2021
DOI: 10.2478/ttj-2021-0026
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A Digital or Sustainable Small and Medium-Sized Port? Sustainable Port Blueprint in the Baltic Sea Region Based on Port Benchmarking

Abstract: Small and medium-sized ports (SMSPs) in the Baltic Sea Region (BSR) are caught in a dilemma of less financial support by the European funding programmes due to their peripheral position in the TEN-T Core Network. Most of the BSR ports belong to the TEN-T Comprehensive Network, which is rationally less important in the topical financial, infrastructural and policy discourses. Despite this, BSR ports are of a colossal importance for the regional economic development serving as gateways for the individual regions… Show more

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Cited by 9 publications
(1 citation statement)
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References 82 publications
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“…For this, this research provides SMSPs with a framework that can support their pathways in terms of sustainability. Advancing the existing literature, this contribution goes beyond sustainability performance in ports from the operational perspective and supports burgeoning research building upon competence portfolios and supporting decision-making in ports [219]. This study contributes to the existing literature on smaller ports in the BSR, such as the studies of Bjerkan et al [220] Bjerkan and Ryghaug [10], and Damman and Steen [221], who scrutinized Norwegian ports in sustainability transition.…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 57%
“…For this, this research provides SMSPs with a framework that can support their pathways in terms of sustainability. Advancing the existing literature, this contribution goes beyond sustainability performance in ports from the operational perspective and supports burgeoning research building upon competence portfolios and supporting decision-making in ports [219]. This study contributes to the existing literature on smaller ports in the BSR, such as the studies of Bjerkan et al [220] Bjerkan and Ryghaug [10], and Damman and Steen [221], who scrutinized Norwegian ports in sustainability transition.…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 57%