“…It is well established in the literature that maritime transport services should be studied in the context of the supply chain that they are embedded in, as supply chain management is now widely practiced by industry professionals (Robinson 2002;Christopher 2005;Carbone and Gouvernal 2007;Cahoon and Notteboom 2008;Zhang and Huang 2012). Many research papers have studied ports from a supply chain perspective, for example, the value propositions and strategic roles of ports/terminals (Robinson 2002;Paixão and Marlow 2003;Robinson 2006;Mangan, Lalwani, and Fynes 2008;Rodrigue and Notteboom 2009;Zhang, Lam, and Huang Fothcoming), port/terminal integration in the supply chain (Carbone and De Martino 2003;Panayides and Song 2008;Song and Panayides 2008;Panayides and Song 2009;Tongzon, Chang, and Lee 2009), port performance measurements (Marlow and Paixão Casaca 2003;Bichou and Gray 2004), and port competition in supply chain systems Yap 2011a, 2011b). Surprisingly, very few papers (Vernimmen, Dullaert, and Engelen 2007;Notteboom and Rodrigue 2008;Saldanha et al 2009;Lam and Van De Voorde 2011) have adopted a supply chain perspective to study liner shipping services.…”