of these emerging countries now have urban rail transport projects. This is largely due to the increase in commercial transportation activities brought by development. Nigeria’s largest city, Lagos, for instance is constructing a light rail system under a Public Private Partnership (PPP). The first two lines of the urban rail transport project are estimated to cost $1.4 billion [2] . The development objective of the intermodal and Rail Development Project for Tanzania is to deliver a reliable open access infrastructure on the Dar es Salam-Isaka rail segment. Total project cost include funding from World Bank and non-bank sources in US$ millions [3] . The developing world is embarking on a massive infrastructure boom, and China wants to build it―and bankroll it― a $12 billion contract to build a railway stretching to more than 1400 kilometers along the coast of Nigeria. It was China’s biggest overseas contract [4] . Kenya Railways Corporation is developing a new standard railway line for passengers and Congo transportation between Mombasa, the largest port in East Africa and Nairobi, the capital city [5] . With a population of 17 million, Cairo is one of the most densely populated cities in Africa. Its railway system operated by Egyptian National Railway (ENR) transports nearly 500 million passengers and 12 million tons of freight each year. Construction of line 3 began in 2007 to accommodate the ever-growing population in Cairo [6] . The Oran tramway project is part of Enterprise du Metro d’Alger’s (EMA) plan to build a tram network to improve public transport in Algeria, which was announced in 2006. Light rail development in Algeria is currently targeting the completion of three new systems by 2020. Oran tramway, being one of them [7] . Rail is an effective way to deliver mass transit of large number of people. It provides fast, safe and comfortable transportation from suburbs into city centers or city centers to another city center. The cost of rail projects, both the upfront land acquisition and construction, as well as the ongoing operations and maintenance, is considerable. Thus, governments and institutions must carefully plan, structure and implement rail and road projects to ensure that they deliver value for money, same time and make sure that transport policy objectives are met optimally [8] [9] . Application of operational research technique to urban rail transportation projects in these emerging countries will help to maximize value for money and meeting policy objectives. Linear programming and other transporting models are operational research tools used to optimize the urban rail transportation projects of the developing countries in this paper [10] .
Linear programming model is a planning technique that uses mathematical model in maximizing or minimizing appropriate measure to optimize the value of some objective after identifying some constraints [10] [11] . It may be used for solving broad range of problems in different sectors of an economy including health and transportation sectors [11] .
The urban rail transit transportation system, in most of the emerging countries, consists of three parts; the carrying tool, infrastructure and operation management [12] .
i) carrying tool is a general term of various types of equipment required by the railway and urban transit transport; it consists of safety monitoring, facilities of maintenance and protection.
ii) Infrastructure is the basic device of rail transit transportation, and it mainly consists of public works engineering system, tractive power supply system, and communication signal system. The public works engineering consists of lines, stations and bridges and tunnels.
The tractive power supply system consists of substation, overhead line system and electric power supply. Also the communication signal consists of two parts namely: the communication and signal parts.
iii) Operation management mainly refers to the operation organization and service management system organizing various transportation resources scientifically and reasonably, and provides high quality transportation services for passengers and owners of cargo based on the requirements on the transport of travellers and goods. This involves mainly: The passenger flow demand forecasting, demand rules analysis, Passenger transport path, transportation organization model, train operation plan, train graph, motor train unit application, train and station organization. The major constraints of rail transport market in sub-Sahara Africa are as follows:
1) The railway network is limited.
2).The technical condition of railway infrastructure is very poor. This have manifested in form of
(a). Aging tracks-insufficient, rail wear, deteriorating earthworks.
(b). Poor conditions of most structures.
(c). Lack of technical expertise and poorly motivated workforce.
(d). Obsolete signals and telecommunication, and lack of spare parts
(e). Lack of investment in the sector and corruption.
3) (i). Africa operates a very limited volume of traffic compared with the rest of the world: With a length of around 54,000 km, the network of rail of Africa represents only 5 percent of the worldwide network [13] . Railway has a competitive advantage to other mode of transportation on large volumes of traffic. Sub-Sahara Africa operates less than 1 percent of the world volume of freight and passenger rail traffic [13] .
3 (ii). The inter-country trade in sub-Saharan Africa is very limited: The percentage of inter-African export exchanges is still low as most Sub-Sahara African countries are still economically dependent on overseas markets, both for export and import. The railway pattern is still mainly oriented on exporting the resources to other continents, and less on regional trade [13] .
2. Formulation of Problem
In order to solve the associated problems of urban rail transportation, especially in the emerging countries, we optimize the three parts that makes up the urban rail transportation system, namely; carrying tool, infrastructure and operation management. These three parts constitutes our decision variables as follows:
2.1. Decision Variables
Let
x1 represent the carrying tool
x2 represent the infrastructure
x3 represent the Operation management
2.1.1. Carrying Tool (x1)
Let
x11 = safety monitoring
x12 = facilities of maintenance and protection
2.1.2. Infrastructure (x2)
Let
x21 = Public works engineering system
x22 = tractive power supply system
x23 = communication signal system
2.1.3. Operation Management (x3)
Let x31 = Passenger flow demand forecasting
x32 = demand rules analysis
x33 = Passenger transport path
x34 = transportation organization model
x35 = train operation plan
x36 = train graph
x37 = motor train unit application
x38 = train and station organization
2.2. Contributions
From the data gathered, the percentage of success (contribution) of each of the decision variables are given in Table 1 [12] [13] .
Therefore, the contributions c1j as regards the carrying tool are as follows:
,
The contributions c2j as regards the infrastructure are as follows:
, ,
The contributions c3i as regards the operation management are as follows:
, , , , , , ,
The performances of the decision variables towards optimization of urban rail transportation in emerging countries, therefore, are respectively:
(1)
(2)
(3)
2.3. Objective
The objective is to maximize total performances of the decision variables. That is:
Maximize
(4)
(5)
2.4. Resource Utilization
Let aij be the amount of resource j used to achieve one unit of decision variable xi. From the data gathered and with some simulations, we have the following:
Table 1. Decision variables and their corresponding contribution.
a11 = unit cost of achieving safety monitoring
a12 = unit cost for acquiring facility of maintenance and production
a22 = unit cost for tractive power supply system
a23 = unit cost of installing communication signal system
a31 = unit cost to achieve passenger flow demand forecast
a32 = unit cost to carry out demand rules analysis
a33 = unit cost to achieve the transport path
a34 = unit cost of formulating transport organization model
a35 = unit cost of building train operations plan
a36 = unit cost of making train graph available
a37 = unit cost of motor train unit application
a38 = unit cost of proper train and station organization
The amount of available resources used to achieve a unit of the decision variables are represented in Table 2 as follows [12] [13] .
2.5. Constraints
where T is the total amount available for rail transport in sub-Sahara African countries, which is put at $20 million. in a year, on the average, for the purpose of this paper.
2.6. The Model
Maximize
Table 2. Values of resources used to produce a unit of different decision variables.
Subject to
3. Model Solution
The model is first of all written in its standard form before applying simplex method to solve it.
3.1. Standardized Model
Maximize
Subject to:
3.2. Simplex Method of Solution
In this research work, we used the simplex method algorithm to solve the standardized linear programming model. The initial tableau was formed from the standardized linear programming model, after which linear programming solver (LIPS) software was adopted to arrive at the following results, with optimum solution equals 25,600,000.
Table 3 shows the values of the different decision variables using LIPS [14] .
4. Results Discussion
The Results obtained in table show that three of the decision variables are very significant, namely: x11, x22 and x34. That is, Safety monitoring, Tractive Power Supply, and Transportation organization model. In any of the emerging countries, these three factors, classified under carrying tools, Infrastructure and operational management respectfully, are very critical in optimizing the urban rail transport in emerging countries. The result revealed that if 200,000 USD is set aside to take care of the safety monitoring, 160,000 USD is set aside for tractive power supply, and 2,200,000 USD is set aside to take care of transportation organization model for urban rail transportation, then the optimum value of the objective, in terms of USD is 25,600,000. Substituting the values of x11, x22 and x34 into the objective function gives us the optimum value. This value is greater than the average amount available for investment in Rail transportation, which was put at 20,000,000 USD on the average, by 5,600,000 USD. This is an advantage. It is important to note that x34 representing transportation organization model, has the highest value, which suggests its importance among the decision variables. Finally, the factors capable of hindering the achievement of the optimization of rail transportation in the emerging countries, such as corruption and unnecessary bottle necks should be discouraged.
Table 3. Optimal feasible values of the decision variables.
5. Conclusion
In this research paper, optimization of urban rail transportation was considered. The problem was modeled as a linear programming problem, which was solved using simplex method with the aid of computer software― Linear programming solver (LIPS). It is shown that all the three categories of factors leading to optimization of urban rail transportation in emerging countries are important in the process of maximization. Specifically, a good transportation organization model must be built in order to attain optimality of urban rail transportation in these countries.