Abstract(s)
The integration of the outbound and the inbound logistics of a company leads to a large transportation network, allowing to detect backhauling opportunities to increase the efficiency of the
transportation. In collaborative networks, backhauling is used to find profitable services in the return trip to the depot and to reduce empty running of vehicles. This work investigates the vertical
collaboration between a shipper and a carrier for the planning of integrated inbound and outbound
transportation. Based on the hierarchical nature of the relation between the shipper and the carrier and their different goals, the problem is formulated as a bilevel Vehicle Routing Problem with
Selective Backhauls (VRPSB). At the upper level, the shipper decides the minimum cost delivery
routes and the set of incentives offered to the carrier to perform integrated routes. At the lower
level, the carrier decides which incentives are accepted and on which routes the backhaul customers
are visited. We devise a mathematical programming formulation for the bilevel VRPSB, where the
routing and the pricing problems are optimized simultaneously, and propose an equivalent reformulation to reduce the problem to a single-level VRPSB. The impact of collaboration is evaluated
against non-collaborative approaches and two different side payment schemes. The results suggest
that our bilevel approach leads to solutions with higher synergy values than the approaches with
side payments.