Wednesday 9th June - 10:00-11:30 BST
The need for digitalisation in the sector has certainly been accelerated by the events of 2020.
Whether feared or embraced, digital tools offer an exciting opportunity for traditional supply chain actors to radically enhance and improve their customer and network operations. At present, there is significant industry collaboration with many new digital platforms bringing together the supply chain and technology industry in a joint effort to deliver truly game-changing initiatives.
New technologies such as 5G, Big Data, IoT, AI or cloud-based solutions, will enable better connectivity, data exchange and storage, and even autonomous vessels. Terminals must embrace digitalisation now to remain competitive or they face becoming redundant within the next decade.
What measures are being implemented by terminals to remain competitive through the present digitalisation race?
What cyber-threats are ports and terminals currently facing and how can they overcome them?
How are present and upcoming innovations in technology strengthening the industry?
How can digitalisation facilitate information exchanges between ships and ports?
How is digitalisation helping to monitor and reduce carbon emissions in terminals?
What intersectoral efforts can democratize the access to digitalisation across the industry?
How can the industry capitalize on present and upcoming regulations regarding digitalisation?
Lyes Chebrek,Port Expert, Port DNA
SUPPORTING OPERATIONS PLANNING WITH AUTOMATED PREDICTIVE ANALYTICS Jussi Poikonen, Co-Founder & VP of AI&Analytics, Awake.Ai
HOW CAN DATA MINING AND DATA POOLING SUPPORT THE OPERATIONAL SUCCESS OF TERMINALS BY MEANS OF A STATE-OF-THE-ART SIMULATION SYSTEM? Holger Schuett, Managing Director, Akquinet Port Consulting Fabio Antunes, Global Operations Design(er), APM Terminals
DIGITAL TWIN – VISUALISING THE FUTURE TODAY Jon Ranstrom, Principal Software Engineer, Moffatt & Nichol
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