Against the backdrop of the dual-carbon strategy promoting the green and low-carbon transformation of the shipping industry, pollutant emissions generated during vessel berthing operations have become a critical challenge in port environmental governance. To address the combined effects of the priority berthing policy for new energy vessels and time-of-use electricity pricing, a joint optimization model for berth and shore power allocation is developed with the objectives of minimizing the total economic cost of vessels and the environmental tax cost associated with pollutant emissions. An improved Adaptive Large Neighborhood Search algorithm (ALNS-II) is further designed to solve the model. Numerical experiments based on actual port data verify the effectiveness of the proposed model and the superiority of the algorithm. The results indicate that, under time-of-use electricity pricing, the priority berthing policy for new energy vessels can shorten their waiting time at anchorage and encourage fuel-powered vessels to shift toward electrification. When the peak-to-valley electricity price ratio increases from 4.1:1 to 7.5:1, the environmental tax cost of pollutant emissions decreases slightly, whereas the total economic cost of vessels rises by 4.17%, suggesting that the peak-to-valley electricity price ratio should not be set excessively high. In addition, increasing the proportion of new energy vessels to 70% is more conducive to improving the overall economic and environmental performance of ports. The findings provide a theoretical basis and decision support for the optimal allocation of port resources under the coordination of multiple policies.
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Yongfeng Zhang
Wenya Wang
Houjun Lu
Journal of Marine Science and Engineering
Shanghai Maritime University
Shanghai Ship and Shipping Research Institute
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Zhang et al. (Tue,) studied this question.
www.synapsesocial.com/papers/69d896566c1944d70ce07baf — DOI: https://doi.org/10.3390/jmse14070688