MIT-CTL
& LOGyCA Create Top Logistics
Ctr. in Latin America
New
Center in Colombia will join MIT’s
global network of Supply Chain Centers
February
1, 2008
The
Massachusetts
Institute of Technology’s Center
for Transportation and Logistics
(MIT-CTL) and LOGyCA,
a Colombia-based logistics company,
have signed an agreement worth $19
million creating the Center for Latin-American
Logistics Innovation (CLLI), the leading
research and education center for
supply chain and logistics in Latin
America.
CLLI
will join MIT-CTL and the Zaragoza
Logistics Center in Spain as the third
member of MIT’s growing international
network of centers dedicated to supply
chain education and research that
now spans the United States, Europe
and Latin America.
CLLI
will help Latin American businesses
and individuals compete in local,
regional and global markets by delivering
leading-edge research, technology
and educational programs in logistics,
transportation and supply chain management.
The Center will also become a major
force in academia within Latin America
and across the globe.
LOGyCA,
which boasts the most robust supply
chain technology infrastructure in
the region, will house the CLLI in
its Bogota, Colombia, headquarters.
CLLI researchers and students will
have access to the infrastructure
and knowledge base that helped Colombia
establish the largest collaborative
technology platform in Latin America.
CLLI
will also connect with its counterparts
in the United States through MIT-CTL
in Cambridge, MA, and in Europe through
the Zaragoza Logistics Center (ZLC)
in Spain. The partnership between
MIT-CTL and ZLC, launched in 2003,
has created a highly regarded educational
program and continues to play a key
role in the economic growth of the
Aragon region and the success of the
PLAZA Logistics Park in Zaragoza.
MIT
Professor of Engineering Systems and
Director of MIT-CTL Yossi
Sheffi said that launching the
CLLI extends the reach of both MIT-CTL
and the ZLC, and enhances their ability
to meet the ever-growing demand for
truly global supply chain education
and research programs.
“Globalization
continues to bring new opportunities
for growth – and immense challenges.
To stay on the cutting edge and help
companies keep pace with these changes,
we are expanding our unique network
of learning centers where faculty,
students, researchers and companies
across continents collaborate on supply
chain and logistics projects that
have global impact,” said Sheffi,
who is also Director of the MIT Engineering
Systems Division.
Rafael
Florez, Director of LOGyCA, said the
creation of CLLI is an excellent opportunity
to strengthen the development of Colombian
and Latin American logistics, a well-known
strategic component of competitiveness.
“By
joining the MIT-CTL network, CLLI
will actively participate in the development
of global educational and research
programs. It will also give CLLI the
opportunity to develop solutions that
reflect the unique logistics and supply
chain challenges in our economies.
Latin American business leaders will
have access to world-class academic
programs that will contribute to improving
value chains through the continent.
This has always been LOGyCA’s
mission: leadership in innovation
for value networks,” said Florez.
The
partnership between MIT-CTL and LOGyCA
is based on a 10-year agreement, which
officially begins on March 1, 2008.
The $19-million deal includes a $4
million gift from LOGyCA to the MIT
Center for Transportation & Logistics.
About
the MIT Center for Transportation
& Logistics: MIT-CTL
has been a world leader in supply
chain management research and education
for more than three decades. Combining
its cutting edge research with industry
relationships, the Center's corporate
outreach program turns innovative
research into market-winning commercial
applications. And in education, MIT
is consistently ranked first among
business programs in logistics and
supply chain management. For more
information, please visit the MIT-CTL
web site.
About
LOGyCA: For the last 20 years,
LOGyCA has focused on delivering the
tools and capabilities that enterprises
need to successfully establish collaboration
initiatives within their value networks.
Through innovative educational, technological
and applied research offerings and
partnerships, LOGyCA has worked with
over 17,000 small, medium and large
companies in Colombia and Latin America.
For more information, please visit
LOGyCA's
website.
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