Showing posts with label sea cargo tracking. Show all posts
Showing posts with label sea cargo tracking. Show all posts

Monday, July 29, 2013


VISAKHAPATNAM: Three new Container Freight Stations (CFS) are expected to be set up in the Port City around the end of the year. Currently, the Container Corporation of India (Concor), Sravan Shipping Services Private Limited, Gateway East India Private Limited and CWC-SICAL have one CFS each in Visakhapatnam.

According to sources, Concor and Sravan Shipping Services plan to set up one more CFS each in the near future. The central government too plans to set up one CFS in Vizag to cater to the increasing demand for container services. "The Balmer Laurie CFS is being undertaken as a joint venture between the central government and Visakhapatnam Port Trust (VPT). "We are finalising the joint venture," said the senior port official. The proposal was made three years ago but could not be implemented because of land related issues. "The handling capacity details will be released once the formalities are completed," said the official.

Phase 1 and 2 of the Concor CFS is expected to come up across 80 acres and is likely to handle around half-a-million TEUs (Twenty-foot Equivalent Units), according to a senior port official."The new (phase 1) Concor facility will be built with a terminal built across 55 acres adjacent the Aiyappa temple. We have transferred the land and it will be operational by October," said the official.

Sravan Shipping chief executive G Sambasiva Rao said the firm aims to handle 10,000 TEUs per month with a CFC built across 30 acres from December. "Container cargo is the future. More than 70% of the commodities in the developed world are switching to container cargo. In some places, even iron ore and coal are being transported through containers. Though container cargo in vizag is just 5% of total cargo handled, it is expected to increase provided there is improved infrastructure in place," he said.

"People are looking at better viability. Earlier, lorries used to be used to transport marble slabs from Rajasthan which was expensive. However, now with domestic and exim (export import) facility available at the ports, businesses are looking at container traffic," said a source.

VPT handled 45.54 lakh tonnes of container traffic in terms of tonnage and 2.48 lakh tonnes in terms of TEUs in 2012-13 as compared to 42.14 lakh tonnes and 2.34 lakh tonnes respectively in 2011-12.

source: http://timesofindia.indiatimes.com/city/visakhapatnam/Three-new-container-freight-stations-mooted/articleshow/21436552.cms

Saturday, July 27, 2013

It is not uncommon for cars to spend weeks on cargo ships en route to their destination - but sometimes the cars simply don’t make it.
That scenario played out on a ship that experienced rough seas on a chaotic ocean crossing from Japan to Russia by the Cambodian vessel, Astongate.
According to the description of the dramatic vision uploaded to YouTube, the ship was carrying 64 used cars to Vladivostok, but following a storm and enormous swells, only 12 made it to the end. Further investigation suggests the incident may have actually occurred in February 2012, according to The Maritime Bulletin.
The vessel is described as being a Roll-on, Roll-off (RO-RO) ship, which are commonly used for shipping cars. In most cases, however, the vehicles are secured in the hull of the ship, meaning they won't be exposed to the elements. In this instance, however, the cars were on the top-deck.
The video shows several cars falling over the edges of the ship, and it appears there are broken tie-down straps littered over the deck.
The person who paid for the cars to be carried on the top deck of the ship reportedly signed a document acknowledging the risks involved.
There have been two well-documented incidents involving RO-RO ships, including the sinking of the MS Herald of Free Enterprise in 1987, and the capsize of the TEV Wahine in New Zealand in 1968.
And even cargo ships with the cars secured in the hull can experience significant problems at sea. For example, the Norwegian carrier MV Tricolor sank in the English Channel in 2002, taking 2800 cars with it. And in 2006, a ship with nearly 5000 Mazdas on board tipped onto its side in rough seas.

Source: http://news.drive.com.au/drive/motor-news/why-cars-and-rough-seas-dont-mix-20130726-2qp1r.html
The Karachi Port handled 93,458 tonnes of cargo comprising 71,179 tonnes of import cargo and 22,279 tonnes of export cargo including 5,038 loaded and empty containers during the last 24 hours ended at 0700 hours on Thursday. The total import cargo of 71,179 tonnes comprised 41,134 tonnes of containerised cargo; 7,985 tonnes of bulk cargo: 1,500 tonnes of coal; 774 tonnes of shredded scrap; 5,711 tonnes of rock phosphate and 22,060 tonnes of oil/liquid cargo.

The total export cargo of 22,279 tonnes comprised 21,865 tonnes of containerised cargo; 30 tonnes of general cargo and 384 tonnes of cement. As many as 5,038 containers comprising 3,064 containers import and 1,974 containers export were handled during the last 24 hours on Thursday.

The brakeup of imported containers shows 985 of 20's and 1,012 of 40's loaded while 55 of 20's and nil of 40's empty containers, whereas that of exported containers shows 457 of 20's and 433 of 40's loaded containers while 125 of 20's and 263 of 40's empty containers were handled during the business hours.

There are six ships namely Naxihe, UAFL Zanzibar, UASC Shuwaikh, DL Ace, Ellie and Banglar Mamata with three container ships, one oil tanker, one bulk cargo ship and one jute carrier respectively sailed out to sea during the reported period. There are four vessels viz Tasanee, Posen, UASC Shuwaikh and Vinalines Mighty with three container ships and one bulk cargo ship respectively are currently at the berths.

There are five ships namely OOCL Jakarta, Hyundai Bangkok, Posen, MT Karachi and Orient Singapore with three container ships, one oil tanker and one scrap carrier respectively sailed out to sea on Thursday, while another ship namely Stavanger Bliss with one oil tanker expected to sail on Friday. There are four vessels viz Rio Blanco, Kota Gembira, Ozay-5 and Sapphire-T with three container ships and one chemical carrier respectively due to arrive on Thursday, while five vessels viz APL Oman, Hansa Nordburg, Northern Prelude, Liberty Promise and SFL Yukon with three container ships, one vehicles carrier and one steel ship respectively due to arrive on Friday.

PORT QASIM
A cargo volume of 99,181 tonnes comprising 76,856 tonnes of import cargo and 22,325 tonnes of export cargo inclusive 2,280 loaded and empty containers (TEUs) was handled at Port Qasim during the last 24 hours on Thursday. The total import cargo of 76,856 tonnes includes 46,667 tonnes of diesel oil; 9,194 tonnes of phosphoric acid and 20,995 tonnes of containerised cargo. The total export cargo includes 22,325 tonnes of containerised cargo.

As many as 2,280 containers comprising 1,105 containers import and 1,175 containers export were handled during the last 24 hours on Thursday. There are two ship namely CV CMA CGM Mozart and MV Better Sea Park with containers and chemicals sailed out to sea on Thursday morning, while another ship namely MT Al-Salam-II with diesel oil is expected to sail on the same day afternoon.

A total number of four vessels viz CV CMA CGM Mozart, MV Better Sea Park, MV Beacon SW and MT Al-Salam-II are currently occupying berths to load/offload containers, chemicals, wheat and diesel oil respectively during the last 24 hours. As many as three ships namely Bux Contact, Brightoil Legend and Flora with containers, crude oil and cement currently at the outer anchorage of Port Qasim. There were two vessels viz CV Bux Contact and CV Dubai Express with containers expected to take berths at Qasim International Container Terminal on Thursday. There is one ship namely CV MSC Reunion with containers due to arrive on Thursday.

Source: http://www.brecorder.com/business-a-economy/189/1215122/

Thursday, July 25, 2013


A Superport is in the prcess of creation  in the North West. Liza Helps investigates.
Work has started on Peel Ports’ £300 million in-river deep sea container port Liverpool 2 – an integral part of the puzzle that makes up the ambitious multi billion pound Liverpool Superport in the North West, but can port centric development really work in the region?

It doesn’t seem possible driving along the ramshackle pot hole-laden road to Peel Ports’ Port of Liverpool headquarters on an unseasonably wintry day close to Easter. But Global Institute of Logistics chief executive officer Kieran Ring is of a more optimistic frame of mind. Talking at the CILT Conference on Logistics Clustering he says the plans have potential: “As fuel costs rise the need to move goods, domestically and internationally, far more efficiently becomes much more important than ever, both from an economic and an environmental viewpoint.”

Mark Basnett, executive director of Liverpool City Region LEP, a key partner in the development of the Superport agrees: “The trends of increased imports of consumer goods from low cost economies and export back to those economies, increased road transport costs and increased focus on more sustainable logistics for retailers and manufacturers, will drive business towards port centric and multi-modal logistics solutions close to large centres of population.”

Ring adds that when companies locate in the same place and share opportunities, synergies are created that can provide more efficient supply chain solutions than if the same companies were to work alone.

He points out that with globalisation the need for clustering at ports becomes paramount as more and more goods are imported around the globe. “The nearer you are to the port the better chance you have of keeping costs low.”

It is just that point that Stephen Carr, head of business development at Peel Ports Mersey (which operates Port of Liverpool and the Manchester Ship Canal) is keen to reiterate: “Currently 90 per cent of deep sea cargo enters the UK from the south, yet over 50 per cent of the UK container market is based in Birmingham northwards. Indeed 70 per cent of all goods that come within a 150 mile radius of the Port of Liverpool enter the UK via southern ports – with the on-going journey to the North of England by road and rail adding extra strain on the country's overburdened transport networks and the environmental impact of unnecessary CO2 emissions.”

Richard Butcher chief executive officer of Stobart Estates agrees and notes: “The majority of containers spend most of their lives empty but someone, somewhere is paying for that – there are about a million empty containers a year being moved out of the North West to the Southern Ports at a cost of £400 per container: that’s £400 million of waste. Any cuts to that cost must be welcomed.”

Carr goes on: "Liverpool is the most centrally positioned deep-sea port in the UK, meaning it is ideally situated to serve all cargo bound for Northern Britain by optimising the supply chain.
"By looking at the integrated ‘Ship-to-Door’ logistics, we not only optimise the transport leg from port to store, but also offer an efficient onward transport journey as Liverpool is closest to the consumer.”

According to the Liverpool LEP 17 million people live within two hours’ drive of Liverpool making it the largest population centre outside London.

Razi Khan, a buyer and supply chain manager at Typhoo, imports tea to the UK from around the globe. He says that by using the Port of Liverpool, as opposed to the southern UK ports, Typhoo has been able to make substantial cost savings and meet its targets for reducing carbon emissions.

Khan says: “We save around £500/40ft by bringing our cargo into the UK through Liverpool, including customs and storage. In 2010 we imported just 20 per cent of our tea through Liverpool. We currently have around 60 per cent coming through the port, and our target is to have 100 per cent entering the UK market through the Port of Liverpool within the next five years.”

Historically, Typhoo Tea routed 95 per cent of its cargo through southern UK ports and then road hauled to the North West. By importing through the Port of Liverpool they have significantly reduced road miles and therefore their carbon emissions as well as saved money. Peel Ports’ Liverpool 2 scheme is part of a wider £2 billion investment in the region which will see a transformation of the way logistics is carried out in the country or so its proponents boast.

Carr says: “There has already been an incremental growth in market share in 2009 to 2012 Liverpool had a one per cent market share – equivalent of 40-50,000 containers or 70,000 TEUs. Although the terminal at Liverpool 2 will open in 2015, it won't be up to full run rate capacity until 2020/21 but in that seven years it is expected to ramp up and broadly double the throughput of the port.

“But, it is not just the increase in market share. Peel Ports estimates show that by 2030 container traffic through the Port of Liverpool could experience a modal shift away from road haulage with five per cent of freight being taken by rail, ten per cent via the Manchester Ship Canal and 15 per cent by coastal shipping.”

In 2012 the figures were less than one per cent by rail, five per cent by Manchester Ship Canal and just 2.5 per cent by coastal shipping.

Construction work on Peel Ports’ Liverpool 2 project will create a 16.5 metre berthing pocket allowing two vessels of up to 13,500 TEU at a time to call directly at the port when it becomes operational in 2015.

The scheme will see the construction of an 854-metre quay wall and the creation of 44 acres of land for the container terminal which will be served by ship to shore quay cranes and modern cantilever rail mounted gantry cranes (CRMGs). It will be one of the UK’s most modern container terminals.

Douglas Coleman, programme director for the Liverpool 2 project, explains: “CRMGs are a highly-efficient use of space. We have given this great thought, and the adoption of CRMG technology also means that ships are going to be serviced very quickly. They are more modern than our current straddle carrier operation, and are a high-technology solution. This will be one of the UK’s most modern container terminals, and that includes the crane technology.”

The sheer scale of the Liverpool 2 project can be shown by the quantities of materials which are needed in the construction phase – with the quay wall requiring 30,000 cubic metres of concrete, 15,000 metres of steel piles and 6100 metres of new crane rails. Dredging of the berthing pocket will remove around one million cubic metres of material from the Mersey; and almost three million cubic metres of infill material will be required to create the new container area.

Associated infrastructure will require the construction of 3,500 metres of new road, 230,000 sq metres of surfacing and 2500 metres of fencing.

Liverpool 2 is the key project in the Mersey Ports Masterplan, the 20-year vision for growth and future developments at the Port of Liverpool and on the Manchester Ship Canal – launched by Peel Ports in 2010.

Liverpool 2 will connect directly to a number of port centric logistics hubs along the Manchester Ship Canal via barge – resulting in the development of the UK's first "green logistics hub" which will reduce costs, congestion and carbon footprint for businesses located in the North West of England, serving the North of the UK.

However, the £2 billion Superport project is not just about Liverpool 2 and the Manchester Ship Canal. Overall the project brings together 3MG (Mersey Multi-Modal Gateway), Port of Liverpool and Liverpool John Lennon Airport as well as Liverpool 2 and the Manchester Ship Canal.

Analysts Amion Consulting have forecast the potential for more than 21,000 new jobs and an additional £6.1 billion GVA (gross value added – a measure of economic output) by 2020, then nearly 30,000 jobs and another £18.3 billion of GVA by 2030.

But why has this all come about now? Much of it is about the economy and the government’s attempts to get it moving. This includes the mass injection of cash to pump prime infrastructure works throughout the country and the revision of the planning process.

 Butcher says: “The regeneration of brownfield sites has been helped by the revision of the planning process. When you look at the North West, land is cheaper than Midlands and the South - land costs, ownership and rents. Then, as you extrapolate, rates are lower. In addition labour rates are lower too.
Total package
“You have got to look at the total logistics package it is not just about the rental cost of the buildings – they are not the be all and end all of the deal. You have to put everything in the mix. The Golden Triangle may look good but you have got to look at how to service your market. The companies that win will be able to combine their business (online and traditional) with the lowest possible distribution cost.”

As well as the basic economics another reason why things are moving in the North West today has to be that for the first time in their history the Manchester Ship Canal and the Port of Liverpool are owned by the one company – Peel Ports.

“Up until recently,” says Stephen Carr, head of business development at Peel Ports, “the two entities were in competition with each other. Originally the Manchester Ship Canal was built by the traders of Manchester to bypass Liverpool and when one built something the other would try to outmatch it – it was a war so to speak.”

"We can now synergise them. That enables us now to hopefully punch our weight."

The canal is proving extremely popular with customers and Peel has had to invest in a larger ship just to keep up with demand. The new ship, MV Coastal Deniz, can carry 260 containers – 60 per cent more than its previous vessel Monica.

Stephen Carr says: “Deniz will move 20,000 containers in 2013. In 2009 we handled 3,000 containers, in 2011 this rose to 10,000 containers and in 2012 it carried 15,000 containers.
“Seven million tonnes of dry bulk cargo and petrol chemicals are also shipped annually.”


Rail links- Rail is key to multi-modal gateway
The rail terminal is key to Stobart Estates’ 1.4 million sq ft Stobart Park at 3MG in Widnes says Stobart Estates’ chief executive Richard Butcher.

“Many developers say they have rail connectivity, either possibly or in the future, but at Stobart Park it is alive and kicking with at present seven freight trains a day and a capacity to more than double that.”

Indeed it is a very slick operation directly linked to the West Coast Main Line handling up to 1,100 vehicles a day with a turnaround time of just 12 minutes.

It has the capacity to securely store 6,000 containers which are shifted around using four rail mounted cranes with automated container positional and recovery system and an advanced GPS and tracking system.

It looks mightily impressive and indeed it impressed Tesco so much so that they increased their presence on the park from an initial 628,000 sq ft to more than 770,000 sq ft.  Stobart Estates secured detailed planning for a 1 million sq ft warehouse with 40m eaves on the second phase of the development which is available on a build-to-suit basis through letting agents Jones Lang LaSalle and Cushman & Wakefield.

As an added incentive to prospective tenants on the site Stobart is also pushing ahead with a 20Mw biomass plant run on recycled wood.

“To get an idea of the power that it can produce,” says Butcher, “Tesco’s current electric needs at the park for its chilled store requires just 2.5Mw a year so there is more than enough power to supply potential occupier enquiries.”

Stobart calculates the potential savings at 35p per sq ft per year by having this green energy supply based on a one million sq ft ambient building that equates to £350,000 a year or £7 million saving in running costs on a 20 year lease.

The park is part of a larger development in conjunction with Halton Council known as the Mersey Multi Modal Gateway (3MG) that could see the development of up to 3.5 million sq ft of warehousing, 5,000 new jobs and the reclamation of 200 acres of contaminated land.

Earlier this year, Mersey Gateway was identified as one of the UK government’s Top 40 priority projects in the National Infrastructure Plan and it has been recognised by KPMG as one of the Top 100 infrastructure projects around the globe. 

Its centrepiece is a new six-lane toll bridge over the River Mersey linking Widnes to Runcorn.

Waterways- Cereal link via the canal
Kellogg’s has increased the volume of breakfast cereals it transports using Peel Ports' “Green highway network” – on the Manchester Ship Canal container shuttle service.

The Ship Canal shuttle service is considered one of the most environmentally-friendly bulk logistics solution on offer in the UK, and already serves other major retail names such as Princes Foods, Kingsland Wine, Tesco, Typhoo, and Regatta.

Approximately 2,500 TEU of Kellogg’s cereal product will be transported via the ship canal between the company's Manchester, Ireland and Iberia distribution hubs in 2013. The containerised product is transhipped at the Port of Liverpool on to a coastal feeder service to serve the Irish and Spanish markets.

In what is an added value logistics solution for the company, Kellogg’s has also taken advantage of the Port of Liverpool's flexible 'on demand' warehousing offering. The port-centric warehousing capacity further increases efficiency of the company's supply chain, with storage for up to 7,000 pallets of cereal product available at the Port of Liverpool when required.

Paul Blears, UK and Republic of Ireland export freight operations manager of Kellogg’s in Manchester, explains: “In general, many of our customers don’t hold stocks of cornflakes, so next day delivery is important, making the Manchester Ship Canal of little interest to us. But this has changed. Already, we have one customer in Dublin (Tesco) which requires between four and five 45ft HC’s a week, which wants us to use the environmentally friendly waterway.

“We were hesitant at first, but since trying the waterway, we have been very impressed with its reliability. There have been no nasty surprises. Truck deliveries to/from Irlam are very quick, and transit times are respected.”

Kellogg's use of the shuttle service will equate to an 85 per cent reduction in road miles for the supply chain: a reduction of 40,000 road miles and 61 tonnes of CO2 in the coming year.

Paul McCoy, business development manager for Containers and Barge at Peel Ports said: "We have developed a strong relationship with Kellogg’s and have a comprehensive understanding of their logistics needs and aspirations.

“Peel Ports is developing a series of mini ports and multi-modal logistics hubs at various locations along the Manchester Ship Canal, which means we can bring containerised products inland to exactly where the customer wants it.”

Source: http://www.logisticsmanager.com/Articles/20441/The+mother+of+all+ports.html

Birmingham-based Guardfreight International has signed a deal with the Midlands Assembly Network (MAN) to bring a new locking mechanism to market, which hopes to prevent $80 billion (£52.5 bn) of cargo going missing every year.
The E-Containerlock will be fitted to shipping containers to provide location updates as well as immediate alerts if entry is forced, thanks to an in-built GRPS tracking system.

Guardfreight says it is ideal for preventing theft of goods and for insurance purposes, as you can prove the exact location of a tampering or break-in.

Designed by industry expert Andrew Harrison, a working prototype of the product has already been developed, a small batch of which is now to be trialled by worldwide freight monitoring agencies.

Harrison said: “It’s early days, but we’re confident that this solution will change the way cargo is transported, with our business plan showing a £16m turnover by 2018 and the possibility of creating up to 50 jobs directly and in the supply chain.”

shipntrak, a subscription free online freight exchange, has been launched at the Logistics Link Live exhibition in Birmingham.
The system, which uses smartphones to track shipments, has been designed for simplicity and is powered by global vehicle tracking company Simplytrak,
It connects shippers and hauliers on a subscription-free auction style platform and enables subscribers to match cargo with available space. It allows live tracking of the cargo from pick up to delivery, which the company reckons is a first for online freight exchange systems.
Users pay a transaction charge of 7.5 per cent of the agreed price.

Carriers can put details of vehicles on the system and relevant loads can be matched with suitable vehicles based on location, route and transport conditions.

shipntrak can be used without any additional tracking hardware fitted to vehicles.  Installation of the shipntrak app on any GPS enabled android/iOS device enables shippers to track their loads in real time and assists hauliers in vehicle management as well as providing an accurate delivery time to the receiver. 
The system alerts the shipper 15 minutes before the collection is due - the shipper can then track the progress of the delivery in real time.
The process has been designed to be self policing with both shippers and carriers rating each other in the same way as ebay buyers and sellers,
Ehab Allam, managing director of shipntrak said: "We are delighted that shipntrak is now live and are looking forward to introducing the system to the logistics community."

Source: http://www.logisticsmanager.com/Articles/20633/Subs-free+freight+exchange+launched+at+Logistics+Link.html
Track your Ocean Cargo by Container or BL (Bill Of Lading) - Number.
Click on the links below to visit the tracking and tracing of the various carriers
:


Ignazio Messina Line
INTERASIA Lines (BL Tracking)
Italia Marittima (formerly Lloyd Triestino)
Container Information
CARU - CARU, LCRU containers
CRONOS - CRSU containers
UES - UESU, GVDU containers
TAL - TRLU, ICSG, TCLU containers
TEXTAINER - TEXU, TGHU containers