XINDE MARINE NEWS
Maersk Implements Physical Container Inspection Pilot xinde marine news 2019-01-11 10:25


Maersk and other carriers in the industry are working to improve safety and reliability in the Containerized Maritime Supply Chain, by verifying that cargo descriptions match actual contents of the container and that the contents of the container are correctly stuffed, lashed and secured. As part of this work, we have recently implemented a Physical Container Inspection Pilot within North America. We are currently performing inspections for Import and Export cargo into the ports of Newark Berth 88, Houston Bayport, Miami Pomtoc and New Orleans Ceres terminals.
 
The data collected through this pilot may be used to develop procedures that better ensure the accuracy of cargo descriptions provided to Maersk, as well as improve the use of the Code of Practice for Packing of Cargo Transport Units (CTU Code). If you would like more information on the CTU code, please see the following International Maritime Organization (IMO) website: http://www.imo.org/en/ourwork/safety/cargoes/cargosecuring/pages/ctu-code.aspx
 
The randomly selected containers are being inspected by NCB (National Cargo Bureau), and the cost for this inspection will be paid for by Maersk. We will endeavour to have the inspections completed as quickly as possible to reduce the delay in the intended transport of the container, however if a container is discovered to be inadequately stuffed, lashed, and secured, or found to contain mismatching cargo compared to the given declaration, it may be necessary to take corrective actions for onward transportation. Such corrective actions may involve reworking the container to ensure it is compliant with given regulations. The cost for such reworking actions to resume transport of the container will be charged to the Shipper / Consignee (depending on direction of the container). Since the inspections are being performed in the United States, a container that has already made sea transit may be selected for inspection. Containers that have already undergone inspections at the loading port may also be selected, as selections are being made at random.
 
By performing these container inspections, we hope to remove some of the risks from mis-declared or incorrectly stuffed containers for all parties involved in handling and transporting cargo, as well as work towards an overall industry improvement of safety and reliability in the Containerized Maritime Supply Chain.
 
Source:maersk.com

Please Contact Us at:

admin@xindemarine.com

 

展开全文

Related Posts

Goltens secures milestone Middle East distribution agreement with Germany's PEINER SMAG

xinde marine news2025-09-18

The Switch reaches 500 shaft generator orders, contributing to decarbonization in global shipping

The Switch2025-09-18

PIL Marks Historic Naming Ceremony of First LNG Dual-Fuel Container Vessel in Ghana

PIL2025-09-18

Accelleron: Shipping must pool carbon-neutral fuel demand with other industries to hit net zero goa

Accelleron2025-09-17

Japanese shipowner Nissen Kaiun takes stake in Dutch Wind-Assist pioneer Econowind

Econowind2025-09-17

bound4blue scores first LPG contract with unique non-explosion proof eSAIL® solution for BWEK

bound4blue2025-09-11