Global daily news 23.07.2014
***Weighing it up
Up front: ports that invest in weighing technologies could put themselves at a competitive advantage. Credit: Bari Bookout

Up front: ports that invest in weighing technologies could put themselves at a competitive advantage. Credit: Bari Bookout

Felicity Landon considers the impact of the new container weight verification requirements on ports

Assuming final confirmation from the International Maritime Organization’s Maritime Safety Committee in November this year, a new amendment to the Safety of Life at Sea (SOLAS) Convention is due to enter into force in July 2016. Half a century after containerisation first emerged in the world of shipping, regulations will – at last – require the weight of containers to be verified.

This landmark decision has prompted a flurry of reaction from various industry bodies.

Among them, the European Sea Ports Organisation (ESPO) welcomed the committee’s decision ‘by which it is the shipper’s responsibility to submit the verified gross weight of containers before loading on to the ship and stressed that the weighing of containers should not burden port handling activities.

“The verification of the containers’ weight can indeed play an important role in enhancing safety in maritime transport and the whole transport chain,” it said. “Ports confirm that misdeclarations of container weight occur and entail safety risks.”

However, said ESPO, it was hoped that the individual states’ implementation of the amendment further clarifies the shippers’ responsibility "and avoids that in the end this responsibility is transferred to ports and terminal operators". The weighing should take place before entering the port area and preferably by the shippers at the place of origin, said ESPO.

Meanwhile, the European Shippers’ Council is urging states to allow container weights to be calculated, rather than requiring containers to be physically weighed; but the International Transport Workers’ Federation wants to make it a legal requirement that containers are actually weighed.

ESPO secretary general Isabelle Ryckbost has called for "the most practical solution for all players in the transport chain", adding: “We should at all times avoid that this weighing operation burdens the handling activities in the port and increases congestion in the port. This could happen if misdeclared container weights are only being detected at a late stage, in the port or port terminal area.”


Weighing or calculating?

As with so much maritime regulation, interpretation of the amendment will vary between different states, says Peregrine Storrs-Fox, risk management director at the TT Club.

“Enforcement agencies in the different jurisdictions may well take quite diverse approaches and that is one of the issues,” he says. “Most of the enforcement agencies have been scaled back considerably these days and are typically looking in directions other than the weight of containers – for example, drug smuggling and human trafficking are clearly going to be much higher up the agenda. So to a large extent, this is going to be industry policing rather than regulatory policing.”

Whether the straightforward weighing or the calculation method is used, the verified weight has to be communicated to the shipping line and terminal through the shipping document "sufficiently in advance to be used in the preparation of the ship’s stowage plan", says Mr Storrs-Fox. He believes that many countries will veer towards the calculation method, for which they will need to set up a validating/auditing process, "so in a sense ports may not need to be worried".

Having said that, ports will have joint responsibility with the master for refusing to load a container if the verified information is not available, so they do seem set to inherit a policing role, although the guidelines don’t set out any sanctions if they fail to take action.

In fact, Mr Storrs-Fox says: “I would very strongly recommend that ports look at ways to up their game and take actions that would help ensure things are correct. For a long time we have said ports are key nodal points where weight can be checked fairly easily.”

A lot of ports have got very worried about whether container weighing will slow down operations, "and of course, that is a possibility, depending on how they do that", he says – for example, traditional weighbridge operation could well cause some problems. The TT Club has been championing the use of twistlock load sensing on yard equipment, which would also identify whether a container was eccentrically loaded, another massive safety issue.

“This technology offers medium to large-size container terminals the option to measure weight and communicate that information into the stowage plan,” says Mr Storrs-Fox. “The ability is there to do it, and pretty much seamlessly; a fairly accurate result can be delivered within ten seconds of the lift, so it will not disrupt yard operations, the information will be available, and it can be checked to ensure it is what has been declared as verified.”


Value add

He believes that ports could actually put themselves at a commercial advantage by providing a box-weighing service. “To my mind, there is a commercial edge to this; ports that embrace this opportunity from the regulatory and safety perspective may well be at an advantage if others don’t.

“We generally encourage our membership and the industry as well to look seriously at doing things that will cover both. But the reality is that a lot will say ‘we are not going to invest in this – at least initially, until we know where lines will go’.

“The end of P3 will have an effect on port rotations and volumes, so I suspect a number of terminals will be conservative and reluctant to invest unless and until they have the certainty around lines’ attitudes and some sort of recognition for installing additional technology. However, fast-forward a decade and I would be surprised if something like load-sensing technology isn’t very much the norm from a safety perspective.”

For its part, the International Transport Workers’ Federation (ITF) wants all containers to be physically weighed. “This is the best way to ensure safety and you can’t put a price on that,” says ITF president Paddy Crumlin.

“However, the SOLAS amendment now includes a second method of verification. If this [calculation] is used, there needs to be a way to ensure/monitor its implementation. We are still seeking clarification on how governments would do this, as the method seems complicated. Implementation is key. Independent spot checks are needed to monitor implementation. If implementation fails, then a mandatory option will need to be considered.”

As for the question of adding an extra burden for ports, Mr Crumlin says: “Many ports already have systems in place to identify overweight containers, such as weighbridges, and there are technologies out there which enable containers to be weighed quickly.

“We do not view container safety as a burden. We do view the misdeclaration of contents, including dangerous goods and weight, along with improper packing of containers, as an extra burden for terminal operators as well as posing significant risks to a large number of people involved in the transport chain and the wider public. Misdeclaration and improper packing are factors that threaten the smooth flow of cargo.”

Ports only need to be a weighing 'safety net'

Weighing at ports provides a critical checkpoint in the transport chain, says ITF president Paddy Crumlin.

"There are few other points where checks are made once the container is packed and sealed. The weight check at the port should increase pressure for containers to be weighed and packed properly, if they are refused by terminal operators following the implementation of the SOLAS amendment,” he says.

However, he says, all shippers must take responsibility for what goes into a container – and that means how it is loaded, how much it weighs and proper declaration of cargo.

“Weight verification should take place when the container is packed and sealed – checks that take place at a later stage to ensure that the weight is accurate can only improve safety along the transport chain and contribute to increased multimodal productivity. The technology is already available to weigh containers quickly at terminals with some systems being able to send alerts if the load distribution is not centred – for example, twistlock load sensors.

"I can certainly see commercial benefits for ports and terminals that are able to verify container weights. It would certainly be attractive to shipping line customers keen to improve vessel stowage and to ensure that container stacks are not top heavy, or exceed the limits of container strength.”

There is, claims Mr Crumlin, a concerted effort from some quarters to play down the dangers of misdeclared container weights, dismissing them as a somewhat small risk in the process of cargo handling.

“This denies that the practice of misdeclaring container contents and weight, often combined with improper packing, is a threat to workers’ safety at ports, at sea, on the roads, on the rails and at facilities where the container is inspected and unpacked. It is also a massive inhibitor to intermodal productivity. Let’s not forget the dangers this brings to the general public, particularly on the roads and rail networks around the world.

“The risks include stack collapse, road and terminal vehicle overturning, crane collapse or even contributing to ship loss.”
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FROM THE SIU:


***Federation Coordinates Aid for Gaza (7/23)

The International Transport Workers’ Federation, to which the SIU is affiliated, has issued the following news release and accompanying photo showing trade union humanitarian supplies being sent to Gaza in 2009.
Union aid supplies on way to Gaza
As its first lorry load of medical supplies begins its journey to Gaza, the International Transport Workers’ Federation (ITF) again backed calls for an immediate ceasefire there.
The ITF has organized a program to help trade unions send food and medicines to Gaza. The federation’s office in Amman, Jordan, is coordinating the provision of aid and is putting together the first cargo load now for dispatch tomorrow. Expected to reach Gaza on Friday, the supplies will be handed over to the United Nations Relief and Works Agency (UNRWA) and the Jordan Hashemite Charity Organization, whose support includes the running of a mobile hospital there.
ITF President Paddy Crumlin stated, “The situation in Gaza is desperate. There is a need for an immediate ceasefire before even more civilians are killed. We strongly echo and support the continuing calls by the ITUC (International Trade Union Confederation) for action in line with the UN Security Council resolution that called for ‘de-escalation of the situation, restoration of calm, reinstitution of the November 2012 ceasefire and respect for international humanitarian law, including the protection of civilians.’”
He concluded, “We firmly believe that a cessation of hostilities must be followed by renewed international pressure to achieve a long-term solution, including the end of Israel’s occupation of the West Bank and a negotiated settlement that respects the 1967 borders between Israel and a Palestinian state. It is time that the rights of the Palestinian people are fully recognized in line with UN resolutions.”
More details of the relief fund are at www.itfglobal.org/campaigns/ITF-Gaza-fund.cfm
In 2009 a similar ITF program delivered ambulances, food and medicine during the attacks at that time (a short film on this can be seen at www.youtube.com/watch?v=DY_KLmnE6EA)
The ITUC’s most recent statement on the issue can be accessed at www.ituc-csi.org/gaza-immediate-ceasefire