Speaker

Dr. Quoc Thong Nguyen

SPEAKER

Dr. Quoc Thong Nguyen is Director of the International Research Institute for Artificial Intelligence and Data Science (IAD), Dong A University, simultaneously, he is now a senior Data Science Researcher at Soft Industries - Groupe HighFi, France.

Dr. Quoc Thong Nguyen received his PhD at University Lille 1, France on Statistical modeling, applied statistics in 2015. From  2015 to January 2020, he was a post-doctoral fellow at laboratory LMBA, Université Bretagne Sud, Vannes, France. From January 2020 to December 2021, he was a researcher at GEMTEX Laboratory, ENSAIT, Roubaix, France & Univ. Liège, Belgium. 

Up to now, he has been publishing over 30 publications on international journals, book chapters and proceedings of international conferences. 

Title: Estimating costs and CO2 emissions for last mile delivery of groceries using alternative modes and routing strategies

Abstract: 

Last mile delivery is a significant component in the growth of e-commerce, especially in urban areas. The deliveries in dense cities cause several serious issues such as air/noise pollution and congestion. In this study, we compare the financial costs and CO2 emissions from different last mile delivery strategies of grocery bins in a scenario in Paris with four types of delivery vehicles (diesel/electric vans, cargo bikes, and autonomous delivery vehicles). We use costs associated with each vehicle type, location data with constraints for establishments in Paris, and delivery scenarios obtained by solving the vehicle routing problem for an overall cost comparison. We consider an economic analysis of the daily delivery to optimise the costs and estimate the CO2 emissions. The results highlight the competitiveness among last mile delivery and reflect the transition knowing the transport expenses since 2018: electric van costs become competitive with diesel ones, it concluded by some perspectives with cargo bikes and autonomous vehicles with their current limits. The strategies show a great impact on overall cost and emissions, which are vital in the development of sustainable urban last-mile delivery.