Our People

Our People

Neil Wiggins

Neil Wiggings has 30 years experience in the maritime sector, from deck cadet, through deck officer to container terminal operations, management, design, construction and development, then on to central operations management within a global ship owning and operating company and now owning and running a company supplying operational expertise to owners and operators of container vessels and operations development consultancy and training to container terminal operators.

He is a member of the Hamburg Committee of the Global Institute of Logistics since 2009, developing and delivering the CTQI (Container Terminal Quality Indicator) to port authorities and terminal operators. In July 2011 he was appointed as Global Director Container Terminal Quality Systems for the Global Institute.

Since September 2010, Neil is Chairman of Dover People’s Port Trust Ltd., an Industrial Providential Society constituted for mass membership and formed for the purpose of purchasing the Port of Dover for and on behalf of the town and communities of Dover.

Since January 31st 2013, he is also Chairman of the National Maritime Development Group (Thames and Channel Cluster).

COVID-19: Are we truly free or merely enslaved to ourselves?

‘Through discipline comes freedom’. Over two thousand years ago Aristotle warned that freedom means more than just “doing as one likes”. Ancient Greek societies survived...

Airtight on Asbestos – A campaign to save our future

On the 24th of November 1999, the United Kingdom banned the use of asbestos. Twenty years later and this toxic mineral still plagues public health,...

Rationality & Regionality: A more effective way to dealing with climate change | by Hamza King

Liberalism relies heavily on certain assumptions about the human condition, particularly, about our ability to act rationally. John Rawls defines a rational person as one...

The Disraeli Room
What are the Implications of proroguing Parliament?

During his campaign, Boris Johnson made it very clear that when it comes to proroguing Parliament, he is “not going to take anything off the...

ResPublica’s submission to CMA

Download the full text of the submission On 3rd July 2019, the CMA launched a market study into online platforms and the digital advertising market...

The Disraeli Room
Productive Places | WSP and ResPublica

On Wednesday 31st October ResPublica and WSP hosted a panel discussion in Parliament to launch WSP’s Productive Places paper and debate its findings. The report...

ResPublica’s Response to the Autumn Budget 2018

The 2018 Budget delivered by Philip Hammond was the first since 1962 to be delivered on a day other than a Wednesday, and was moved...

ResPublica Response to changes to the National Planning Policy Framework

The Government’s housing announcements on the 5th March were the first substantial change to the planning system since the Coalition reforms six years ago. The...

Food poverty: Time to lift the veil?

A century on from Charles Booth’s famous Poverty Map of London, accurate information on poverty has never been more important. So the findings of...