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INDUSTRY TERMS
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A-1: Term used to signify a first class ocean
vessel.
A/P: Abbreviation for AUTHORITY TO PAY.
AACO: See Arab Air Carriers Organization.
AAD: See ADVANCE AGAINST DOCUMENTS.
AAR: See ASSOCIATION OF AMERICAN RAILROADS.
AB: The abbreviation for Aktiebolaget, a joint stock company in
Sweden. Also AKTB.
ABANDONMENT: 1) Proceeding where a carrier seeks authorization to
stop service over all or part of its route/line or to give up
ownership/control of cargo or vessel. 2) Shipper or consignee relinquishes
damaged freight to carrier or refuses to accept delivery. 3) In marine
insurance, giving up title to partly destroyed property to the insurers.
4) The act of relinquishing title to damaged or lost property in order to
claim a total loss.
ABS: See AMERICAN BUREAU OF SHIPPING.
ABI: See Automated Brokerage Interface.
ABC analysis: The classification of items in an inventory according
to importance defined in terms of criteria such as sales volume and
purchase volume.
ABSOLUTE LIABILITY: Condition in which carrier is responsible for
all liability and is not protected by the normal exemptions found in the
Bill of Lading or common law liability.
ABSORPTION: Acceptance by a carrier of a portion of a joint rate or
change which is less in amount than that which it would receive for the
service in the absence of such joint rate or charge.
ABSTRACT: Abridgement of evidence omitting non-essential items.
Used especially in regulatory proceedings.
ACCEPTANCE: 1) Acknowledged receipt by consignee of a shipment
terminating the common carrier’s contract. 2) A promise to pay usually
evidenced by inscribing across the face of the bill “accepted“, followed
by the date, the place payable and the acceptor’s signature. (Broadly
speaking, any agreement to purchase goods under specified terms. An
agreement to purchase goods at a state price and under stated terms.)
ACCESSORIAL CHARGES: Charges for supplementary services and
privileges provided in connection with line-haul transportation of goods.
These charges are not included in the freight charge and usually take the
form of a flat fee. Some examples are pickup/delivery, in-transit
privileges, demurrage, switching, loading/unloading, weighing, storage,
inspection, grading, repackaging, billing, fabrication, etc.
ACCESSORIAL SERVICES: Services performed in addition to the normal
transportation service. Common accessorial services include advancement of
charges, pickup, delivery, COD Service, signature service, storage etc.
ACCOUNT NUMBER- An identifying number issued to identify a shipper
and/or consignee. The number ensures accurate invoicing procedures and
customer traffic activity.
ACH: See Automated Clearinghouse
ACI: See AIR CARGO, INC. or Airports Council International.
ACS –See Automated Commercial System
ACT OF GOD: Operation of an uncontrollable natural force. A natural
event, not preventable by any human agency, such as flood, storms, or
lightning. Forces of nature that a carrier has no control over, and
therefore cannot be held accountable.
Activity-based costing: An accounting system based on the true cost
of specific activities performed in an organization.
ACTUAL GROSS WEIGHT: The sum of the container weight, tractor
pulling it and the payload contained in it.
ACTUAL PAYLOAD: Actual weight of commodity being transported
(actual gross weight minus tare weight).
ACTUAL VALUATION: Actual value of goods shown on Bill of Lading by
shipper when rate to be applied depends on value.
AD HOC: Latin phrase meaning “for this”. In business used to
indicate a single end or purpose, a onetime application e.g., an “ad hoc”
investigating committee.
Ad Hoc Charter: A one-off charter operated at the necessity of an
airline or charterer.
AD VALOREM: Latin phrase meaning “according to value”. Freight
rates set at a certain fixed percentage of the value of articles. E.g. The
wholesale price of the articles, are known as “ad valorem” rates.
AD VALOREM DUTY: Tax imposed on imported merchandise assessed as a
percentage of its value.
ADB: See Asian Development BANK
ADD-ON: A term equivalent to proportional, arbitrary or
construction rate.
Admiralty Court: A court having jurisdiction over maritime questions
pertaining to ocean transport, including contracts, charters, collisions,
and cargo damages.
ADP: Abbreviation for “Automated Data Processing”.
ADVANCE AGAINST DOCUMENTS (AAD): A loan made on the security of the
actual documents covering a shipment.
ADVANCE ARRANGEMENTS- The shipment of certain classes of
commodities in air freight-examples: gold, precious gems, furs, live
animals, human remains, and oversized shipments- require arrangements in
advance with carriers: The shipper or it’s agent must contact the carrier
prior to tendering the consignment.
ADVANCE FREIGHT: Partial payment of the Bill of Lading freight in
advance. In other respects is the same as guaranteed freight.
ADVANCED CHARGE: Freight or charge on a shipment that is advanced
by one transportation company or another, or to the shipper, to be
collected from the consignee.
Advanced Technology Products: About 500 commodity classification
codes used in reporting U.S. merchandise trade are classified as "Advanced
Technology" which meet the following criteria: The technology is from a
recognized high technology field, the products employ leading edge
technology in that field; and such products constitute a significant part
of all items covered in the commodity classification code.
ADVANCEMENT OF CHARGES: A service under which carriers, in some
instances, pay incidental charges. Examples would include cartage and
warehousing costs. These charges can be in advance for the convenience of
either the shipper or their receiver. Generally abbreviated “PBA” (“Paid
by Agent”) on Air Waybills.
ADVICE OF SHIPMENT: Notice to local or foreign party that shipment
has occurred with details of packing, routing, etc. A copy of the invoice
is usually enclosed and sometimes a copy of the Bill of Lading.
Advising Bank: A bank that receives a Letter of Credit from an
issuing bank, verifies its authenticity and forwards the original Letter
of Credit to the exporter without obligation to pay.
ADVISORY CAPACITY: A term used when the powers of a shipper’s agent
or representative aboard are limited and he is not authorized to make
definite decisions and adjustments without reference to his principals.
AERP: See Automated Export Reporting Program
AEV: See ARTICLES OF EXTRAORDINARY VALUE.
AFFIDAVIT: Written statement which must be witnessed and sworn to
before a notary public or other officer who has authority to administer
oaths or affirmations.
Affiliate: A company that controls, or is controlled by another
company, or is one of two or more commonly controlled companies.
AFLOAT: Commodities underway in water transit, either actually
aboard vessels at sea or in port but not yet unloaded.
AFTER DATE: When a DRAFT bears this phrase, the time begins to run
its date. The date of maturity is therefore fixed and does not depend upon
presentation or acceptance.
AFTER SIGHT: When a DRAFT bears this phrase, the time begins to run
from its presentation or acceptance.
AG: The abbreviation for Aktien-Gesellschaft, a joint stock company
in Germany.
AGAINST: In international trade, used as a synonym for “upon”.
Agency Agreement: The steamship line appoints the steamship agent
and defines the specific duties and areas of responsibility of that agent.
AGENT: 1) A person or organization authorized to act and/or
transact business for and in the name of another person or organization.
2) A broker.
Agent of Change: The professional who lobbies for new ways of doing
business.
AGGREGATED SHIPMENTS: Several shipments from different shippers to
a single consignee, consolidated and treated as single consignment.
AGIO: Premium paid for exchange of one currency for another.
AGVS: See automated guided vehicle system.
AIR CARGO: Any property (freight, mail, express) carried or to be
carried in an aircraft. Does not include passenger baggage.
AIR CARGO, INC. (ACI): A ground service corporation established and
jointly owned by the United States scheduled airlines. In addition to its
airline owners, ACI also serves over 30 air freight forwarders and
international air carriers. One of ACI’s major functions is to facilitate
the surface movement of air freight by negotiating and supervising the
performance of a nationwide series of contracts under which trucking
companies provide both local pickup and delivery service at airport cities
and over-the-road truck service to move air freight to and from points not
directly served by the airlines. ACI publishes a directory of these
trucking services, listing over 19,000 points served in the United States
and the applicable pickup and delivery rates. Other services include
claims inspection, terminal handling, telemarketing service, and group
purchasing (equipment, supplies, insurance). ACI also makes available, in
many cities, low cost, disposable containers for shippers' use. For
further information: 1819 Bay Ridge Avenue, Annapolis, MD 21403
AIR CARGO GUIDE: A basic reference publication for shipping freight
by air. It contains current domestic and international cargo flight
schedules, including pure cargo, wide body and combination passenger-cargo
flights. Each monthly issue also contains information on air carriers'
special services, labeling, airline and aircraft decoding, air carrier and
freight forwarders directory, cargo charter information, United States and
Canadian city directory small package services, interline air freight
agreements, aircraft loading charts and more. For information: 2000
Clearwater Drive, Oak Brook, IL 60521-9953.
AIR EXPRESS: A term often used to describe expedited handling of
air freight service. See also PRIORITY AIR FREIGHT.
AIR FREIGHT: A service provided for the transport of goods in any
volume. Air freight is by far, the predominant form of air cargo and
accounts for over 80% of all air cargo movements. Each shipper's decision
to move goods by air turns on one or more of these basic factors: The time
factor, inventory control, superior condition of goods upon arrival or
lower shipping costs. Increasingly, the decision to ship by air is a
market oriented decision and hence, a consumer oriented decision.
AIR FREIGHT FORWARDER: Serves a dual role. The air freight
forwarders are, to the shipper, an indirect carrier because they receive
freight from shippers under their own tariff usually consolidating it into
larger units which is tendered to the airlines. To the airlines, the air
freight forwarder is a shipper. An air freight forwarder is ordinarily
classed as an indirect air carrier. However, several air freight
forwarders operate their own aircraft.
AIR PARCEL POST- Term commonly used for priority mail which
consists of first class mail weighing more than 13 ounces. Priority mail
is another economical and expedited service for the shipping of parcels by
air.
air taxi: An exempt for-hire air carrier that will fly anywhere on demand.
Air taxis are restricted to a maximum payload and passenger capacity per
plane.
AIR TRANSPORT ASSOCIATION OF AMERICA (ATA): The trade and service
organization for the U.S. Scheduled airlines. The ATA acts on behalf of
the airlines to serve the Government and the public in activities ranging
from improvement in air safety to planning for the airlines' role in
national defense. The ATA plays a leading role in encouraging Government
to cut red tape that hampers foreign trade. In the cargo field, the ATA
works with the airlines, the Government and shippers in developing
improved standards and techniques in all phases of air cargo. The ATA is
an authoritative source of information on cargo matters ranging from air
freight packaging practices, automation, freight lift capacity, data on
air freight growth and statistical data on air cargo services. For
information: 1709 New York Avenue NW, Washington, DC 20006-5206.
Air Transport Action Group (ATAG): An independent coalition of
organizations from throughout the air transport industry which have united
to press for economically beneficial aviation capacity improvements in an
environmentally responsible manner.
Air Transport Association (ATA): Founded by a group of 14 airlines
meeting in Chicago in 1936, it was the first, and today remains the only
trade organization for the principal U.S. airlines.
AIR TRANSPORT COMMITTEE: A Canadian government agency responsible
for the economic and general welfare of air transport within Canada. For
information: 15 Eddy Street, Ottawa, Ontario, Canada KIA 0N9.
AIR WAYBILL (AIRBILL): Shipping document used by the airlines for
air freight. It is a contract for carriage that includes carrier
conditions of carriage including such items as limits of liability and
claims procedures. The air waybill also contains shipping instructions to
airline, a description of the commodity, and applicable transportation
charges. Air waybills can be used by many truckers as through documents
for coordinated air-truck service. Air waybills are not negotiable. The
airline industry has adopted a standard formatted air waybill that
accommodates both domestic and international traffic. The standard
document was designed to enhance the application of modern computerized
systems to air freight processing for both the carrier and the shipper.
Normally, an Air Waybill refers to the Air Waybill issued by carrying
airlines and also called Master Air Waybill (MAWB) which comes with three
digits of numeric airline identification codes issued by IATA to non-U.S.
based airlines and Air Transport Association of America to U.S. based
airlines. However, air freight forwarders also issue HAWB (House Air
Waybill) to their customers for each of the shipments.
AIRBILL: See AIR WAYBILL.
Aircraft Container: A unit load device (ULD) which links directly
with the airplane cargo handling and restraint system.
AIRCRAFT PALLET: The use of a platform or pallet (in air freight
usually from ¾ “ to 2” thick) upon which unitized shipment rests or on
which goods are assembled and secured before being loaded as a unit onto
the aircraft. Most carriers offer container discounts for palletized
loads. Palletization results in more efficient use of space aboard
freighter aircraft and better cargo handling, particularly when used as
part of mechanized systems employing such other advances as pallet loaders
and pallet transporters. See also PALLET.
Airline Group of the International Federation of Operational Research
Societies: A society with the avowed purpose of forwarding the
practice of Operational Research in airlines. The membership consists of
Operational Research workers who are also employed by recognized civil
airlines.
Airfreightment: An agreement by a steamship line to provide cargo
space on a vessel at a specified time and for a specified price to
accommodate an exporter or importer, who then becomes liable for payment
even though he is later unable to make the shipment.
AIRLINE TARIFF PUBLISHING COMPANY (ATPCO): Publisher of airline
industry tariffs setting forth rates and rules applicable to air freight
as well as fares for passengers. Tariffs are available on a subscription
basis. Subscriptions include an up-to-date copy of the tariffs for new
subscribers. For information: 400 West Service Road, Chantilly, VA 22021.
AIRMAIL: The term "airmail," as a class of mail, is used only in
international postal service. Within the United States, the U.S. Postal
Service moves all first class mail, priority mail, and express mail by air
where this will expedite delivery.
Airlines Reporting Corporation (ARC): Since 1964, ARC's Area
Settlement Plan (ASP) provides ARC accredited travel agency locations in
the USA with a ticketing, reporting, and settlement link to ARC's
participation carriers. Incorporated in 1984 and currently operating under
the theme of Building an Electronic System, ARC provides its services to
approximately 46,000 agency locations (of which 33,000 are retail
locations) and 136 air and rail carriers.
Airport and Airway Trust Fund: A federal fund that collects
passenger ticket taxes and disperses those funds for airport facilities.
Airports Council International (ACI): The Airports Council
International is the "Voice of the World's Airports" representing over
1,200 airports across 150 countries.
AIRPORT MAIL FACILITY (AMF): A U S Postal Service facility located
on or adjacent to an airport that is primarily engaged in the dispatch,
receipt and transfer of mail directly with air carriers
AIRWORTHINESS CERTIFICATION: Documentation to show that aircraft or
components comply with all the airworthiness requirements related to its
use as laid down by the regulatory authorities for the country in which
the aircraft is registered.
AIS: See ALBION INTERNATIONAL SERVICES, INC. Also abbreviation for
“Automated Information System”.
AIT: See American Institute in Taiwan
AKTB: See AB.
AKTS: See AS.
Albion Group of Companies: See Albion International Services, Inc,
(AIS), Albion Management Resources, Inc. (AMR) and Albion Quality
Management Systems, Inc. (AQMS)
ALBION INTERNATIONAL SERVICES, INC. (AIS): Headquartered in Valley
Stream NY with a Miami FL branch, Albion International Services, Inc.
offers the following services: Mergers & Acquisitions, Company Valuations,
Management Consulting Services, Financial and Accounting Services and
International Representation Services. For information: 265 E. Merrick
Road; Suite 209, Valley Stream, NY 11580.
ALBION MANAGEMENT RESOURCES, INC. (AMR): Headquartered in Chicago,
IL with regional offices in Los Angeles CA, Ridgewood NJ, Valley Stream
NY, Miami FL and Houston TX, Albion Management Resources, Inc. offers a
full range of highly confidential and professional services to assist
corporate management with all their Executive Recruitment and staffing
requirements. Services offered include Executive Recruitment, Interim
Management, Outplacement Services, Temporary Staffing and Background
Investigations. For information: 9420 West Foster; Suite 211, Chicago, IL
60656.
Albion Quality Management Systems, Inc. (AQMS): Headquartered in
Valley Stream, NY with a Miami, FL branch, Albion Quality Management
Systems, Inc. offers a full range of services leading to implementation of
Quality Systems consistent with the requirements of ISO 9000. Albion also
offers ISM Code Consulting and Training. AQMS has a 100% first-time pass
rate in over 150+ Certifications within the transportation logistics and
related industries. Services offered include ISO 9000 and ISM Code
Consulting & Training, Quality Management Training, Gap Analysis, Health
Checks and Pre-assessment Audits. For information: 265 E. Merrick Road;
Suite 209, Valley Stream, NY 11580.
ALL-COMMODITY RATE: 1) Usually a carload/truckload rate applicable
to multiple shipments which move at one time in one vehicle from the
consignor to the consignee. 2) “freight-all-kinds” or FAK rate. 3) An
all-commodity rate is established based on actual transportation cost
rather than “Value of service”.
ALL-CARGO AIRCRAFT: An aircraft for the carriage of cargo only
rather than the combination of passengers and cargo. The all-cargo
aircraft will carry traffic in bulk or container in the main deck as well
as in the lower deck of the aircraft. It may include a scheduled and
non-scheduled service.
All-Risk Clause: An insurance provision that all loss or damage to
goods is insured except that of inherent vice (self caused). See All-Risk
Insurance.
All Risks Coverage: A type of marine insurance, is the broadest
kind of standard coverage, but excludes damage caused by war, strikes, and
riots. The broadest form of coverage available, providing protection
against all risks of physical loss or damage from any external cause. Does
not cover loss or damage due to delay, inherent vice, pre-shipment
condition, inadequate packaging, or loss of market.
ALL-RISK INSURANCE: Names given to a policy which covers against
loss caused by all perils except those which are specifically excluded in
the terms of the policy. This is the broadest form of coverage available,
providing protection against all risks of physical loss or damage from any
external cause. Does not cover loss or damage due to delay, inherent vice,
pre-shipment condition, inadequate packaging, or loss of market. Ordinary
policies name the peril or perils specifically covered in the policy.
ALLONGE: A slip of paper attached to a BILL OF LADING, ACCEPTANCE
or NOTE for the purposes of providing space for additional endorsements.
ALLOWANCE: Deduction from the weight or value of goods, allowed if
a carrier fails to provide necessary equipment and that equipment is
furnished by the shipper.
ALONGSIDE: Point of delivery beside a vessel. Statement designating
where the title to goods passes from party to another. Normally, a phrase
referring to the side of a ship. Goods to be delivered "alongside" are to
be placed on the dock or barge within reach of the transport ship's tackle
so that they can be loaded aboard the ship. Also, goods delivered to the
port of embarkation, but without loading fees.
AMTD: Abbreviation for “Automatic Magnetic Tape Distribution”
ALTERNATE ROUTING: Routing that is less desirable than the normal
but results in identical terms.
AMERICAN BUREAU OF SHIPPING (ABS): Organization for classification
of vessels, control of construction specifications and examination of
seaworthiness.
American Institute in Taiwan: The AIT is a non-profit corporation that
represents U.S. commercial, cultural, and other interests in Taiwan in
lieu of an embassy. In 1979, the United States terminated formal
diplomatic relations with Taiwan when it recognized the People's Republic
of China as the sole legal government of China. AIT was authorized to
continue commercial, cultural and other relations between the United
States and Taiwan. AIT headquarters are located in Arlington, Virginia;
constituent offices are in Taipei and Kaohsiung, Taiwan.
AMERICAN SOCIETY OF TRAFFIC & TRANSPORTATION (AST&T): Examining and
certifying organization which aims for professionalism in the traffic and
transportation field.
American Society of Transportation & Logistics: A professional
organization in the field of logistics.
AMERICAN TRUCKING ASSOCIATION (ATA): National federation of the US
trucking industry comprised of 51 state trucking associations (including
Washington DC) and independent conferences, each representing a special
class/type of trucking operation.
AMERICAN WAREHOUSEMEN’S ASSOCIATION (AWA): Voluntary organization
of warehousemen established to assure high standards in the industry.
AMERICAN WATERWAY OPERATORS: A domestic water-carrier industry
association representing barge operators on the inland waterways.
AMF: See AIRPORT MAIL FACILITY.
AMR: See ALBION MANAGEMENT RESOURCES, INC.
AMS: See Automated Manifest System
AMTRAK: The National Railroad Passenger Corporation. A federally
created corporation that operates most of the US inter-city passenger rail
service.
ANCILLARY EQUIPMENT: Equipment used to build up a palletized load
or to convey an ULD outside an aircraft. See also AIRCRAFT PALLET.
ANIMAL CONTAINERS: The use of air freight as a means of
transporting household pets led to the development of special containers
designed to provide adequate protection and air circulation. Such
containers may be purchased or rented from many carriers.
ANSI: Abbreviation for “American National Standards Institute”
Antidumping:
Antidumping, as a reference to the system of laws to remedy dumping, is
defined as a converse of dumping.
Antidumping Duty: A
duty assessed on imported merchandise which is subject to an antidumping
duty order. The antidumping duty is assessed on an entry-by-entry basis in
an amount equal to the difference between the United States price of that
entry and the foreign market value of such or similar merchandise at the
time the merchandise was sold to the United States.
Antidumping Petition:
A petition filed on behalf of an affected United States industry, alleging
that foreign merchandise is being sold in the United States at "less than
fair value" and that such sales are causing or threatening material injury
to, or materially retarding the establishment of, a United States
industry.
any-quantity rate: A
rate that applies to any size shipment tendered to a carrier. No discount
rate is available for large shipments.
APEC: See Asia Pacific Economic
APPARENT GOOD ORDER: Statement denoting that goods are free from
damage and in good condition, as far as their external appearance is
concerned.
AQMS: see Albion Quality Management Systems, Inc.
Arab Air Carriers Organization (AACO): The Arab Air Carriers
Organization is the Regional Association of Arab Airlines. It is one of
the oldest tools of Pan Arab cooperation established by the Arab League of
States. Since its inception in 1965, AACO has thrived to progress in an
environment of an air transport industry that is both challenging and
demanding.
ARBITRARY: 1) Charge in addition to regular freight charge to
compensate for unusual local conditions. 2) Fixed amount accepted by a
carrier when dividing joint rates. Also referred to as a PROPORTIONAL,
ADD-ON or construction rate.
ARBITRAGE: The buying of foreign exchange, securities or
commodities in one market and the simultaneous selling in another market,
in terms of a third market. By this manipulation, a profit is made due to
the difference in rates of exchange or in the price of the securities or
commodities involved.
Arbitration Clause:
A standard clause to be included in the contracts of exporters and
importers, as suggested by the American Arbitration Association. It states
that any controversy or claim will be settled by arbitration in accordance
with the rules of the American Arbitration Association.
ARC: See Airlines Reporting Corporation.
ARINC: Based in Annapolis, MD, this organization provides
communications services, systems development and integration, systems
engineering, and management services to the world's aviation community,
commercial customers, and government agencies such as the FAA, DOD, NASA,
DOE, and DOT. ARINC provides sophisticated communications and information
handling services capable of reaching aircraft anywhere in the world.
ARRIVAL NOTICE: On arrival of freight at destination, notice is
promptly sent to the consignee showing number of packages, description of
goods, route, rate, weight, car initial and number, amount of freight
charges, location where delivery will be made and the time allowed for
removal before demurrage/storage charges will accrue. Also the Notice that
the carrier or the forwarders sends to the consignee when a shipment has
arrived. It is issued by railroads, airlines, and maritime services.
ARTICLES OF EXTRAORDINARY VALUE (AEV): Commodities identified as
high value items.
artificial intelligence: A field of research seeking to understand and
computerize the human thought process.
AS: The abbreviation for Akieselskabet, a joint stock company in
Denmark or Norway. Also AKTS.
AS CUSTOMARY: In a contract, this refers to the usual manner of
performing a service without a time period specified.
AS/IS: Term indicating that goods offered are without warranty or
guarantee. Buyer has no recourse on vendor for the quality of the
merchandise.
ASEAN: See Association of Southeast Asian Nations
Asia Pacific Economic
Cooperation: APEC, established in November 1989, is an informal
grouping of Asia Pacific countries that provides a forum for Ministerial
level discussion of a broad range of economic issues. APEC includes the
six ASEAN countries (Brunei, Indonesia, Malaysia, Philippines, Singapore,
and Thailand), plus: Australia, Canada, China, Hong Kong, Japan, New
Zealand, South Korea, Taiwan, and the United States.
Asian Development Bank:
The ADB helps finance economic development in developing countries in
the Asian and Pacific area through the provision of loans on near-market
terms, with its Ordinary Capital Resources (OCR), and on concessional
terms, through the Asian Development Fund (ADF). The ADB was established
in 1965 (began operating in December 1966); headquarters are in Manila,
Philippines.
ASIAN DOLLARS: U.S. funds deposited in banks in Asia and the
Pacific Basin.
ASRS: See automated storage and retrieval system.
Assessment: The
imposition of Antidumping Duties on imported merchandise.
Association of Asia Pacific
Airlines (formerly the Orient Airlines Association): This
organization covers all aspects of commercial aviation in the Asia Pacific
region.
ASSEMBLY SERVICE: A service under which a carrier assembles
shipments from many shippers and transports them as one shipment to one
receiver. See also DISTRIBUTION SERVICE.
Asset-based provider:
A logistics company with ties to a motor carrier, air carrier,
railroad, or warehouse management firm.
ASSIGNMENT: Legal transfer of the rights, duties, responsibilities
and/or benefits of an agreement, contract, or financial instrument to
third party.
Assignment of Proceeds:
A stipulation within a Letter of Credit in which some or all of the
proceeds are assigned from the original beneficiary to one or more
additional beneficiaries.
ASSOCIATION OF AMERICAN RAILROADS (AAR): A railroad industry
association that represents the larger U. S. Railroads.
Association of Southeast Asian
Nations (ASEAN): Agreed in January 1992 to create a free trade
area (ASEAN Free Trade Area, or AFTA) with use of a common effective
preferential tariff. Under the agreement ASEAN members will cut tariff
rates within 15 years of its start date of January 1994. Manufactured
goods from 15 sectors designated as "fast track" are subject to tariff
reduction to 0-5 percent within 10 years, and seven years if the starting
rates were already below 20 percent. "Fast track" sectors include
vegetable oils, cement, chemicals, pharmaceuticals, fertilizer, plastics,
rubber products, leather products, pulp, textiles, ceramic and glass
products, gems and jewelry, copper cathodes, electronics, and wooden and
rattan furniture.
AST&T: See AMERICAN SOCIETY OF TRAFFIC & TRANSPORTATION.
AT: Abbreviation for “American Terms” used in Marine Insurance. A
term used to differentiate between the conditions of American Policies
from those of other nations, principally England.
ATA: Actual Time of Arrival, or Airport-To-Airport or see AIR
TRANSPORT ASSOCIATION OF AMERICA or AMERICAN TRUCKING ASSOCIATION.
ATA CARNET: A customs document permitting the holder to carry or
send merchandise temporarily into certain foreign countries (for display,
demonstration or similar purposes) without completing normal customs
formalities. With a carnet, the holder avoids paying duties or posting
bonds. See also CARNET.
ATAG: See Air Transport Action Group.
ATD: Actual Time of Departure.
ATLAS: See Automated Trade Locator Assistance Network
ATPCO: See AIRLINE TARIFF PUBLISHING COMPANY.
ATHWARTSHIP: A direction across the beam of a vessel.
ATTENDANT ACCOMPANYING SHIPMENTS: Sometimes attendants accompany
cargo shipments as when grooms or veterinarians accompany racehorses or
other live animals. This service requires advance arrangements with an
airline.
AUDIT TRAIL: 1) Path generated by a fully processed business
transaction includes original entry, transaction listing, file posting and
report. 2) Management controls that document acceptance, handling and
movement of materials through a warehouse. 3) Verifying summary account
balances by analysis/inspection of underlying source documents and
transaction records.
Auditing: In
transportation, determining the correct transportation charges due the
carrier. Auditing involves checking the freight bill for errors, correct
rate and weight.
Automated Brokerage Interface (ABI):
A system available to U.S. Customs Brokers with the computer capabilities
and customs certification to transmit and exchange customs entries and
other information, facilitating the prompt release of imported cargo. Part
of Customs' Automated Commercial System, permits transmission of data
pertaining to merchandise being imported into the United States. Qualified
participants include brokers, importers, carriers, port authorities, and
independent data processing companies referred to as service centers.
Automated Clearinghouse (ACH):
The Automated Clearinghouse (ACH) is a feature of the Automated Broker
Interface which is a part of Customs' Automated Commercial System. The ACH
combines elements of bank lock box arrangements with electronic funds
transfer services to replace cash or check for payment of estimated
duties, taxes, and fees on imported merchandise.
Automated Commercial System:
The electronic system of the US Customs Service, encompassing a
variety of industry sectors, that permits on-line access to information in
selected areas.
Automated Export Reporting
Program: The AERP provides for electronic submission of most
information required on the Shipper's Export Declaration. The program was
initiated in 1969 with the intent of enabling large volume exporters to
submit electronically and facilitate Census Bureau data entry and
analysis. AERP was expanded in 1982 to allow freight forwarders, and again
in 1985 to allow ocean carriers, to file electronically. At the beginning
of fiscal year 1994, about 220 firms: - accounting for 350,000 to 400,000
records a month: - were participating in AERP. The program is administered
by the Automated Data Reporting Branch, Foreign Trade Division, Bureau of
the Census.
automated guided vehicle system: A computer-controlled materials handling
system consisting of small vehicles (carts) that move along a guideway.
Automated Manifest System:
The electronic system allowing a manifest inventory to be
transmitted to the US Customs Service data center by carrier, port
authority or service center computers.
automated storage and retrieval system: An automated, mechanized system
for moving merchandise into storage locations and retrieving it when
needed.
Automated Trade Locator
Assistance Network: ATLAS is a Small Business
Administration-sponsored, contractor-operated, automated system which
provides market research information and statistics on world markets by
SIC code (and possibly harmonized system). Indirect access is available
for businesses, with arrangements through the local SBA district office.
ATLAS, which became operational in Spring 1993, replaced SBA's export
information system (XIS).
AUTOMATIC POD: Information automatically sent to payer containing
name of person who signed for the package with date and time of delivery.
See also POD.
AUTOMATIC PROOF OF DELIVERY: Same as AUTOMATIC POD.
AUTHORITY: Operating rights granted by a motor carrier by the ICC.
See OPERATING AUTHORITY.
AUTHORITY TO PAY: A letter mainly used in the Far Eastern trade
which is addresses by a bank to a seller of merchandise notifying him that
it is authorized to purchase, with or without RECOURSE, drafts up to a
stipulated amount drawn on a foreign buyer in cover of specialized
shipments of merchandise.
AUTHORIZED CARRIER: Person/company authorized to engage in the
transportation of property as a common carrier or contract carrier.
AVERAGE: Any loss or damage due to insured perils that is less than
a total loss. Two types of average occur: Particular Average and General
Average.
average cost: Total cost, fixed plus variable, divided by total
output.
AWA: See AMERICAN WAREHOUSEMEN’S ASSOCIATION.
AXLE RATINGS: Rear axles on a truck generally carry three ratings;
the carrying capacity rated at the ground (raw materials); the total
weight the axle is capable of carrying/pulling in service, and the gross
combined weight (GCW rating) which is the maximum horsepower limit the
axle is capable of carrying in normal service (engine size rating).
BAA: Abbreviation for the “British Airports Authority”
BACA: Abbreviation for the “Baltic Air Charter Association”.
back order: The
process a company uses when a customer orders an item that is not in
inventory, the company fills the order when the item becomes available.
BACK-TO-BACK CREDITS: A term commonly used to denote LETTERS OF
CREDIT issued for account of different buyers to cover the same shipment,
the terms of which credits are so similar that documents under one are
subsequently applicable against one another.
BACKHAUL: 1) Return transportation movement, usually at less
revenue than the original move (headhaul). 2) Movement in the direction of
lighter traffic flow when traffic is generally heavier in the opposite
direction. 3) To move a shipment back over part of a route already
traveled.
BACKUP: Making a duplicate copy of a computer file or a program on
a disk or cassette so that the material will not be lost if the original
is destroyed. A spare copy.
BAI CERTIFICATE: Issued by the Bureau of Animal Industry of the
USDA certifying veterinary inspection.
BAILEE RECEIPTS: See TRUST RECEIPT.
BALANCE OF TRADE: The difference between a country’s total imports
and exports. If exports exceed imports, a favorable balance of trade
exists; if not, a trade deficit is said to exist.
BALLAST: Heavy material which is placed in the ship’s hold for
stability.
BANK ACCEPTANCE: A DRAFT of which a bank is drawee and acceptor.
BANK DRAFT: Bill of Exchange drawn by one bank to another. Normally
used to provide a customer with funds payable at distant bank.
BANK RELEASE: Negotiable time draft drawn on and accepted by a bank
which adds its credit to that of an importer of merchandise.
Banker's Acceptance:
A banker's acceptance is a draft drawn on and accepted by a bank.
Depending on the bank's creditworthiness, the acceptance becomes a
financial instrument which can be discounted.
Banker's Draft:
Draft payable on demand and drawn by or on behalf of the bank itself; it
is regarded as cash and cannot be returned unpaid.
Banker's Guarantee:
An assurance, obtained from a bank by a foreign purchaser; that the bank
will pay an exporter up to a given amount for goods shipped if the foreign
purchaser defaults.
bar code scanner: A
device to read bar codes and communicate data to computer systems.
Bar codes: The most
commonly used form of automatic-identification technology. Basically, a
series of light and dark bars of different widths that are used to
represent a number, letter or symbol. A bar-code reader, really an optical
scanner, emits a beam of light and records the pulsated reflection that
occurs when light bounces off the black-and-white bands. The scanner then
converts the pulsated reflection of light into electronic data.
BARGE: The cargo carrying vehicle used primarily by inland water
carriers. The basic barges have open tops, but there are covered barges
for both dry and liquid cargoes.
BARREL: Container of cylindrical shape made of wood, aluminum or
steel which is longer than it is wide and has ends with equal diameters.
Barter: The exchange
of goods or services of equivalent value without the use of currency.
Barter is the oldest form of trade. Widely used in trade with countries
using currencies that are not readily convertible on the world exchange
markets.
BASING POINT: Geographic point to which transportation rates are
set to that rates to adjacent points can be constructed by adding or
deducting from the Basing Point rate.
batch picking: The picking of items from storage for more than one order
at a time.
BAUD RATE: Number of bits per second a computer is capable of
sending/receiving. Varies from 300 (teletypewriter) and up.
BAY: Area in a warehouse outlined by markings on columns or posts
or floor to show specific boundaries.
BEAM: Greatest width of a ship’s structure.
Belly Cargo: Freight accommodation below the main deck on an
aircraft.
BENEFICIARY: The person in whose favor a DRAFT is drawn or a LETTER
OF CREDIT opened. The beneficiary is usually the seller or exporter.
BELLY PITS OR HOLDS: Compartments located beneath the cabin of an
aircraft and used for the carriage of cargo and passenger baggage.
Benchmarking: Using
specific measurements to compare performance against another standard. A
management tool for comparing performance against an organization that is
widely regarded as outstanding in one or more areas, in order to improve
performance.
BENEFIT-COST RATIO: An analytical tool used in public planning. A
ratio of total measurable benefits divided by the initial capital cost.
Bermuda Agreement:
An agreement concluded in 1946 between the U.K. and the U.S. designed to
regulate future international air traffic. Most governments accept its
principles and follow it inter-alia by limiting traffic rights on
international routes to one or two carriers.
BERTH: Ship’s place at dock, pier, quay or wharf where a vessel can
be loaded or discharged.
Berth Liner Service:
Is a regular scheduled steamship line with regular published schedules
(port of call ) from and to defined trade areas.
Berth or Liner Terms:
An expression covering assessment of ocean freight rates generally
implying that loading and discharging expenses will be for ship owner's
account and usually apply from the end of ship's tackle in port of loading
to the end of ship's tackle in port of discharge.
BERTH RATES: Rates charged by scheduled liner services.
Best practice:
State-of-industry performance or application.
BIG EMERGING MARKETS: A group of fast growing economies identified
by the Department of Commerce as having the most potential for U.S.
exporters. They are currently: Argentina, Brazil, the China Economic Area
(China, Hong Kong, Taiwan, India, Indonesia, Mexico, Poland, South Africa,
South Korea and Turkey).
BILGE: 1) The lowest internal part of a ship’s hull, next to the
keelson, where the bilge water collects. 2) Belly of a barrel or cask.
BILL OF EXCHANGE: Also referred to as a DRAFT. Instrument drawn by
one person ordering second person to pay definite sum of money to third
person on sight (SIGHT DRAFT) or at definite time in the future (TIME
DRAFT).
BILL OF LADING: Principal transportation document by which a
carrier acknowledges receipt of freight, describes the freight and sets
forth a contract of carriage. It is a receipt for goods and contracts to
move them. Terms and conditions, responsibilities and liabilities vary
with manner and place of use. Bills of Lading may be negotiable or
non-negotiable. Contents of the Bill of Lading were outlined in 1917.
Every Bill of Lading must contain at least the following: 1) Date of
issue. 2) Name of consignor. 3) Place of original consignment. 4) Place of
delivery. 5) Statement of whether goods are to be delivered to a specific
person. 6) Description of goods/packages containing them and 7) Signature
of carrier. There are many kinds of Bills of Lading. An Ocean shipment
requires two documents: an Inland Bill of Lading to cover the domestic
movement of the cargo and an Ocean Bill of Lading to cover the
international carriage. In air freight, the air waybill is a form of Bill
of Lading and is the contract for carriage- both domestically and
internationally. See also ORDER BILL OF LADING.
BILLING THIRD PARTY: The invoicing of transportation charges to
other than shipper or consignee.
BINDER: 1) Temporary insurance coverage pending the issuance of an
insurance policy or certificate. 2) A strip of cardboard, thin wood,
burlap or similar material placed between layers of containers to hold a
stack together.
BLANK ENDORSEMENT: Writing only one’s own name on the back of a
document.
BLANKET RATE: A rate that does not increase according to the
distance the commodity is shipped.
Bleeding edge: A maneuver so far ahead of its time that it may
create a competitive disadvantage.
BLOCKED EXCHANGE: Exchange which cannot be freely converted into
otter currencies.
Blue Lantern: Blue
Lantern, a procedure pertaining to U.S. Munitions List items, is intended
to verify that information stated on export license applications is valid
and that the use of the commodity or service exported is consistent with
the terms of the license. It includes pre-license and post-shipment checks
of export applications conducted by designated officials at U.S.
embassies. Blue Lantern was initiated in September 1990 by the State
Department's Office of Defense Trade Controls
Bond System: The
Bond System, a part of Customs' Automated Commercial System, provides
information on bond coverage. A Customs bond is a contract between a
principal, usually an importers, and a surety which is obtained to insure
performance of an obligation imposed by law or regulation. The bond covers
potential loss of duties, taxes, and penalties for specific types of
transactions. Customs is the contract beneficiary.
BONDED TERMINAL: An airline terminal approved by the U.S. Treasury
Department for storage of goods until Customs duties are paid or the goods
are otherwise released.
BONDED WAREHOUSE: A warehouse authorized by Customs authorities for
storage of goods on which payment of duties is deferred until the goods
are removed. Also U.S. Customs Bonded Warehouse.
BOGIE: 1) An assembly of two or more axles. 2) Removable set of
rear axles and wheels used to support a van container.
BOLSTER: A device so fitted on a chassis or railcar so as to hold
and secure the container.
BONA FIDE: Latin phrase meaning “in good faith”. Also used to mean
“real” or “true”.
BOND: 1) Obligation made binding by payment of a fee, which is lost
if the contract is violated. 2) A binding agreement.
BONDED TERMINAL: An airline terminal approved by the U.S. Treasury
Department for storage of goods until Customs duties are paid or the goods
are otherwise released
BOTTOM SIDE-RAILS: Structural members located on the longitudinal
sides of the base of the container.
BOX: 1) Slang term for trailer or container for ocean carriers. 2)
A slang term used for truck transmission.
BOXCAR: An enclosed railcar typically 40 to 50 feet long; used for
packaged freight and some bulk commodities.
BPR: See “Business Process Reengineering”
BRACING: Securing a shipment inside a carrier’s vehicle to prevent
damage.
BRANCH LINE: Railroad line providing train service to one or more
stations beyond a junction with the main line or another branch in the
line.
BREAK BULK: 1) To unload, sort and reload some/all of a vehicle in
transit. 2) To reduce a large shipment of a single commodity to many
shipments that are then dispersed to various buyers. 3) Disassembling of
consolidated shipment for delivery or re-consignment of a shipment. 4)
Loose cargo, such as cartons, stowed directly in the ship's hold as
opposed to containerized or bulk cargo. Note: For consolidated air
freight, it is moved under one MAWB and each consignment designated to
specific consignee or recipient is under one HAWB. When freight forwarder
receives the consolidated cargo from carrier, they will break the
consolidation apart per HAWB then proceed customs clearance along with
associated shipping and import documents. Such Break-Bulk is normally
handled by airlines or their contracted ground handling agent.
BREAK-EVEN WEIGHT: The weight at which it is cheaper to charge the
lower rate for the next higher weight-break times the minimum weight
indicated, than to charge the higher rate for the actual weight of the
shipment.
Breaking out the box: Solving conventional problems with unconventional
thinking.
BRIDGE FORMULA: Formula used to determine the maximum gross weight
that can be carried on any given arrangement of consecutive axles.
BROKER: 1) Agent who arranges interstate movement of goods by other
carriers. 2) Arranger of exempt loads for owner-operators and/or carriers.
3) One who arranges the buying/selling of goods for a commission. 4)
Person who leases owned equipment to a carrier. 5) Solicitor of insurance
who places orders for coverage with companies designated by the insured or
with companies of his choosing. 6) Person or company licensed by the U.S.
Treasury Department to transact business with Customs on behalf of
importers. 7) Middleman between Buyer and Seller.
BROKER (CUSTOMS): A person or company licensed by the U.S. Treasury
Department to transact business with Customs on behalf of importers. See
also CUSTOM BROKERS and CUSTOMHOUSE BROKER.
BROKERAGE: Fee or commission that is paid to a BROKER for services
performed.
Brussels Tariff Nomenclature Number: The customs tariff number used by
most European nations. The US uses a similar system known as the
Harmonized Tariff Schedule.
BULK: A mass of a product, unpackaged.
bulk area: A storage area for large items which at a minimum are most
efficiently handled by the pallet load.
BULK CARRIER: Vessel engaged in carriage of bulk commodities like
petroleum, grain or ore, which are not packaged, bundled, bottled or
otherwise packed.
BULK SHIPMENTS: Shipments which are not packaged, but are loaded
directly into the vessel's holds. Examples of commodities that can be
shipped in bulk are ores, coal, scrap, iron, grain, rice, vegetable oil,
tallow, fuel oil, fertilizers, and similar commodities.
BULKHEAD: 1) Upright wall in trailer or rail car that separates a
load. 2) Cargo restraining partition in a vehicle or vessel.
BULL RINGS: Cargo securing devices mounted in the floor of
containers which provide for the lashing and securing of cargo.
BUNKER: Ship’s coal bin or oil storage place.
BUSINESS LOGISTICS: The physical movement of goods from supply
points to final sale to customers, and the associated transfer and holding
of such goods at various intermediate storage points, accomplished in such
a manner as to contribute to the explicit goals of an organization. The
process of planning, implementing and controlling the efficient, effective
flow and storage of goods, services and related information from the point
of origin to the point of consumption for the purpose of conforming to
customer requirements. Note that this definition includes inbound,
outbound, internal and external movements.
Business process
re-engineering: The fundamental thinking and radical redesign
of business process to achieve dramatic improvements in critical,
contemporary measures of performance, such as cost, quality, service and
speed.
BUYERS RIGHT TO ROUTE: When a seller does not pay for freight
charges, the purchaser has the right to designate the route for shipment;
seller is responsible for following the buyers instructions. Complete
routing is permitted for rail shipments but only for the first carrier in
motor shipments.
C/L: See CARLOAD.
C&F: See Cost And Freight.
CAA: Abbreviation of the “Civil Aviation Authority”. Government
body responsible for regulating U.K. airlines.
CABOTAGE: Applies to traffic originating at a point in one country
and destined to another point within the territory of the same country.
Coastwise and inter-coastal navigation and trading. In the US, a federal
law that requires coastal and inter-coastal traffic to be carried in
U.S.-built and U.S.-registered ships. Also, where cargo is carried on what
is essentially a domestic flight and therefore not subject to
international agreements that fix set rates. Cabotage rates are negotiable
between shipper and airline and apply on flights within a country and to
its overseas territories.
CAD: See CASH AGAINST DOCUMENTS.
CAD/CAM: Abbreviation for “Computer Aided Design” and “Computer
Aided Manufacturing”.
CAF –See currency adjustment factor
Cage: (1) A secure
enclosed area for storing highly valuable items. (2) A pallet-sized
platform with sides that can be secured to the tines of a forklift and in
which a person may ride to inventory items stored well above the warehouse
floor. 3) The transporting of goods by truck to or from a vessel,
aircraft, or bonded warehouse, all under customs custody.
Caged: Before import
customs formality has been completed cleared and released, cargo is
remained at bonded warehouse under customs custody.
CAPACITY PLATE: Plate affixed to a forklift truck indicating the
maximum weight which can be raised or moved by that equipment.
Capital: The
resources, or money, available for investing in assets that produce
output.
CAPSTAN: Mechanical device for moving/raising heavy weights used at
docks in mooring vessels at rail terminals to move dead engines.
CAPTAIN’S PROTEST: Declaration by master of ship on arrival in port
to accidents/damage to ship/cargo during the voyage designated to relieve
ship owner of liability.
CARGO: 1) Freight transported. 2) Goods, merchandise or commodities
of every description which may be carried aboard a vessel, in
consideration of the freight charged; does not include provisions and
stores for use on board. 3) Equivalent to the term “goods” meaning
anything carried or to be carried in an aircraft or vessel other than mail
or property carried under the terms of an international postal convention
or baggage (including personal effects accompanying a passenger) or the
property of the carrier; providing that unaccompanied baggage moving under
an air waybill or Bill of Lading is cargo.
CARGO AIRCRAFT: See ALL-CARGO AIRCRAFT.
CARGO AGENT: An agent appointed by a carrier to solicit and process
international freight for shipments. In air freight, cargo agents are paid
commissions by the airline.
Cargo Agents Settlement System:
See CASS.
Cargo Network Services Corp.
(CNS): A subsidiary of the International Air Transport
Association, was founded to serve the needs of the Air cargo industry in
the United States. CNS provides services to promote productivity,
profitability, credibility, cooperation and quality of service among air
carriers and cargo agents. For information: 300 Garden City Plaza, Suite
312, Garden City, NY 11530
CARGO PLAN: Stowage plan of a vessel.
Cargo Receipt: A
receipt of cargo for shipment by a consolidator (used in ocean freight).
See also DOCK RECEIPT.
Cargo Selectivity System:
The Cargo Selectivity System, a part of Customs' Automated Commercial
System, specifies the type of examination (intensive or general) to be
conducted for imported merchandise. The type of examination is based on
database selectivity criteria such as assessments of risk by filer,
consignee, tariff number, country of origin, and manufacturer/shipper. A
first time consignee is always selected for an intensive examination. An
alert is also generated in cargo selectivity the first time a consignee
files an entry in a port with a particular tariff number, country of
origin, or manufacturer/shipper.
Caribbean Common Market:
CARICOM includes 13 English-speaking Caribbean nations: Antigua and
Barbuda, the Bahamas, Barbados, Belize, Dominica, Grenada, Guyana,
Jamaica, Montserrat, St. Kitts-Nevis, St. Lucia, St. Vincent/Grenadines,
and Trinidad and Tobago). CARICOM was established in 1973; headquarters
are in Georgetown, Guyana.
CARLOAD (C/L or CL): 1) Quantity of freight required to fill a
rail-car. 2) Specified quantity necessary to qualify a shipment for a
carload rate.
Carmack Amendment:
An Interstate Commerce Act amendment that delineates the liability of
common carriers and the Bill of Lading provisions.
Carnet: Customs
documents permitting the holder to carry or send sample merchandise
temporarily into certain foreign countries without paying duties or
posting bonds. Foreign customs regulations vary widely; in some countries,
duties and extensive customs procedures on sample products may be avoided
by obtaining an ATA Carnet. The ATA Carnet is a standardized international
customs document used to obtain duty-free temporary admission of certain
goods into the countries that are signatories to the ATA Convention. Under
the ATA Convention, commercial and professional travelers may take
commercial samples; tools of the trade; advertising material; and
cinematographic, audiovisual, medical, scientific, or other professional
equipment into member countries temporarily without paying customs duties
and taxes or posting a bond at the border of each country visited. The
carnets are generally valid for 12 months. See also TEMPORARY Importation
UNDER BOND.
Carousel: A rotating
system of layers of bins and/or drawers that can store many small items
using relatively little floor space.
CARRIAGE: That part of transportation service that is represented
by actual movement of goods to a point of destination after having been
loaded but before being unloaded.
CARRIAGE OF GOODS BY SEA ACT: 1936 U.S. Statute that governs the
acts that a carrier is responsible for and defines the terms used in
shipping. The act provides that the shipowner's liability will be limited
to $500 per shipping package, and it stipulates a one-year time limit for
filing suit against the carrier. This act automatically applies to
international ocean movements but not to domestic ocean transits unless
the carrier agrees to be bound by it.
Carriage Paid To:
Carriage paid to (CPT) and carriage and insurance paid to (CIP) a named
place of destination. Used in place of CFR and CIF, respectively for
shipment by modes other than water.
CARRIER: Individual, partnership or corporation engaging in the
business of transporting goods or passengers, in most cases, for a fee.
Usually means Steamship Company, but can also refer to trucking company,
airline, or railroad as transporter of cargo.
Carriers(s) Containers or
Shipper(s) Containers: The term Carrier(s) Container(s) or
Shipper(s) Container(s) means containers over which the carrier or the
shipper has control either by ownership or by the acquisition thereof
under lease or rental from container companies or container suppliers or
from similar sources. Carriers are prohibited from purchasing, leasing or
renting shipper owned containers.
CARRIER’S LIABILITY: Liability begins when goods are delivered at
the proper place and ends when goods have been delivered to the consignee
or when the carrier’s duty has been discharged according to the terms of
the freight contract. A common carrier is liable for all shipment loss,
damage, and delay with the exception of that caused by act of God, act of
a public enemy, act of a public authority, act of the shipper, and the
goods' inherent nature.
Carriage and Insurance Paid to
(CPA) (...named place of destination): Seller pays freight and
insurance for carriage of the goods to the named destination.
Carriage and Insurance Paid To
(CIP) (...named place of destination): The seller has the same
obligations as under CPT but with the addition that the seller has to
procure cargo insurance against the buyer's risk of loss of or damage to
the goods during the carriage. The seller contracts for insurance and pays
the insurance premium. The buyer should note that under the CIP term the
seller is only required to obtain insurance on minimum coverage.
CARTAGE: 1) Charge for pickup or delivery of goods. 2) Act of
moving goods (usually short distances).
CARTAGE AGENT: Ground service operator who provides pickup and
delivery in areas not served directly by air carrier.
CARTEL: Group of industrial companies that agree to regulate
output, divide markets and set prices at which to sell products. An
illegal practice in the U.S. since it violates anti-trust laws. carton
flow rack: A storage rack consisting of multiple lines of gravity flow
conveyors.
CASE MARKS: Information shown on the outside of shipping cartons,
including destination and contents. See also MARKS.
CASH AGAINST DOCUMENTS (CAD): Payment for goods in which a
commission house or other intermediary transfers title documents to the
buyer upon payment in cash. A term denoting that payment is made when the
bill of lading is presented.
CASH BEFORE DELIVERY (CBD): Seller assumes no risk and extends no
credit because he is paid before shipment.
CASH IN ADVANCE (CIA): Payment for goods in which the full price is
paid in full before the shipment is made. This type of payment is only
made for small shipments or when goods are made to order.
Cash On Delivery: COD means payment to be made upon the delivery of
goods.
CASH WITH ORDER (CWO): Payment for goods in which a buyer pays when
ordering and in which the transaction is binding on both parties.
CASHIER’S CHECK: Check drawn by a bank.
CASS: Abbreviation for “Cargo Agents Settlement System”.
Administered by CNS. Simplifies air cargo reporting, billing and
remittance procedures through a centralized settlement system. During
1995, CNS instituted a credit improvement program which not only
investigates potential problems but also assists the parties in achieving
creative and acceptable solutions.
Category management:
Managing products with similar requirements and characteristics (e.g.,
temperature-or humidity-controlled) as a single systems or category
throughout the supply chain.
CAVEAT EMPTOR: Latin term meaning “let the buyer beware”. Common
law imposes on the buyer the duty of examining the purchase. There is no
recourse against seller because of the defects.
CBD: See CASH BEFORE DELIVERY.
CCEF: Abbreviation of “Customs Centralized Examination Facility”.
CD-ROM: Abbreviation for “Compact Disk-Read Only Memory”
CELLULAR VESSEL: Ship constructed for transportation of containers
stacked on top of each other in vertical guide shafts, no general freight
carried.
centralized authority:
The restriction of authority to make decisions to few managers.
Central American Common Market:
A first effort to establish a Central American Common Market, CACM
(Spanish: Mercado Common Centroamericano, MCCA) was attempted in 1960
under the auspices of the Organization of Central American States (OCAS).
A restructuring was started in 1973. Members include Honduras, Guatemala,
El Salvador, Nicaragua and Costa Rica. The common market will cover all
products traded within the region by the end of 1992. A second step toward
regional integration will be the establishment of a common external
tariff. CACM is associated with the Central American Bank for Economic
Integration; headquarters are in Guatemala City, Guatemala.
Central Europe Free Trade Association: CEFTA is a trade agreement among
the "Visegrad" countries: - Poland, the Czech Republic, Slovakia, and
Hungary: - that is somewhat parallel to the European Free Trade
Association.
central processing unit:
The physical part of the computer that does the actual computing.
Certificate of Analysis:
A certificate required by some countries as proof of the quality
and composition of food products or pharmaceuticals. The required analysis
may be made by a private or government health agency. The certificate must
be legalized by a foreign consul of the country concerned, as is the case
with such similar certificates as the phytosanitary certificate.
CERTIFICATE OF INSPECTION: A document often acquired in connection
with shipments of perishable goods in which certification is made as to
the good condition of the merchandise immediately prior to shipment.
Pre-shipment inspection is a requirement for importation of goods into
many developing countries.
CERTIFICATE OF INSURANCE: Issued (usually on Form E or Form H) by
an officer of an insurance company, to state agency or other party,
stating the fact that the party named has insurance coverage in
amounts/type. Not a binding agreement.
CERTIFICATE OF MANUFACTURE: A statement sometimes notarized by a
producer, usually also the seller, or merchandiser that indicates the
goods have been manufactured and are at the disposal of the buyer.
CERTIFICATE OF MANUFACTURER: Document used with letters of credit
when drafts are paid/negotiated on presentation of a certificate stating
the fact that the goods have been completed and are being held for
shipment.
CERTIFICATE OF ORIGIN: A document required by U.S. Customs and
certain other countries for tariff purposes certifying as to the country
of origin of specified goods. Sometimes requires the signature of the
consul of the country to which it is destined. A certificate may be
required even though the commercial invoice contains the information.
CERTIFICATE OF PUBLIC CONVENIENCE AND NECESSITY: The grant of
operating authority that is given to common carriers. A carrier must prove
that a public need exists and that the carrier is fit, willing, and able
to provide the needed service. The certificate may specify the commodities
to be hauled, the area to be served, and the routes to be used.
CERTIFICATE OF REGISTRY: Document issued by maritime authorities
indicating legal restriction of a ship.
CERTIFICATED CARRIER: A for-hire carrier that is subject to
economic regulation and that requires an operating certification to
provide services.
CES: Abbreviation of “Customs Examination Station”.
CFD: See Continuous flow distribution
CFR: See Cost And Freight.
CFS: The term CFS at loading port means the location designated by
carriers for the receiving of cargo to be packed into containers by the
carrier. At discharge ports, the term CFS means the bonded location
designated by carriers in the port area for unpacking and delivery of
cargo.
CFS/CFS: The term CFS/CFS means cargo delivered by break-bulk to
Carrier's CFS to be packed by Carrier into containers and to be unpacked
by Carrier from the container at Carrier's destination port CFS.
CFS/CY: The term CFS/CY means cargo delivered break-bulk to
Carrier's CFS to be packed by Carrier into containers and accepted by
consignee at Carrier's CY and unpacked by the consignee off Carrier's
premises, all at consignee's risk and expense.
CFS CHARGE: The term CFS Charge means the charge assessed for
services performed at the loading or discharging port in packing or
unpacking of cargo into/from containers at CFS.
CFS Receiving Service:
The term "CFS Receiving Services" means the service performed at
loading port in receiving and packing cargo into containers from CFS to CY
or shipside. "CFS Receiving Services" referred herein are restricted to
the following: Moving empty containers from CY to CFS, Drayage of loaded
containers from CFS to CY and/or ship's tackle, Tallying, Issuing dock
receipt/shipping order, Physical movement of cargo into, out of and within
CFS, Stuffing, sealing and marking containers, Storage, Ordinary sorting
and stacking, Preparing carrier's internal container load plan
Chaebol: Chaebol are
Korean conglomerates which are characterized by strong family control,
authoritarian management, and centralized decision making. Chaebol
dominate the Korean economy, growing out of the takeover of the Japanese
monopoly of the Korean economy following World War II. Korean government
tax breaks and financial incentives emphasizing industrial reconstruction
and exports provided continuing support to the growth of Chaebols during
the 1970s and 1980s. In 1988, the output of the 30 largest chaebol
represented almost 95% of Korea's gross national product.
CHARGES FOR PACKING SHIPMENTS: Some carriers provide material and
services for packing and unpacking special commodities that require
special packaging and handling. A charge is made for this service.
CHARGEABLE WEIGHT: The weight of the shipment used in determining
air freight charges. The chargeable weight may be the dimensional weight
or on container shipments the gross weight of the shipment less the tare
weight of the container.
Chargeable Kilo: Rate for goods where volume exceeds six cubic
meters to the tonne.
CHARGES ADVANCED: See ADVANCEMENT or CHARGES.
CHARGES COLLECT: Transportation charges may include pickup and/or
delivery and are entered on the air waybill to be collected from the
consignee. Equivalent terms are freight collect or charges forward.
CHARGES FORWARD: A banking term used when foreign and domestic bank
commission charges, interest (if any) and government taxes in connection
with the collection of a draft are for the account of the drawee.
CHARGES FOR PACKING SHIPMENTS: Some carriers provide material and
services for packing and unpacking special commodities that require
special packaging and handling. A charge is made for this service.
charging area: A
warehouse area where a company maintains battery chargers and extra
batteries to support a fleet of electrically powered materials handling
equipment. The company must maintain this area in accordance with
government safety regulations.
Charter: Originally
meant a flight where a shipper contracted hire of an aircraft from an
airline. Has usually come to mean any non-scheduled commercial service.
CHARTER PARTY: A contract, expressed in writing on a special form,
between the owner of a vessel and the one (the Charterer) desiring to
employ the vessel, setting forth the terms of the arrangement such as
freight rates and ports involved in the trip contemplated. Also, among
other specifications, the contract usually stipulates the exact
obligations of the ship-owner (loading the goods, carrying the goods to a
certain point, returning to the charterer with other goods, etc.); or it
provides for an outright leasing of the vessel to the charterer, who then
is responsible for his own loading and delivery. In either case, the
charter party sets forth the exact conditions and requirements agreed upon
by both sides.
Charter Party Bill of Lading: A bill of lading issued under a charter
party. It is not acceptable by banks under letters of credit unless so
authorized in the credit.
CHARTER SERVICE: The temporary hiring of an aircraft usually on a
trip basis, for the movement of cargo or passengers.
CHASSIS: A trailer-type device with wheels constructed to
accommodate containers enabling the load to be moved over-the-road. Also,
a wheel assemble including bogies constructed to accept mounting of
containers.
CHECK DIGIT NUMBER: A single digit of the air waybill number used
to insure that the air waybill number is correctly entered into a computer
system.
CHEMTREC: Abbreviation for “Chemical Transportation Emergency
Center”. Organization available on a 24-hour basis to provide emergency
response information to anyone involved in hazardous chemical accidents.
Chinese Economic Area:
The CEA is an informal reference to the economic integration of
Southern China with Hong Kong and Taiwan which has proceeded without any
"arrangement". Also referred as "Greater China".
CHOCK: 1) A piece of wood or other material placed at the side of
cargo to prevent it from rolling about or moving sideways. 2) A wedge,
usually made of hard rubber or steel, that is firmly placed under the
wheel of a trailer, truck, or boxcar to stop it from rolling.
CIA: See CASH IN ADVANCE.
CIF: See Cost, Insurance and Freight.
CIRCA: “About”
CITES: Abbreviation “Committee on International Trade of Endangered
Species”
city driver: A motor carrier driver who drives a local route as opposed to
a long-distance, inter-city route.
CITY TERMINAL SERVICE: A service provided by some air lines to
accept shipments at the terminals of their cartage agents or other
designated in-town terminals or to deliver shipments to these terminals at
lower rates than those charged for the door-to-door pickup and delivery
service.
CIVIL AERONAUTICS BOARD (CAB): A Federal agency created by Congress
in 1938 to promote the development of the U.S. air transport system, to
award air routes and to regulate passenger fares and cargo rates.
Legislation passed by the U.S. Congress in 1978 terminated the CAB,
effective January 1, 1985. Many of the CAB functions such as certificates,
air carrier fitness, consumer protection, international rates and services
were transferred to the Department of Transportation.
CL: See CARLOAD.
CLAIM: 1) Demand on transportation company for payment, due to
loss/damage of freight that occurred during transit. 2) Demand on
transportation company for refund on overcharge. 3) Demand by individual
or corporation to recover for loss under policy of insurance.
CLASS (or KIND) of MERCHANDISE: A term used in defining the scope
of an antidumping investigation. Included in the "class or kind" of
merchandise is merchandise sold in the home market which is "such or
similar" to the petitioned product. "Such or similar" merchandise is that
merchandise which is identical to or like the petitioned product in
physical characteristics.
Class I carrier: A
classification of regulated carriers based upon annual operating
revenues--motor carriers of property of more than $5 million; railroads
more than $50 million and motor carriers of passengers more than $3
million.
Class II carrier: A
classification of regulated carriers based upon annual operating
revenues--motor carriers of property of $1-$5 million; railroads of
$10-$50 million and motor carriers of passengers less than $3 million.
Class III carrier: A
classification of regulated carriers based upon annual operating
revenues--motor carriers of property of less than $1 million and railroads
less than $10 million.
"Class or Kind" of
Merchandise: A term used in defining the scope of an antidumping
investigation. Included in the "class or kind" of merchandize is
merchandise sold in the home market which is "such or similar" to the
petitioned product. "Such or similar" merchandise is that merchandise
which is identical to or like the petitioned product in physical
characteristics.
CLASS RATE: Rate for commodities grouped according to similar
shipping characteristics. Applies to numbered/lettered groups/classes of
articles contained in the territorial rating column in classification
schedules. A class rate is available for any product between any two
points.
Classification: 1)
An alphabetical listing of commodities, the class or rating into which the
commodity is placed, and the minimum weight necessary for the rate
discount. Used in the class rate structure. 2) A customs term. The
placement of an item under the correct number in the customs tariff for
duty purposes. At times this procedure becomes highly complicated; it is
not uncommon for importers to resort to litigation over the correct duty
to be assessed by the customs on a given item.
classification yard:
A railroad terminal area where railcars are grouped together to form train
units.
Claused Bill of Lading:
A bill of lading which has exemptions to the receipt of merchandise
in "apparent good order" noted.
CLAYTON ACT: An antitrust act of Congress making price
discrimination unlawful. The Federal Trade Commission (FTC) is the
enforcement agency.
Clean Bill of Lading:
A bill of lading which covers goods received in "apparent good order and
condition" and without qualification.
CLEAN DRAFT: A draft to which no documents are or have been
attached.
CLEARANCE: 1) Customhouse certificate that ship is free to leave,
all legal requirements having been met. 2) Space or measurements above an
beside tracks/highways.
CLEAT: Strip of wood or metal used to add additional strength or to
prevent warping or to keep goods in position.
CLM: See Council of Logistics Management
CM: Centimeters
COASTAL CARRIERS: Vessels that provide service along coasts serving
ports on the Atlantic or Pacific oceans or on the Gulf of Mexico.
COCOM: See: Coordinating Committee for Export Controls
COD TERMS OF SALE: Abbreviation for “Cash On Delivery”. Buyer pays
carrier the price of goods before they are delivered. Seller assumes risk
of buyer refusing to accept goods.
COFC: Abbreviation for “Container on Flatcar”.
COGAS: See CARRIAGE OF GOODS BY SEA ACT.
COLLAPSIBLE CONTAINER: So fitted that the main parts are hinged or
removable for the purpose of reducing its effective volume for
transporting in a empty condition, thus making more efficient use of empty
space.
COLLECT CHARGES: The transportation practice under which the
receiver of the goods pays charges. See CHARGES COLLECT.
COLLECT ON DELIVERY (COD): A transportation service under which the
purchase price of the goods is collected by the carrier from the receiver
at the time of delivery, and subsequently, payment is transmitted by the
carrier to the shipper. Carriers charge a nominal fee for this service. As
the term COD implies payment is due upon delivery. There are no credit
provisions in COD service.
COLLECT SHIPMENT: Shipment where collection freight
charges/advances is made by delivering carrier from the
consignee/receiver.
Collection Papers:
All documents (invoices, bills of lading or air waybill, etc.) submitted
to a buyer for the purpose of receiving payment for a shipment.
Collection System:
The Collections System, a part of Customs' Automated Commercial System,
controls and accounts for the billions of dollars in payments collected by
Customs each year and the millions in refunds processed each year. Daily
statements are prepared for the automated brokers who select this service.
The Collections System permits electronic payments of the related duties
and taxes through the Automated Clearinghouse capability. Automated
collections also meet the needs of the importing community through
acceptance of electronic funds transfers for deferred tax bills and
receipt of electronic payments from lock-box operations for Customs bills
and fees.
Collective Paper:
All documents (commercial invoices, bills of lading, etc.) submitted to a
buyer for the purpose of receiving payment for a shipment.
COMBI AIRCRAFT: Aircraft specially designed to carry unitized cargo
loads on the upper deck of the aircraft forward of the passenger
compartment.
COMBINATION AIRCRAFT: An aircraft capable of transporting both
passengers and cargo on the same flight. Some came is carried on virtually
all scheduled passenger flights in the belly pits below the passenger
cabin.
Combination Vessels:
Container/Break-bulk vessel: this type of ship accommodates both container
and break-bulk cargo. It can be either self sustaining or non-self
sustaining.
COMMERCE: Buying, selling, trading and transportation of goods and
services.
COMMERCE CLAUSE OF THE U.S. CONSTITUTION: .... “Congress shall have
the power.... to regulate commerce with foreign nations and among the
several states...”. This clause that gives authority to regulate
interstate commerce.
Commercial Code: A
published code designed to reduce the total number of words required in a
cablegram.
COMMERCIAL INVOICE: Itemized list issued by seller/exporter in
foreign trade showing quantity, quality, description of goods; price,
terms of sale, marks/numbers, weight full name/address of buyer and date.
The commercial invoice is a bill for the goods from the seller to the
buyer. These invoices are often used by governments to determine the true
value of goods for the assessment of customs duties and are also used to
prepare consular documentation. Governments using the commercial invoice
to control imports often specify its form, content, number of copies,
language to be used, and other characteristics.
Commercial Risk:
Risk carried by the exporter (unless insurance is secured) that the
foreign buyer may not be able to pay for goods delivered on an open
account basis. With respect to Eximbank guarantees, commercial risks cover
nonpayment for reasons other than specified Political Risks. Examples are
insolvency or protracted default.
COMMERCIAL SET: Set of four "negotiable" documents that represents
and takes the place of the goods themselves in the financing of the cargo
sales transaction.
Commercial Treaty:
An agreement between two or more countries setting forth the conditions
under which business between the countries may be transacted. May outline
tariff privileges, terms on which property may be owned, the manner in
which claims may be settled, etc.
commercial zone: The
area surrounding a city or town to which rate carriers quote for the city
or town also apply. The ICC defines the area.
COMMISSION: Fee charged by brokers as compensation for their
services in purchasing or selling commodities/securities at the direction
of a customer.
Committee for the
Implementation of Textile Agreements: CITA is an interagency
committee chaired by the Department of Commerce which exercises the rights
of the United States under the Multi-Fiber Arrangement. CITA initiates
"calls" for consultation when imports of a particular textile product from
a particular country disrupt the U.S. domestic market for that product.
Other member agencies include the Departments of Labor, State, and
Treasury and the United States Trade Representative.
COMMITTEE OF AMERICAN STEAMSHIP LINES: An industry association
representing subsidized U.S. flag steamship companies.
commodities clause:
A clause that prohibits railroads from hauling commodities that they
produced, mined, owned or had an interest in.
COMMODITY CODE: A system for identifying a given commodity by a
number as a means of facilitating, for example, the application of
computerization to freight transport. See HARMONIZED COMMODITY DESCRIPTION
AND CODING SYSTEM.
COMMODITY RATE: A rate for a specific commodity and its origin or
destination.
Commodity Specialist:
An official authorized by the U.S. Treasury to determine proper tariff and
value of imported goods.
COMMON CARRIER: Any carrier engaged in the interstate
transportation of persons or property on a regular schedule at published
rates and whose service are available to the general public on a for-hire
basis. Common carriers are regulated by the ICC. To operate, the carrier
must secure a certificate of public convenience and necessity.
COMMON CARRIER DUTIES: Common carriers are required to serve,
deliver, charge reasonable rates and not discriminate.
COMMON COST: A cost that cannot be directly assignable to
particular segments of the business that is incurred for the business as a
whole.
Common Market: A
common market (as opposed to a free trade area) has a common external
tariff and may allow for labor mobility and common economic policies among
the participating nations. The European Community is the most notable
example of a common market.
Commuter: 1) An
exempt for-hire air carrier that publishes a time schedule on specific
routes. 2) A special type of air taxi.
comparative advantage:
A principle based on the assumption that an area will specialize in
producing goods for which it has the greatest advantage or the least
comparative disadvantage.
Competitive line rate:
A shipper/carrier negotiated rate or National Transportation
Agency-imposed rate. With a Competitive Line Rate, Railway A (the "local
carrier") may charge a shipper served exclusively by it and located more
than 30 kilometers from an interchange, to move the shipper's traffic to
the interchange and transfer it to Railway B (the "connecting carrier").
COMPUTERIZED TRAFFIC FLOW: The increased use of electronic data
processing is one of the most significant advances in physical
distribution of recent years. Computers are being given new assignments
not only by carriers, but also by shippers, to achieve better control over
the flow of raw materials and finished inventories. Also the U.S.
Government and the United Nations gather more accurate data on the flow of
commerce. Airlines have been in the forefront of computer application of
cargo operations by using computers to prepare air waybills, expedited
terminal handling, pickup and delivery, up-to-the-minute shipment status
and billing.
CONCEALED DAMAGE: When product in an apparently undamaged container
is damaged. Usually freight claims for concealed damage are difficult to
settle because neither shipper nor carrier wants responsibility.
CONCURRENCE: Document signed by carrier and filed with the ICC that
verifies carrier participates in rates published in a tariff by a given
agent.
CONDITIONS OF CONTRACT: The terms and conditions established by the
air carriers for the carriage of goods. These conditions are printed on
the air waybill and include such items as limits of liability, claims
limitations, indemnity and dimensional weight rules.
CONFERENCE: 1)
Independent/autonomous organization within the American Trucking
Association (ATA) that represents a certain class/type of motor carrier.
2) Association of shipowners servicing the same trade route who operate
under collective conditions of carriage and tariff rates. Organization
which fixes rates and sailings for the purpose of limiting competition
between members and of “outsiders.
Conference on Security and
Cooperation in Europe: CSCE was established in 1991 as a
successor to the Eastern bloc's Council for Mutual Economic Assistance (CMEA
or COMECON). CSCE administers residual tariffs and quotas and relations
with other organizations.
Confidential contract:
A binding written agreement for the rates and conditions of moving
traffic, negotiated between a shipper and railway and kept confidential
between them. Such contracts were not permitted before the 198 National
Transportation Act.
Confirmed Letter of Credit:
A letter of credit, issued by a foreign bank, with validity
confirmed by a U.S. bank. An exporter who requires a confirmed letter of
credit from the buyer is assured of payment by the U.S. bank even if the
foreign buyer or the foreign bank defaults.
Confirming:
Confirming is a financial service in which an independent company confirms
an export order in the seller's country and makes payment for the goods in
the currency of that country. Among the items eligible for confirmation
are the goods; inland, air, and ocean transportation costs; forwarding
fees; custom brokerage fees; and duties. Confirming permits the entire
export transaction from plant to end user to be fully coordinated and paid
for over time. It is mainly a European practice.
Confiscation: The
taking and holding of private property by a government or an agency acting
for a government. Compensation may or may not be given to the owner of the
property.
Conrail:
Abbreviation for the “Consolidated Rail Corporation” established by the
Regional Reorganization Act of 1973 to operate the bankrupt Penn Central
Railroad and other bankrupt railroads in the Northeast. The 4-R Act of
1976 provided funding.
CONSIGN: 1) Deliver formally to another. 2) Send goods to buyer,
factor or agent to sell.
CONSIGNEE: Person who receives the goods shipped from one owner
(consignor) or a person named as the receiver of a shipment: one to whom a
shipment is consigned. Also, the person or firm named in a freight
contract to whom goods have been consigned or turned over. For export
control purposes, the documentation differentiates between an
"intermediate" consignee and an "ultimate" consignee.
CONSIGNEE ACCOUNT NUMBER: See ACCOUNT NUMBER.
Consignee Marks:
A symbol laced on packages for identification purposes; generally
consisting of a triangle, square, circle, diamond, cross, with letters
and/or numbers as well as port of discharge.
CONSIGNMENT: Shipment of one or more pieces of property, accepted
by the carrier from one shipper at one time, receipted for in one lot and
moving on one air waybill. Also merchandise shipped to a foreign agent or
customer when an actual purchase has not been made, but under an agreement
obliging the consignee to pay the consignor for the goods when sold. Also,
the delivery of merchandise from an exporter (the consignor) to an agent
(the consignee) under agreement that the agent sell the merchandise for
the account of the exporter. The consignor retains title to the goods
until sold. The consignee sells the goods for commission and remits the
net proceeds to the consignor.
CONSIGNOR: Shipper of goods. Means the person whose name appears as
the party contracting with the carrier for the carriage of goods. See also
SHIPPER.
CONSOLIDATION –1) Practice of combining less-than-carload (LCL) or
less-than-truckload (LTL) shipments to make carload/truckload movements.
2) The Consolidation Endorsement may be added to an Open Cargo Policy at
an agreed premium, to provide coverage on merchandise while in transit to,
and while at, a common consolidation point for the purpose of preparing or
consolidating the merchandise for export. Also, in order to handle small
lot of consignment efficiently and competitively, freight forwarder
usually put many consignments into one lot then tender to carrier for
forwarding. In this case, each consignment will be shipped with one HAWB
respectively and all of them will be under one MAWB.
CONSOLIDATOR: An entity that provides service also provided by an
air carrier, independent from that carrier, and derives income from
package consolidation of others for tender to an air carrier. An Air
Freight Forwarder performs the functions of a consolidator.
Consortium:
The name for an agreement under which several nations or nationals
(usually corporations) of more than one nation, join together for a common
purpose. It could be for management or exploitation of a natural resource,
as in the case of some international petroleum consortiums.
Constructed Value: A
means of determining fair or foreign market value when sales of such or
similar merchandise do not exist or, for various reasons, cannot be used
for comparison purposes. The "constructed value" consists of the cost of
materials and fabrication or other processing employed in producing the
merchandise, general expenses of not less than 10 percent of material and
fabrication costs, and profit of not less than 8 percent of the sum of the
production costs and general expenses. To this amount is added the cost of
packing for exportation to the United States.
construction rate:
See ARBITRARY.
Consul: A government
official residing in a foreign country, charged with representing the
interests of his or her country and its nationals.
CONSULAR DECLARATION: A formal statement made to the consul of a
foreign country describing goods to be shipped.
CONSULAR DOCUMENTS: Bills of Lading, Certificates of Origin or
special forms of invoice to which has been added the official signature of
the consul of the country of destination.
Consular Invoice: A
document, required by some foreign countries, describing a shipment of
goods and showing information such as the consignor, consignee, and value
of the shipment. Certified by a consular official of the foreign country,
it is used by the country's customs officials to verify the value,
quantity, and nature of the shipment.
CONSULAR VISA: An official signature affixed to certain shipping
documents by the consul of the country of destination.
Consultative Committee for
International Telephone and Telegraphy: CCITT facilitates U.S.
coordination of communications standards issues. CCITT is a part of the
International Telecommunications Union (ITU), which is an international
treaty organization. The State Department is responsible for coordinating
and presenting U.S. positions to the ITU.
container: The term
container means a single rigid, non-disposable dry cargo, insulated,
temperature controlled flatrack, vehicle rack portable liquid tank, or
open top container without wheels or bogies attached, having not less than
350 cubic feet capacity, having a closure or permanently hinged door that
allows ready access to the cargo (closure or permanently hinged door not
applicable to flatrack vehicle rack or portable liquid tank). All types of
containers will have constructions, fittings and fastenings able to
withstand without permanent distortion, all the stresses that may be
applied in normal service use of continuous transportation. All containers
must bear manufacturer's specifications. For Air Cargo, many types of air
cargo containers are offered: The containers are designed in various sizes
and irregular shapes to conform to the inside dimensions of a specific
aircraft. For ocean cargo, containers are designed to be moved inland on
its own chassis and can be loaded at the shippers plant for shipment
overseas. Basic types of containers are; dry van, open top, half high, hi
cube, flat rock, tank container, refrigerated container, insulated
container, tilting container. Average outside dimensions are generally 20,
35, and 40 feet in length, 8 feet wide and 8 feet high standard.
CONTAINER FREIGHT STATION See CFS: Associated with consolidation
depots where parcels of cargo are grouped and loaded into containers.
CONTAINER LOAD: A loading which does not utilize the full
volumetric capacity of a container nor the maximum payload by weight and
will permit additional part loads.
CONTAINER ON FLAT CAR (COFC): Is the form of piggyback where the
van-container is first de-mounted from the chassis or bogie, prior to
being loaded and secured directly onto a railroad flat car.
CONTAINER POOL: An agreement between transport carriers and/or
container leasing companies which will permit the exchange of containers.
CONTAINER SHIP: Vessel with specially designed cellular structure
for transport of containers.
CONTAINERIZATION: 1) The practice or technique of using a box-like
device in which a number of packages are stored, protected, and handled as
a single unit in transit. Container descriptions have been broadened to
include a unitized load on a carrier owned pallet, loaded by shippers, and
unloaded by receivers at places other than on airline premises and are
restrained and contoured so as to permit proper positioning and tie-down
aboard the aircraft. Containerized air freight reduces packaging costs for
the shipper because of the protection afforded by the container. The
buildup of container loads at the shipper's plant bypasses the terminals.
Shippers who do not have appropriate facilities for loading and unloading
containers may contract through the airlines for this service. Specially
equipped trucks pick up containerized shipments at the shipper's plant for
direct delivery to mechanical loading equipment near plane-side.
Containerization saves the airlines time and manpower in ground handling
and enables the carriers to achieve a more efficient utilization of the
cubic capacity of modern freighter aircraft and wide body jets
Consequently, the airlines pass along part of this savings to shippers. 2)
Shipping system based on large cargo-carrying (usually 20 or 40 feet in
length) that can be interchanged between trucks, trains and ships without
re-handling contents.
contingency planning:
Preparing to deal with calamities (e.g., floods) and non-calamitous
situations (e.g., strikes) before they occur.
Continuous Bond: An annual customs bond insuring compliance with all
regulations and requirements.
Continuous flow distribution: The streamlined pull of products in response
to customer requirements while minimizing the total costs of distribution.
continuous-flow, fixed-path equipment: Materials handling devices that
include conveyors and drag lines.
Continuous Replenishment Program:
A customer-driven replenishment when the
purchase of a good by the end user triggers the manufacturing and movement
of a product through the supply chain. A system used to reduce customer
inventories and improve service usually to large customers.
CONTRABAND: During the time of war, materials carried aboard a vessel that
could aid a belligerent in the process of the war, such as arms, weapons
or munitions.
CONTRACT CARRIER: Carrier engaged in interstate transportation of
persons/property by motor vehicles on a for-hire basis but under
continuing contract with one or a limited number of customers to meet
specific needs of each customer. Must receive authorization from the ICC.
Contract Logistics: The use of a third-party provider to plan, implement
and control the efficient, cost-effective flow and storage of raw
materials, in-process inventory, finished goods and related information
from the point of origin to the point of consumption, or any portion
thereof.
Conveyor: A materials handling device that moves freight from one
warehouse area to another. Roller conveyors utilize gravity, whereas belt
conveyors use motors.
COOPERATIVE ASSOCIATIONS: Groups of companies or individuals having common
interest; agricultural cooperative associations may haul up to 25% of
their total interstate tonnage in non-farm, non-member goods in movements
incidental and necessary to their primary business.
COORDINATED TRANSPORTATION: Two or more carriers of different modes
transporting a shipment.
COORDINATED MOVEMENT: The extending of the air freight transport system to
the immediate and smaller size communities increasingly involves the use
of interline agreements and the use of combined services of truck/air,
helicopters, regional, and commuter airlines. In many cases such traffic
moves under a joint rate. The success of such combined service hinges on
preplanning on the part of the carriers, and often on the part of
shippers, with regard to production and distribution schedules. The
various aspects of such preplanning among two or more carriers and
shippers are often referred to as "coordinated movement."
Coordinating Committee for Export Controls: An informal group of 15
western countries established to prevent the export of certain strategic
products to potentially hostile nations.
Coordination Council for North American Affairs: The CCNAA, the
counterpart to the American Institute in Taiwan, unofficially represents
Taiwan's interests in the United States. The Council provides information
on trade, business, and investment opportunities to the American business
community. Council headquarters are in Washington, D.C.
CO-LOAD: Two shipments from different terminals combined to ship as one
load.
CORDAGE: Products of rope, twine and string industry.
Core competency: A function essential to a company's success.
Correspondent Bank: A bank that, in its own country, handles the business
of a foreign bank.
Cost And Freight (CFR) (...named port of destination): The seller must pay
the costs and freight necessary to bring the goods to the named port of
destination but the risk of loss of or damage to the goods, as well as any
additional costs due to events occurring after the time the goods have
been delivered on board the vessel, is transferred from the seller to the
buyer when the goods pass the ship's rail in the port of shipment. The CFR
term requires the seller to clear the goods for export. This term can only
be used for sea and inland waterway transport. When the ship's rail serves
no practical purpose, such as in the case of roll-on/roll-off or container
traffic, the CPT term is more appropriate to use. (Typically used for
ocean shipments only. CPT, or carriage paid to, is a term used for
shipment by modes other than water.) Also, a method of import valuation
that includes insurance and freight charges with the merchandise values.
Cost, Insurance and Freight (CIF) (...named port of destination):
The
seller has the same obligations as under CFR but with the addition that he
has to procure marine insurance against the buyer's risk of loss of or
damage to the goods during the carriage. The seller contracts for
insurance and pays the insurance premium. The buyer should note that under
the CIF term the seller is only required to obtain insurance on minimum
coverage. The CIF term requires the seller to clear the goods for export.
cost of lost sales: The forgone profit companies associate with a
stock-out.
Costs of Manufacture: In the context of dumping investigations, the costs
of manufacture, COM, is equal to the sum of the materials, labor and both
direct and indirect factory overhead expenses required to produce the
merchandise under investigation.
Cost of Production: A term used to refer to the sum of the cost of
materials, fabrication and/or other processing employed in producing the
merchandise sold in a home market or to a third country together with
appropriate allocations of general administrative and selling expenses.
COP is based on the producer's actual experience and does not include any
mandatory minimum general expense or profit as in "constructed value."
cost trade-off: The interrelationship among system variables in which a
change in one variable affects other variables' costs. A cost reduction in
one variable may increase costs for other variables, and vice versa.
Country of Origin: The U.S. Customs Service defines country of origin as
the country where an article was wholly grown, manufactured or produced,
or, if not wholly grown, cultivated or produced in one country, the last
country in which the article underwent a substantial transformation. Duty
rates vary according to the country of origin.
Court of International Trade: The CIT has jurisdiction over any civil
action against the United States arising from Federal laws governing
import transactions. The court hears antidumping, product classification,
and countervailing duty matters as well as appeals of unfair trade
practice cases from the International Trade Commission. The court was
originally established in 1890; principal offices are located in New York
City, but the court is empowered to hear and determine cases arising at
any port or place within the jurisdiction of the United States. The judges
are appointed for life by the President, subject to Senate confirmation.
Council of Logistics Management: A professional organization in the
logistics field that provides leadership in understanding the logistics
process, awareness of career opportunities in logistics and research that
enhances customer value and supply chain performance.
Counterpurchase: This is an agreement whereby the initial exporter buys or
undertakes to find a buyer for a specified amount or value of unrelated
goods from the initial importer during a specified time period.
Countertrade: Refers to the reciprocal and compensatory trade agreements
involving the purchase of goods or services by the seller from the buyer
of his product, or arraignments whereby the seller assists the buyer in
reducing the amount of net cost of the purchase through some form of
compensatory financing. See also Technology Transfer.
COUNTERVAILING DUTY: A duty over and above normal duties, imposed by the
Secretary of the Treasury to counteract the economic advantage afforded
the foreign supplier (from export grants, bounties or subsidies paid in
certain countries by their government for export promotion).
COUNTRY OF EXPORTATION (COE): Is usually, but not necessarily, the country
in which merchandise was manufactured or produced and from which it was
first exported. For example, merchandise made in Switzerland and shipped
to the United States through Frankfurt, Germany has, as the country of
exportation, Switzerland.
COUNTRY of ORIGIN: Country of origin is the country where the merchandise
was grown, mined or manufactured, in accordance with U.S. Customs
Regulations. In instances where the Country of Origin cannot be
determined, transactions are credited to the country of shipment. Certain
foreign trade reports show country subcodes to indicate special tariff
treatment afforded some imported articles.
COURIER: Attendant who accompanies shipment(s). Also, some courier
companies provide a full transportation function, without accompanying
attendants, offering door-to-door air service for time-sensitive documents
or small packages on a “same-day” or “next-day” basis.
courier service: A fast, door-to-door service for high-valued goods and
documents. Companies usually limit service to shipments weighing fifty
pounds or less.
CPT: See Carriage and Insurance Paid to.
Crane: 1) A materials handling device that lifts heavy items. There are
two types: bridge and stacker. 2) An owner of Eagle USA.
CREDIT ARRANGEMENTS: A series of programs under which credit is extended
to shippers and consignees for the payment of charges.
CREDIT RISK INSURANCE: Insurance that covers the risk of non-payment for
delivered goods.
critical value analysis: A modified ABC analysis in which a company
assigns a subjective critical value to each item in an inventory.
cross-docking: The movement of goods directly from receiving dock to
shipping dock to eliminate storage expense.
Cross-functional team: A multifunctional group of workers (it may be
inter-departmental and/or inter-company) that works on a common set of
objectives.
CRP: See Continuous Replenishment Program.
CUBE: Slang term for volume capacity of a van trailer.
CUBE OUT: When a container has reached its volumetric capacity before
reaching the permitted weight limit.
CUBE RATE: Rate based on space instead of weight and used for light bulky
loads.
CUBIC CAPACITY: The carrying capacity within an aircraft or container
according to measurement in cubic feet.
currency adjustment factor: An added charge assessed by water carriers for
currency value changes.
CUSTOMER AUTOMATION: The use of air carrier automation equipment on the
customer's premises that aids in the processing of shipments, i.e., airbill preparations, invoicing, weighing and tracing.
Customer driven: The end user, or customer, motivates what is produced or
how it is delivered.
customer service: Activities between the buyer and seller that enhance or
facilitate the sale or use of the seller's products or services.
CUSTOMS: A government authority designated to regulate flow of goods to
and from a country and to collect duties levied by a country on imports
and exports. The term also applies to the procedures involved in such
collection.
Customs Bonded Warehouse: A warehouse where imported goods may be stored
for a total of three years without the payment of duty or taxes.
Customs Broker: An individual or company licensed by the government to
enter and clear goods through Customs. The U.S. Customs Service defines a
Customs Broker, as any person who is licensed in accordance with Part III
of Title 19 of the Code of Federal Regulations (Customs regulations) to
transact Customs business on behalf of others. Customs business is limited
to those activities involving transactions with Customs concerning the
entry and admissibility of merchandise; its classification and valuation;
the payment of duties, taxes, or other charges assessed or collected by
Customs upon merchandise by reason of its importation, or the refund,
rebate, or drawback thereof.
Customs Clearance: The procedures involved in getting cargo released by
Customs through designated formalities such as presenting import
license/permit, payment of import duties and other required documentation
by the nature of the cargo such as FCC or FDA approval.
Customs Cooperation Council:
The CCC (French: Conseil de Cooperation
Dounaire, CCD) is an international organization consisting of
representatives of about 150 countries. The Council serve as a technical
body which studies and seeks to resolve the various countries' customs
problems in an attempt to harmonize customs operations and promote trade.
The Council was established in 1950; headquarters are in Brussels,
Belgium.
Customs Cooperation Council Nomenclature: A customs tariff nomenclature
formerly used by many countries, including most European nations but not
the United States. It has been superseded by the Harmonized System
Nomenclature to which most major trading nations, including the U.S.,
adhere.
CUSTOMS COURT: A U.S. Customs Services court based in New York, NY,
consisting of three 3rd party divisions to which importers may appeal or
protest classification and value decisions and certain other actions taken
by U.S. Customs.
CUSTOMS DECLARATION: A statement, oral or written, attesting to the
correctness of description, quantity, value, etc., of merchandise offered
for importation into the USA.
Customs Free Zone: See: Free Trade Zone.
Customs Import Value: This is the U.S. Customs Service appraisal value of
merchandise. Methodologically, the Customs value is similar to f.a.s.
(free alongside ship) value since it is based on the value of the product
in the foreign country of origin, and excludes charges incurred in
bringing the merchandise to the United States (import duties, ocean
freight, insurance, and so forth); but it differs in that the U.S. Customs
Service, not the importer or exporter, has the final authority to
determine the value of the good.
CUSTOMS INFORMATION EXCHANGE (CIE): A clearinghouse of information for
U.S. Customs Service officers.
Customs Invoice: A document, required by some foreign countries' customs
officials to verify the value, quantity, and nature of the shipment,
describing the shipment of goods and showing information such as the
consignor, consignee, and value of the shipment.
Customs tariff: Schedule of charges assessed by the government on
imports/exports.
Customs Union: An agreement between two or more countries in which they
arrange to abolish tariffs and other import restrictions on each other's
goods and establish a common tariff for the imports of all other
countries. The European Community is the most well-known example. The two
primary trade effects of a customs union are: (a) trade creation: - the
shift from consumption of domestic production toward consumption of member
imports and (b) trade diversion: - the shift from trade with non-member
countries in favor of trade with member countries.
CUSTOMS VALUATION: This is one of three methods of import valuation. The
Customs value represents the value of imports as appraised by the U.S.
Customs Service and is primarily used for the collection of import duties.
Methodologically, Customs and FAS data are similar since both represent a
value in the foreign country and exclude all charges incurred in bringing
the merchandise to the United States. Customs valuation replaced FAS
valuation beginning with the compilation of the January 1982 data.
CUSTOMHOUSE BROKER: A broker who is certified by U.S. Customs to act for
importers and other business men in handling for them the sequence of
Customs formalities and other details attendant to the legal and
expeditious importing of goods.
CWO: See CASH WITH ORDER.
CWT: See HUNDREDWEIGHT.
CY: The term CY means the location designated by Carrier in the port
terminal area for receiving, assembling, holding, storing and delivering
containers, and where containers may be picked up by shippers or
re-delivered by consignees. No container yard (CY) shall be a shipper's,
consignee's, NVOCC's, or a forwarder's place of business, unless otherwise
provided.
CY/CFS: The term CY/CFS means containers packed by shipper of carrier's
premises and delivered by shipper to Carrier's CY, all at shipper's risk
and expense and unpacked by Carrier at the destination port CFS.
CY/CY: The term CY/CY means containers packed by shipper off Carrier's
premises and delivered by shipper to Carrier's CY and accepted by
consignee at Carrier's CY and unpacked by consignee off Carrier's
premises, all at the risk and expense of cargo.
cycle inventory: An inventory system where counts are performed
continuously, often eliminating the need for an annual overall inventory.
It is usually set up so that A items are counted regularly (i.e., every
month), B items are counted semi-regularly (every quarter or six months),
and C items are counted perhaps only once a year.
Cycle time: The amount of time from when a product or service is ordered
until it is received by the customer.
D/A: See DOCUMENTS AGAINST ACCEPTANCE.
D/P: See DOCUMENTS AGAINST PAYMENT.
DAMAGE CLAIM (FREIGHT): Demand upon carrier for reimbursement for physical
injury to shipment or because shipment was not delivered within reasonable
time.
DANGEROUS GOODS: Articles or substances which are capable of posting a
significant risk to health, safety, or property when transported by air
and which are classified according to the most current editions of the CAD
Technical Instructions for the Safe Transport of Dangerous Goods by Air
and the IATA Dangerous Goods Regulations. Dangerous goods may be
transported domestically and internationally by air. Also see HAZARDOUS
MATERIALS.
DAT: Abbreviation for “Dangerous articles tariff”.
DATA PLATE: Sign attached to container giving details of weight,
dimensions, capacity, etc.
Date Draft: Draft that matures in a specified number of days after the
date it is issued, without regard to the date of Acceptance. See Time
Draft.
DCA: Abbreviation for “Department of Civil Aviation”. Commonly used term
to denote the government department of any foreign country that is
responsible for aviation regulation and granting traffic rights.
DDP: See Delivered Duty PAID.
DDU- See DELIVERED DUTY UNPAID.
DE FACTO: Latin phrase meaning “in fact”, used to describe situation which
exists regardless of any other condition.
Dead Leg: A sector flown without payload.
Dead Freight: Freight charges paid by the charterer of vessel for the
contracted space, which is left partially unoccupied.
DEAD WEIGHT TONNAGE (DWT): 1) Estimated number of tons of cargo a vessel
can carry when loaded to maximum depth, obtained by subtracting
displacement “light” and “loaded” tonnage and expressed in long tons
(2,240 lb.) or metric tons (1,000 kg). Serves as a basis for rates when
vessels operate on time charters. 2) Cargo of such nature that a long-ton
is less than 70 cubic feet.
DEADHEAD: One leg of a move with either a tractor alone or a tractor
pulling an empty container.
Decentralized authority: A situation in which a company management
gives decision-making authority to managers at many organizational levels.
decision support system: A set of computer-oriented tools designed to
assist managers in making decisions.
DECK CARGO: Cargo carried outside rather than within the enclosed cargo
spaces of a vessel. On deck carriage is required for certain commodities,
such as explosives.
Declaration by Foreign Shipper: The U.S. Customs Service defines this term
as a statement by the shipper in the foreign country attesting to certain
facts. For example, articles shipped from the United States to an insular
possession and then returned must be accompanied by a declaration by the
shipper in the insular possession, indicating that, to the best of his or
her knowledge, the articles were exported directly from the United States
to the insular possession and remained there until the moment of their
return to the United States. (see 19 CFR 4.60 and 4.61 on U.S. clearance
of vessels bound for a foreign port or ports.)
DECLARED VALUE: 1) Assumed value of shipment unless shipper declares a
higher amount (e.g. Air freight declared value on most shipments has been
50 cents a pound or $50.00, whichever is greater). 2) Process of stating a
lower value on a shipment to obtain a lower rate.
DECLARED VALUE FOR CARRIAGE: The value of goods declared to the carrier by
the shipper for the purposes of determining charges or of establishing the
limit of the carrier's liability for loss, damage, or delay. See VALUATION
CHARGES.
DECLARED VALUE FOR CUSTOMS: The selling price of the contents or the
replacement cost if the contents are not for resale. The amount must be
equal to or greater than the declared value.
Dedicated Contract Carriage: A third-party contractual service that
dedicates vehicles and drivers to a single customer for its exclusive use.
Usually done in a closed loop or fixed route situation.
defective goods inventory: Those items that have been returned, have been
delivered damaged and have a freight claim outstanding, or have been
damaged in some way during warehouse handling.
DEFERRED AIR FREIGHT: Air freight requiring dependable, reliable service,
but of a less time sensitive nature, with delivery provided over a period
of days.
DEFERRED PAYMENT CREDIT: A type of Letter of Credit which provides for
payment some time after presentation of the shipping documents by the
exporter.
DEFERRED REBATE: The return of a portion of the freight charges by a
carrier or a conference shipper in exchange for the shipper giving all or
most of his shipments to the carrier or conference over a specified period
of time (usually 6 months). Payment of the rate is deferred for a further
similar period, during which the shipper must continue to give all or most
of his shipments to the rebating carrier or conference. The shipper thus
earns a further rebate which will not, however, be paid without an
additional period of exclusive or almost exclusive patronage with the
carrier of conference. In this way, the shipper becomes tied to the
rebating carrier or conference. Although, the deferred rebate system is
illegal in U.S. foreign commerce, it generally is accepted in the ocean
trade between foreign countries.
DELAY: Even under All Risk coverage, damage due to delay is not
recoverable. Most underwriters have inserted a "Delay Cause" in the Open
Cargo Policy, which states specifically that damage caused by delay is not
recoverable even if the delay was due to a peril insured against.
DELCREDERE: Shifting of risk to somebody else, or acceptance by a party
other than the original creditor.
Delivered at Frontier: (DAF) (...named place): Seller delivers the goods
at the named point and place at the frontier. Means that the seller's
obligations are fulfilled when the goods have arrived at the frontier: -
but before "the customs border" of the country named in the sales
contract. The term is primarily intended to apply to goods by rail or road
but is also used irrespective of the mode of transport.
Delivered Duty Paid (DDP) (...named place of destination): The seller
fulfills his obligation to deliver when the goods have been made available
at the named place in the country of importation. The seller has to bear
the risks and costs, including duties, taxes, and other charges of
delivering the goods thereto, cleared for importation. Whilst the EXW term
represents the minimum obligation for the seller, DDP represents the
maximum obligation. While the term "Ex Works" signifies the seller's
minimum obligation, the term "DDP” when followed by words naming the
buyer's premises, denotes the other extreme: - the seller's maximum
obligation. The term "Deliver Duty Paid" may be used irrespective of the
mode of transport. If the parties wish that the seller should clear the
goods for import but that some of the cost payable upon the import of the
goods should be excluded: - such as value added tax (VAT) and/or other
similar taxes: - this should be made clear by adding words to this effect
(e.g., "exclusive of VAT and/or taxes").
Delivered Duty Unpaid (DDU) (...named place of destination): The seller
fulfills his obligation to deliver when the goods have been made available
at the named place in the country of importation. The seller has to bear
the costs and risks involved in bringing the goods thereto (excluding
duties, taxes, and other official charges payable upon importation as well
as the costs and risks of carrying out customs formalities). The buyer has
to pay any additional costs and to bear any risks caused by his failure to
clear the goods for import in time. Basically, referring to DDP except
buyer pays for the import duty.
Delivered Ex Quay (Duty Paid) (DEQ) (...named port of destination): The
seller fulfills his obligation to deliver when he has made the goods
available to the buyer on the quay (wharf) at the named port of
destination, cleared for importation. The seller has to bear all risks and
costs including duties, taxes and other charges of delivering the goods
thereto.
Delivered Ex Ship (DES) (...named port of destination): The seller
fulfills his obligation to deliver when the goods have been made available
to the buyer on board the ship uncleared for import at the named port of
destination. The seller has to bear all the costs and risks involved in
bringing goods to the named port of destination.
Delivery Instructions: Provides specific information to the inland carrier
concerning the arrangement made by the forwarder to deliver the
merchandise to the particular pier or steamship line. Not to be confused
with Delivery Order which is used for import cargo.
Delivery Verification Certificate: The U.S. Customs Service defines a DVC
as a form used to track imported merchandise from the custody of the
importer to the custody of a manufacturer and is used to substantiate a
manufacturing drawback claim. The DVC is also known as a Certificate of
Delivery (Customs Form 331). An export license may be issued with a
requirement for delivery verification by Customs in the receiving country.
When delivery verification is required by a foreign government for goods
imported into the U.S., the U.S. Customs Service will certify a delivery
verification certificate (Form ITA-647). A U.S. export license may require
submission of a similar form from an importing country.
DELTA NU ALPHA: A transportation fraternity of transportation and traffic
practitioners.
DEMURRAGE: The detention of containers by shippers or receivers of freight
beyond a specified grace period. In air freight, the airlines tender
carrier owned containers to the customer for loading and unloading of the
unit. In the event the container is not returned to the carrier within a
specified time (usually 36-48 hours) a charge shall be assessed by the
carrier for each 24-hour period or fraction thereof beyond the allowed
time. Similar processes apply for motor, rail and ocean carriage.
Detention means the same thing for motor carriers. Also the excess time
taken for loading or unloading a vessel, thus causing delay of scheduled
departure. Demurrage refers only to situations in which the charter or
shipper, rather than the vessel's operator, is at fault.
DENSITY: A physical characteristic measuring a commodity's mass per unit
volume or pounds per cubic foot; an important factor in rate making, since
density affects the utilization of a carrier's vehicle. Weight per cubic
foot or kilo per meter of space occupied by the article. The cubage of
loose articles or pieces, or packaged articles of a rectangular,
elliptical or square shape on one plane shall be determined by multiplying
the greatest straight line dimensions of length, width and depth in
inches, including all projections, and dividing the total by 1728 (to
obtain cubic feet). The density is the weight of the article divided by
the cubic feet thus obtained. See also dimensional weight.
density rate: A rate based upon the density and shipment weight.
Deposit of Estimated Duties: This refers to antidumping duties which must
be deposited upon entry of merchandise which is the subject of an
antidumping duty order for each manufacturer, producer or exporter equal
to the amount by which the foreign market value exceeds the United States
price of the merchandise.
DEREGULATION: Revisions or complete elimination of economic regulations
concerning transportation. The Motor Carrier Act of 1980, the Staggers
Rail Act of 1980 and the Airline Deregulation Act of 1978 revised the
economic controls over motor carriers, railroads and air forwarders
respectively.
DEPARTMENT OF TRANSPORTATION (DOT): An executive department of the U.S.
Government established by the Department of Transportation Act of 1966 (80
Stat 931) for the purpose of developing national transportation policies.
As a result of the Airline Deregulation Act of 1978, the DOT acquired many
of the functions of the CAB. For information: 400 7th Street SW,
Washington, DC 20590.
DEQ: See Delivered Ex Quay.
DEMAND: The demand for transportation of a product is derived from the
demand for the product at some location.
derived demand: The demand for a product's transportation is derived from
the product's demand at some location.
DES: See Delivered Ex Ship.
DESICCANT: material that absorbs moisture by physical/chemical action
(e.g. Calcium chloride). Desiccants are includes in packages to keep the
contents from suffering moisture damage.
Destination Control Statement: Any of various statements that the U.S.
government requires to be displayed on export shipments and that specify
the destination for which export of the shipment has been authorized.
Detention- See DEMURRAGE. The charge a motor carrier assesses when a
shipper or receiver holds a truck or trailer beyond the free time the
carrier allows for loading or unloading.
DEVALUATION: The official lowering of the value of one country’s currency
in terms of one or more foreign currencies.
DEVANNING: The discharge of cargo from a container.
DGR: Dangerous Goods Requirement.
DIFFERENTIAL: 1) Amount added to/deducted from a base rate to make rate
to/from some other point or via another route. 2) Part of power train of
vehicle containing gears that convert rotation of drive shaft to turn
wheels/axles.
Dim Weight: See Dimensional Weigh.
DIMENSIONAL WEIGHT: Dimensional weight refers to density, i.e. weight per
cubic foot. The weight of a shipment per cubic foot is one of its most
important transportation characteristics directly involving such factors
as the efficient loading of an aircraft and the economy of freight traffic
movement. Some commodities, such as machinery, have a relatively high
density. Others, like ladies hats, have a relatively low density. Hence,
the Dimensional Weight Rule was developed as a practice applicable to low
density shipments under which the transportation charges are based on a
cubic dimensional weight rather than upon actual weight. Examples in air
freight: One pound for each 194 cubic inches of the shipment in the case
of most domestic air freight; one pound for each 266 cubic inches of cut
flowers or nursery stock shipments; and one pound for each 194 cubic
inches of most international shipments. Some carriers give discounts for
shipments of high-density goods.
Direct Offset: Involves compensation in related goods and usually involves
some form of co-production, license or joint venture. See also OFFSET.
direct product profitability: Calculation of the net profit contribution
attributable to a specific product or product line.
Direct Ship: Ship without consolidation and under one MAWB i.e.
non-consolidation.
direct store delivery: A logistics strategy to improve services and lower
warehouse inventories.
DISC: Abbreviation for and see DOMESTIC INTERNATIONAL SALES CORPORATION.
DISCOUNT: An allowance from the quoted price of goods made usually by the
deduction of a certain percentage from the invoice price. See also
FINANCIAL DISCOUNT.
DISCRIMINATION: Difference in rates not justified by costs. E.g. Two
shipments move under the same circumstances but for different charges.
DISHONOR: Refusal on the part of the drawee to accept a draft or to pay it
when due.
DISPATCHER: Person who schedules and controls truck pickups and
deliveries. E.g. Assigns drivers/return vehicles to jobs, records
departures/return times, investigates overdue vehicles, issues equipment,
establishes routes etc.
Dispatching: The carrier activities involved with controlling equipment;
involves arranging for fuel, drivers, crews, equipment, and terminal
space.
DISPLACEMENT TONNAGE: Weight in long tons of water displaced by capacity
of vessel and its cargo.
DISTANCE RATE SYSTEMS: Based on tapering rate principal in which rates
increase with distance but not as fast as distance itself. Distance rates
are often established for key points.
distribution resource planning: A computer system that uses MRP techniques
to manage the entire distribution network and to link it with
manufacturing planning and control.
DISTRIBUTION SERVICE: A service under which a carrier accepts one shipment
from one shipper and, after transporting it as a single shipment,
separates it into a number of parts at destination and distributes them to
many consignees. Also see ASSEMBLY SERVICE.
DISTRIBUTION WAREHOUSE: A warehouse that stores finished goods and from
which customer orders are assembled.
DISTRIBUTOR: An agent who sells for a supplier directly and maintains an
inventory of the supplier’s products.
Distribution License: The DL is a Special License that allows the holder
to make multiple exports of authorized commodities to foreign consignees
who are approved in advance by the Bureau of Export Administration. The
procedure also authorizes approved foreign consignees to re-export among
themselves and to other approved countries. Applicants and consignees must
establish Internal Control Programs to ensure the proper distribution of
items under the DL. Each program must include comprehensive procedures for
ensuring that the items exported will be used only for legitimate
end-uses.
DIVERSION: Change made in consignee, destination or route of shipment
while in transit and to still pay the through rate from origin to final
destination.
Diversionary Dumping: This occurs when foreign producers sell to a third
country market at less than fair value and the product is then further
processed and shipped to another country.
DOC- Abbreviation for “Department of Commerce”
DOCK: 1) Area at warehouse/manufacturing plant where goods are loaded,
unloaded and sorted. 2) Slip/waterway between two projections to receive
vessels while taking on or discharging cargo or passengers.
DOCK RECEIPT: A steamship company form evidencing receipt of the goods at
a pier. Copies of the form are made available to shippers as a means of
expediting handling at piers. The dock receipt is used to transfer
accountability when the export item is moved by the domestic carrier to
the port of embarkation and left with the international carrier for
export. The Dock Receipt controls the ownership of the goods until the
Bill of Lading is issued.
DOCK STATEMENT: A receipt issued by an Ocean Carrier to acknowledge the
receipt of a shipment at the carrier’s dock or warehouse facility.
DOCUMENTARY CREDIT: A commercial letter of credit providing for payment by
a bank to the named beneficiary who is usually the seller of merchandise
against delivery of such documents as may be specified in the credit.
DOCUMENTS: Papers customarily attached to foreign drafts, consisting of
ocean bills of lading, marine insurance certificates, and commercial
invoices, and where required, including certificates of origin and
consular invoices.
DOCUMENTS AGAINST ACCEPTANCE: Instructions given by a shipper to his bank
that the documents attached to a draft for collection are deliverable to
the drawee against his acceptance of the draft. Also D/A.
DOCUMENTS AGAINST PAYMENT: Instructions given by a shipper to his bank
that the documents attached to a draft for collection are deliverable to
the drawee only against his payment of the draft. Also D/P.
DoD: Abbreviation for “Department of Defense”
DOOR-TO-DOOR: Through transportation of a container/trailer and its
contents from CONSIGNOR’s loading facility to CONSIGNEE’s unloading
facility. The through delivery of cargo from shipper to receiver.
DOLLY: A piece of equipment used to move containers or pallets around the
airport with the aid of a tractor.
Domestic Exports: Exports of domestic merchandise include commodities
which are grown, produced, or manufactured in one country, and commodities
of foreign origin which have been substantially changed in this country,
including Foreign Trade Zones, from the form in which they were imported,
or which have been enhanced in value by further manufacture in this
country.
DOMESTIC INTERNATIONAL SALES CORPORATION: An export sales corporation
established by a US Company under US government authorization to promote
trade from the USA by giving the exporter economic advantages not
available outside such framework.
domestic trunk line carrier: A classification for air carriers that
operate between major population centers. These carriers are now
classified as major carriers.
DOMICILE: The place where a draft or acceptance is made payable.
DOT: See Department of Transportation.
DOUBLE-STACK: Railcar movement of containers stacked two high.
double bottoms: A motor carrier operation that involves one tractor
pulling two trailers.
double-pallet jack: A mechanized device for transporting two standard
pallets simultaneously.
Download: To merge temporary files containing a day's or week's worth of
information with the main data base in order to update it.
Downstream Dumping: This occurs when foreign producers sell at below cost
to a producer in its domestic market, and the product is then further
processed and shipped to another country.
DRAWBACK: A refund of duties paid on imported goods which is provided at
the time of their re-exportation.
DRAFT: 1) See BILL OF EXCHANGE. 2) Buyer's payment for goods. 3) Depth of
water necessary to float vessel.
Draft Bill of Exchange: A written, unconditional order for payment from
one person (the drawer) to another (the drawee). It directs the drawee to
pay a specified sum of money, in a given currency, at a specific date to
the drawer. A Sight Draft calls for immediate payment (on sight) while a
Time Draft calls for payments at a readily determined future date.
DRAW: The addressee of a draft. The person on whom the draft is drawn.
DRAWBACK: Refund of customs duties paid on material imported and then
later exported. This feature of U.S. Customs law permits a refund of 99%
of the duty paid for articles manufactured or produced in the United
States with the use of imported merchandise and are later exported.
Drawback regulations and procedures vary among countries.
Drawback System: The Drawback System, a part of Customs' Automated
Commercial System, provides the means for processing and tracking of
drawback claims.
Drawee: The individual or firm on whom a draft is drawn and who owes the
indicated amount.
Drawer: The individual or firm that issues or signs a draft and thus
stands to receive payment of the indicated amount from the drawee.
DRAYAGE: Transportation of freight by truck, primarily in local cartage.
driving time regulations: U.S. Department of Transportation rules that
limit the maximum time a driver may drive in interstate commerce; the
rules prescribe both daily and weekly maximums.
Drop: A situation in which an equipment operator deposits a trailer or
boxcar at a facility at which it is to be loaded or unloaded.
DROP-OFF: Delivery of a shipment(s) to an air or ocean carrier for
transportation.
DROP SHIPMENT: Shipment sent directly from manufacturer to retailer or
industrial customers, even though ordered through wholesaler who takes
title to goods and unusual wholesale discount.
Dry Lease: The rental of a "clean" aircraft without crew, ground staff or
supporting equipment.
DST: The acronym meaning "double stack train" service, which is the
transport rail between two points of a trainload of containers with two
containers, one on top of the other, per chassis.
DUAL OPERATION: A motor carrier that has both COMMON and CONTRACT CARRIER
operating authority.
Dual Pricing: The selling of identical products in different markets for
different prices. This often reflects dumping practices.
DUAL-RATE SYSTEM: An international water carrier pricing system whereby a
shipper signs an exclusive-use agreement with the Conference and pays a
lower rate (10 to 15 percent) than non-signing shippers for an identical
shipment.
Dumping: The sale of a commodity in a foreign market at less than fair
value. Dumping is generally recognized as unfair because the practice can
disrupt markets and injure producers of competitive products in an
importing country. Article VI of the GATT permits imposition of
antidumping duties equal to the difference between the price sought in the
importing country and the normal value of the product in the exporting
country. With price-to-price dumping, the foreign producer can use its
sales in the high-priced market (usually the home market) to subsidize its
sales in the low-priced export market. The price difference is often due
to protection in the high-priced market. Price-cost dumping indicates that
the foreign supplier has a special advantage. Sustained sales below cost
are normally possible only if the sales are somehow subsidized.
Dumping Margin: The amount by which the imported merchandise is sold in
the United States below the home market or third country price or the
constructed value (that is, at less than its "fair value"). For example,
if the U.S. "purchase price" is $200 and the fair value is $220, the
dumping margin is $20. This margin is expressed as a percentage of the
United States price. In this example, the margin is 10 percent.
DUNNAGE: Cardboard, lumber or other filler material used to stabilize
shipment. Does not include packaging.
DUTY: A tax imposed on imports by the Customs authority of a country.
Duties are generally based on the value of the goods (ad valorem duties),
weight or quantity (specific duties) or a combination of value and other
factors (compound duties). Also known as a TARIFF. Also “Specific duty”:
An assessment on the weight or quantity of an article without preference
to its monetary value or market price and “Duty Drawback”: A recovery in
whole or in part of duty paid on imported merchandise at the time of
exportation, in the same or different form.
dw: Abbreviation for “Deadweight ton” (tons of 2,240 lbs.)
dwc: Abbreviation for “Deadweight for cargo”
DWT: See Deadweight TONNAGE
Dynamic Asian Economies: A collective reference, currently comprising six
Asian countries: Hong Kong, Korea, Malaysia, Singapore, Taiwan, and
Thailand.
EAA: See Experimental Aircraft Association.
EAON: Abbreviation for “Except as otherwise noted”
ECAC: See European Civil Aviation Conference.
Economic Value Added: Measuring the true profitability of an operation by
focusing on the total cost of assets, operating costs, inventories, etc.
Economic Zones: Economic zones are designated regions in a country which
operate under rules that provide special investment incentives, including
duty free treatment for imports, for manufacturing plants which re-export
their products. The term "economic zone" is currently used in the People's
Republic of China and the former Soviet Union.
Entry Summary Selectivity System: The Entry Summary Selectivity System, a
part of Customs' Automated Commercial System, provides an automated review
of entry data to determine whether team or routine review is required.
Selectivity criteria include an assessment of risk by importer, tariff
number, country of origin, manufacturer, and value. Summaries with Census
warnings, as well as quota, antidumping and countervailing duty entry
summaries are selected for team review. A random sample of routine review
summaries is also automatically selected for team review.
ECR: See Efficient consumer response.
EDI: Electronic Data Interchange. Enables computers to talk to computers.
Although an investment in computer hardware and software is necessary, EDI
allows companies to engage in electronic commerce, exchanging information
such as purchase orders to better coordinate their logistics operations.
Standardized formats define how information is encoded and permit the flow
of data from one database in a company to another. Of particular
importance to distribution operations has been the development of the
EDI-based advance shipment notice. This tells a consignee what to expect
in a shipment before the truck even arrives.
EDIFACT: Electronic Data Interchange for Administration, Commerce and
Transportation, is an international syntax used in the interchange of
electronic data. Customs uses EDIFACT to interchange data with the
importing trade community.
EEC: See EUROPEAN ECONOMIC COMMUNITY.
Efficient consumer response: A supply chain initiative for the grocery
industry. ECR is a consumer-driven system of replenishment in which
high-quality products and accurate information flow through a paperless
(EDI) system between all distribution points from manufacturing line to
checkout counter.
Efficient foodservice response: A supply chain initiative for the
foodservice industry, a.k.a. ECR without the coupons. Growth in the
quick-service restaurant and correctional industries has provided EFR with
a solid foundation for growth.
EFR: See Efficient foodservice response
EIN: Employer Identity Number.
EIR: See EQUIPMENT INTERCHANGE RECEIPT.
Electronic Data Interchange: See EDI
Electronic Point of Sale: A computerized system for recording sales at
retail checkouts.
EMBARGO: 1) Temporary refusal to accept traffic for transportation at
certain points or in certain routes due to emergencies, limitations of
facilities or other abnormal circumstances. 2) Detention of vessel in port
by order of government usually issued in time of war or hostilities.
Empty Leg: Results from an aircraft primarily chartered outbound having
cargo capacity inbound or vice versa. A cheap form of airfreight.
ENDORSE: Sign one’s name on back of document such as a check or Bill of
Lading.
Endorsement in Blank: Commonly used on a bank check, an endorsement in
blank is an endorsement to the bearer. It contains only the name of the
endorser and specifies no particular payee. Also, a common means of
endorsing Bills of Lading dawn to the order of the shipper. The bills are
endorsed "For..." (see Bill of Lading, Order).
Entrepot: An intermediary storage facility where goods are kept
temporarily for distribution within a country or for re-export.
Entry Summary Selectivity System: The Entry Summary Selectivity System, a
part of Customs' Automated Commercial System, provides an automated review
of entry data to determine whether team or routine review is required.
Selectivity criteria include an assessment of risk by importer, tariff
number, country of origin, manufacturer, and value. Summaries with Census
warnings, as well as quota, antidumping and countervailing duty entry
summaries are selected for team review. A random sample of routine review
summaries is also automatically selected for team review.
Entry Summary System: An entry is the minimum amount of documentation
needed to secure the release of imported merchandise. The Entry Summary
System, a part of Customs' Automated Commercial System, contains data on
release, summary, rejection, collection, liquidation, and extension or
suspension.
Entry Value: The U.S. Customs Service defines entry value (or entered
value) as the value reflected on the entry documentation submitted by the
importer. (see 19 CFR 141.61 for how shown on entry.)
EPOS: See Electronic Point of Sale (EPOS): a computerized system for
recording sales at retail checkouts.
EQUIPMENT INTERCHANGE RECEIPT (EIR): Form used by parties
delivering/receiving containers or container equipment. Used for container
control an damage purposes.
ERAA: See European Regional Airlines Association.
ESTOPPEL: Legal document used in a court of law to establish liability.
ETA: Abbreviation for “Estimated time of arrival”. Then, It normally takes
4 hours for carriers to Break Bulk then ready to be picked up by
forwarders along with customs release notification.
ETD: Abbreviation for “Estimated time of departure”. The cut-off time for
carriers' cargo ramp handling is normally two hours ahead of ETD. However,
the freight forwarder’s' consolidation cut-off time may vary depending on
each forwarder's operations respectively.
ETIOLOGIC AGENTS: As defined in the HAZARDOUS MATERIAL REGULATIONS in 49 CFR. Viable microorganisms or their toxins which may cause human disease.
EURO DOLLAR: U.S. funds deposited in banks outside the USA. This usually
means banks in Europe or the European Union.
European Regional Airlines Association (ERAA): This organization is the
voice of Europe’s regional air transport industry.
EUROCONTROL: Founded in 1960 for overseeing air traffic control in the
Upper Air-space of Member States, this organization has, as its most
important goal, the development of a coherent and coordinated air traffic
control system in Europe.
European Civil Aviation Conference (ECAC): An inter-governmental
organization founded in 1955. The ECAC has today 37 Member States. It’s
aim is to promote the continued development of a safe, efficient and
sustainable European air transport system.
European Community: A regional organization created in 1958 providing for
gradual elimination of intra-regional customs duties and other trade
barriers, applying a common external tariff against other countries, and
providing for gradual adoption of other integrating measures, including a
Common Agricultural Policy (CAP) and guarantees of free movement of labor
and capital. The original 6 members were Belgium, France, West Germany,
Italy, Luxembourg, and the Netherlands. Denmark, Ireland, and the United
Kingdom became members in 1973; Greece acceded in 1981; Spain and Portugal
in 1986. The term European Community (EC) refers to three separate
regional organizations which operate under separate treaties: European
Coal and Steel Community (ECSC), established in 1952; European Atomic
Energy Community (EURATOM), established in 1958, and European Economic
Community (EEC), established in 1958. Since 1967, the European Community
have been served by four common institutions: - the EC Commission, the EC
Council, the European Parliament, and the Court of Justice of the European
Community. The present 12 member states of the EC are also members of the
ECSC and Euratom. While the expression "European Community" (or "EC") was
meant to refer to the three Communities, frequent use of the expression
"European Community" (or "EC") has become common as a reference to the
European Economic Community (EEC). Prior to November 1, 1993 (the date on
which the Maastricht Treaty on European Union entered into force), the
acronym "EC" was used as a reference to "European Community" and "European
Communities." Part I, Article I of the Maastricht Treaty on European Union
formalized "EC" as a reference to "European Community." The Treaty also
introduced the term "European Union" as a broader legal entity than the
European Community.
EUROPEAN ECONOMIC COMMUNITY (EEC): Common market nations of Europe.
European Union: The EU is an umbrella reference to the European Community
(EC) and to two European integration efforts introduce by the Maastricht
Treaty: Common Foreign and Security Policy (including defense) and Justice
and Home Affairs (principally cooperation between police and other
authorities on crime, terrorism, and immigration issues). The term
"European Union" was introduced in November 1993 (when the Maastricht
Treaty on European Union entered into force). The term "European
Community" (EC) continues to exist as a legal entity within the broader
framework of the EU.
EX: As a prefix, means “out” or “from” when used in conjunction with a
noun or location. Means all transportation charges and risks of
loss/damage are chargeable to buyer when goods are delivered to carrier at
"ex" location. When used in pricing terms such as "Ex Factory" or "Ex
Dock," it signifies that the price quoted applies only at the point of
origin (in the two examples, at the seller's factory or a dock at the
import point). In practice, this kind of quotation indicates that the
seller agrees to place the goods at the disposal of the buyer at the
specified place within a fixed period of time.
Ex Quay: "Ex Quay" means that the seller makes the goods available to the
buyer on the quay (wharf) at the destination named in the sales contract.
The seller has to bear the full cost and risk involved in bringing the
goods there. There are two "Ex Quay" contracts in use: (a) Ex Quay "duty
paid" and (b) Ex Quay "duties on buyer's account" in which the liability
to clear goods for import is to be met by the buyer instead of by the
seller.
Ex Ship: "Ex Ship" means that the seller will make the goods available to
the buyer on board the ship at the destination named in the sales
contract. The seller bears all costs and risks involved in bringing the
goods to the destination.
Ex Works (EXW): This represents the minimum risk and cost for the supplier
and the maximum risk and cost for the buyer. The seller's only
responsibility is to make the goods available at his premises. He is not
responsible for loading the goods on the vehicle provided by the buyer,
unless otherwise agreed. The buyer bears all costs and risks involved in
taking the goods from the seller's premises.
EXCEPTION RATINGS: Rates set at a certain percentage above the general
commodity rates because they apply to commodities that require special
handling, such as live animals, human remains, or automotive vehicles.
EXCESS VALUATION: See DECLARED VALUE.
EDI or EDIFACT: Electronic Data Interchange for Administration, Commerce
and Transport, from the UN-backed electronic data interchange standards
body, to create electronic versions of common business documents that will
work on a global scale. One digital document under consideration, the
International Forwarding and Transport Message will do the jobs of six
different electronic messages currently in use.
EXCLUSIVE USE: Carrier vehicles that are assigned to a specific shipper
for its exclusive use.
EXEMPT CARRIER: Motor carrier engaged in for-hire transportation of
commodities exempt from economic regulations by the ICC under provisions
of the Interstate Commerce Act. Generally seafood or agricultural
commodities.
EXPEDITING: Moving shipments through regular channels at accelerated pace.
An example of dispatching LTL quantities on a single truck for quick
delivery.
Experimental Aircraft Association (EAA): This organization is dedicated to
serving all of aviation by fostering and encouraging individual
participation, high standards and access to the world of flight in an
environment that promotes freedom, safety, family and personal
fulfillment.
EXPLOSIVES: As defined in the HAZARDOUS MATERIAL REGULATIONS in 49 CFR.
Any chemical compound, mixture or device for which the function is an
explosion. Further defined into Class A, B, C and Blasting Agents.
Export Administration Act: The EAA of 1979, as amended, authorizes the
President to control exports of U.S. goods and technology to all foreign
destinations, as necessary for the purpose of national security, foreign
policy, and short supply. As the basic export administration statute, the
EAA is the first big revision of export control law since enactment of the
Export Control Act of 1949. The EAA is not a permanent legislation; it
must be reauthorized: - usually every three years. There have been
reauthorizations of the EAA in 1982, 1985 (the Export Administration
Amendments Act), and 1988 (Omnibus Amendments of 1988) which have changed
provisions of the basic Act. The Act was extended in 1993 until June 30,
1994.
EXPORT BROKER: An individual or company that brings buyers and sellers
together for a fee but does not take part in the actual sales transaction.
Export Control Classification Number: Every product has an export control
classification number (formerly: Export Control Commodity Number) within
the Commerce Control List. Each ECCN consists of five characters that
identify the category, product group, type of control, and country group
level of control.
Export Declaration: A form to be completed by the exporter or their
authorized agent and filed in triplicate by a carrier with the United
State Collector of customs at the point of exit. It serves a twofold
purpose: 1) Primarily, it is used by the U.S. Bureau of Census for the
compilation of export statistics on United States foreign trade (For this
reason an export declaration is required for practically all shipments
from the United States to foreign countries and the United States
possessions, except for mail shipments of small value, or for those of a
non commercial character) and 2) The declaration also serves as an export
control document because it must be presented, together with the export
license, to the United States Customs at the port of export. If the goods
may be exported under general export license, this fact must be stated on
the export declaration. See also SHIPPER’S EXPORT DECLARATION
EXPORT CONTROL: An exercise control over exports for statistical and
strategic purposes. U.S. Customs enforces the export control laws for the
U.S. Department of Commerce and other Federal agencies.
EXPORT LETTER OF CREDIT: When importer has arranged with bank for letter
of credit financing of purchases, importer applies for issuance of
individual letters of credit to cover purchase contracts as made.
Export License: A government document (also known as an "Individual
Validated License") authorizing exports of specific goods in specific
quantities to a particular destination. This document may be required in
some countries for most or all exports and in other countries only under
special circumstances. An export license is often required if a government
has place embargoes or other restrictions upon exports.
EXPORT MANAGEMENT COMPANY: A private company that serves as the export
department for several manufacturers soliciting and transacting export
business on behalf of its clients in return for a commission, salary, or
retainer plus commission.
Export Processing Zones: EPZs are a form of free trade zone which provide
incentives for industrial or commercial export activity. Export processing
zones are located in developing countries and are usually in defined
areas, industrial parks, or facilities which provide free trade zone
benefits and usually offer additional incentives, such as exemption from
normal tax and business regulations. The zones, which began appearing
around 1975, are sometimes referred to as Special Economic Zones or
Development Economic Zones.
Export Revolving Line of Credit: The Export Revolving Line of Credit, ERLC,
is a form of financial assistance provided by the Small Business
Administration (SBA). The ERLC guarantees loans to U.S. firms to help
bridge the working capital gap between the time inventory and production
costs are disbursed until payment is received from a foreign buyer. SBA
guarantees 85 percent of the ERLC subject to a $750,000 guarantee limit.
The ERLC is granted on the likelihood of a company satisfactorily
completing its export transaction. The guarantee covers default by the
exporter, but does not cover default by a foreign buyer; failure on the
buyer's side is expected to be covered by letters of credit or export
credit insurance. Under SBA's ERLC program, any number of withdrawals and
repayments can be made as long as the dollar limit on the line of credit
is not exceeded and disbursements are made within the stated maturity
period (not more than 18 months). Proceeds can be used only to finance
labor and materials needed for manufacturing, to purchase inventory to
meet an export order, and to penetrate or develop foreign markets.
Examples of eligible expenses for developing foreign markets include
professional export marketing advice or services, foreign business travel,
and trade show participation. Under the ERLC program, funds may not be
used to purchase fixed assets.
EXPORT SERVICE: Airlines, ocean carriers and freight forwarders perform,
at the request of shippers, many services relating to the transfer,
storage and documentation of freight destined for export. The same is true
of imports. A narrower application of the term 'Export Service" refers to
the air movement of goods having a subsequent movement by ocean vessel.
Some airlines have a tariff on such traffic which sets forth a rate
covering the air transportation, from airport of origin to seaport and all
relevant transfer and documentation procedures. On freight arriving in the
USA via an ocean vessel and having a subsequent movement by air, some
airlines have a similar tariff program known as "Import Service”
EXPORT TRADING COMPANY: Similar to an export management company.
Exporter's Certificate of Origin: The U.S. Customs Service defines an
Exporter's Certificate of Origin (also known as Customs Form 353) as a
document completed by the exporter, certifying that the goods described
therein are eligible for a preferential rate of duty under some trade
program such as the U.S.-Canada Free-Trade Agreement. (See 19 CFR
10.37(d)(1).)
Express: Premium-rated service for urgent deliveries.
External Dimensions: The extreme outside measurements, including any
handles or other protrusions, of a ULD.
External Volume, ULD: The amount of space a ULD occupies in an aircraft
calculated using the extreme external dimensions of the unit.
Euro Dollars: Euro Dollars are deposits of U.S. dollars in banks or other
financial institutions which are located outside the borders of the United
States. In every other way, Euro Dollars are identical to any other U.S.
dollars. These same dollars are also called offshore dollars, or depending
where the money is on deposit.
F&D: Abbreviation for “Freight and Demurrage”.
FAA: See FEDERAL AVIATION ADMINISTRATION.
FACE VALUE: Nominal value on coin, paper currency or other negotiable
document or instrument; may be lower or higher than the market value.
FACILITATION: Programs to expedite the flow of international commerce
through modernizing and simplifying Customs procedures, duty collection,
and other procedures to which inter-national cargo and passengers are
subject. The ATA Facilitation Committee pursues this work with Government
agencies in the United States and other countries. Examples of progress in
facilitation include the elimination of certain export declaration
requirements, more expeditious release of cargo from Customs and clearance
of cargo at point of origin.
FACTOR: Agent appointed to sell goods on commission. Also known as a
COMMISSION MERCHANT.
FAIR MARKET VALUE: The sum that a sale of an article would bring under
normal market conditions.
FAK: See “Freight All Kinds”. See also ALL-COMMODITY RATE and GENERAL
COMMODITY RATE.
Fathom: Nautical term. Conversion equivalents: 6 feet or 1.83 meters.
Fcsrcc: Abbreviation for “Free of capture, seizure, riots and civil
commotions”.
FC&S: Abbreviation for “Free of Capture & Seizure” A clause excluding war
risks from the Marine Policy. War risks can be covered by issuing a
separate War Policy with an additional premium being charged.
FCL: Abbreviation for “Full Container Load”. The maximum permissible
weight for the value of the cargo contained in a container.
FDA: The U.S. Food and Drug Administration.
FEDERAL AVIATION ADMINISTRATION (FAA): Created under the Federal Aviation
Act of 1958 as the Federal Aviation Agency and charged with the
responsibility of promulgating operational standards and procedures for
all classes of aviation in the USA. With the creation of the cabinet
level, Department of Transportation in 1966, the FAA became a unit within
the new Department and received the new designation Federal Aviation
Administration. The FAA Administrator, however, continues to be a
presidential appointee and the FAA remains a separate entity with most of
its former functions. In the field of air cargo, the FAA promulgates
certain stress standards which must be met in the tiedown of cargo in
flight. The FAA is the element of the U.S. government with primary
responsibility for the safety of civil aviation. Major functions include
regulating civil aviation to promote safety and fulfill the requirements
of national defense, encouraging and developing civil aeronautics,
including new aviation technology, developing and operating a common
system of air traffic control and navigation for both civil and military
aircraft, research and development with respect to the National Airspace
System and civil aeronautics, developing and implementing programs to
control aircraft noise and other environmental effects of civil aviation
and regulating U.S. commercial space transportation. For information: 800
Independence Avenue SW, Washington, DC 20591
FEDERAL HIGHWAY ADMINISTRATION (FHWA): The division of the U.S. Department
of Transportation in charge of the nation’s highway system which
administers federal aid for highway construction, develops safety
standards and programs and has jurisdiction over the safety of commercial
motor carriers engaged in interstate commerce.
FEDERAL MARITIME COMMISSION (FMC): Established in 1961 as an independent
government agency responsible for the regulation of shipping in the
foreign trades of the United States. The Commission's five members are
appointed by the President with the advice and consent of the Senate. The
FMC is headquartered at 800 North Capitol Street, N.W., Washington, D.C.
20573 with five Area Representatives around the USA. The FMC's
jurisdiction encompasses many facets of the maritime industry. However, it
has no jurisdiction over vessel operations, navigation, vessel
construction, vessel documentation, vessel inspection, licensing of
seafaring personnel, maintenance of navigational aids or dredging. These
activities are handled by other federal, state and local agencies. The
principal shipping statutes administered by the FMC are the Shipping Act
of 1984 (46 USC app. 1710 et seq.), the Foreign Shipping Practices Act of
1988 (46 USC app. 1701 et seq.), and section 19 of the Merchant Marine
Act, 1920 (46 USC app. 876). The FMC's regulations are published in 46 CFR
500 et seq. The FMC controls the services, practices and agreements of
international water carriers and non-contiguous domestic water carriers.
FEDERAL REGISTER: Government publication that prints rules and regulations
of federal agencies on a daily basis. In most cases, rules and regulations
must be published to become legal.
FEEDER: In intermodal context, a pickup or delivery vehicle or ship.
FEEDER SERVICES: Coastal movement of loaded or empty containers on board
smaller container vessels which coordinate with a “mother ship” for the
ocean voyage.
FEU: Abbreviation for a “Forty-Foot Equivalent Unit” or a 40 foot dry
cargo container.
FHWA: See FEDERAL HIGHWAY ADMINISTRATION.
FIATA: See International Federation of Freight Forwarders' Associations.
FIB: Abbreviation for “Free in Bunkers” or “Free into Barge”.
FIFO: Abbreviation for “First-In-First-Out”. Warehouse and accounting term
meaning the first items stored are the first items used.
Fifth Freedom Flight: Where cargo is carried by an airline between two
countries in neither of which it is based.
FILING OF TARIFFS: Requirement that tariffs/supplements/re-issues/other
schedules be in the hands of the regulating body such as the FMC or ICC at
specific time prior to effective date.
FINANCIAL DISCOUNT: A deduction form the face value of commercial paper
such as Bills of Exchange and acceptance in consideration of receipt by
the seller of cash before maturity date. The rates of discount vary
according to the state of the money market, the financial standing of the drawee to accept a draft or to pay it when due.
FISCAL YEAR: Annual period established for accounting purposes in business
or government. May start at any time in the calendar year.
Flag Carrier: An airline of one national registry whose government gives
it partial or total monopoly over international routes.
Flag of convenience: A shipowner registers a ship in a nation that offers
conveniences in the areas of taxes, manning and safety requirements.
Liberia and Panama are the two nations best known.
FLAMMABLE LIQUID: As defined in the HAZARDOUS MATERIAL REGULATIONS in 49 CFR. Any liquid other than an EXPLOSIVE having a flash point below 100
degrees F except liquids which meet definition of compress gas or that are
part of a mixture where other components with flash points above 100
degrees F make up at least 99% of the mixture.
FLAMMABLE SOLID: As defined in the HAZARDOUS MATERIAL REGULATIONS in 49 CFR. Any solid material other than an EXPLOSIVE which under conditions
incidental to transportation is liable to cause fires through friction,
retained heat from manufacturing/processing or which can be ignited
readily.
FLASH POINT: Minimum temperature at which substance gives off flammable
vapors which will ignite when they come in contact with a spark or flame.
FLASH VESSELS: Shallow draft vessels suitable to carry 8 to 15 barges at a
time towed by seagoing vessels.
FLATBED: Trailer with level bed and no sides or tops.
FLAT-RACK CONTAINER: A container with no sides and frame members at the
front and rear of the container. Container can be loaded from the sides or
the top.
Flexible specialization: A strategy based on multi-use equipment, skilled
workers and innovative senior management to accommodate the continuous
change that occurs in the marketplace.
Flight Safety Foundation: An independent, nonpolitical, nonprofit
organization offering an objective view of aviation safety developments.
The Foundation uses the Internet to maximize dissemination of its
publications, seminars, special reports and calendar of events.
FLOOR LOAD RATING: Weight that can be safely supported by floor.
Expression in pound per square foot.
FMC: See FEDERAL MARITIME COMMISSION.
FILS: French for “Sons” at the end of a business company’s name.
FOB: See FREE ON BOARD
FOD : Abbreviation of “Free of Damage”.
FOIA: Abbreviation for the US “Freedom of Information Act”
FOIR: Abbreviation for “Freedom of Information Request”
Folded: An article folded in such a manner as to reduce its bulk 33 1/3%
from its normal shipping cubage when not folded.
FOOTPRINT: Slang expression for the amount of tire tread on the ground.
FOR-HIRE CARRIER: A carrier that provides transportation service to the
public on a fee basis.
FORCE MAJEURE: Condition in contract that relieves either party from
obligation where major unforeseen events prevent compliance with the
provisions of an agreement.
FORE AND AFT: 1) At bow and stern, all over ship. 2) The direction on a
vessel parallel to the centerline.
Foreign Access Zone: FAZ is a term adopted by Japan for its form of free
trade zone. FAZs are the outgrowth of Japan's effort to improve its trade
balance and to stimulate regional economic areas. FAZs are intended to be
established around airports and seaports, with facilities (warehouses,
cargo-sorting, distribution, import processing, wholesale, design-in
centers, exhibition halls) on an international scale. The FAZ concept: -
which emphasizes imports rather than the processing and job creation: -
extends from the July 1992 Law on Extraordinary Measures for the Promotion
of Imports and the Facilitation of Foreign Direct Investment in Japan.
Passage of the law is linked to the Structural Impediments Initiative (SII).
Foreign Exports: Exports of foreign merchandise (re-exports), consist of
commodities of foreign origin which have entered the United States for
consumption or into Customs bonded warehouses or U.S. Foreign Trade Zones,
and which, at the time of exportation, are in substantially the same
condition as when imported.
FOREIGN FLAG: A reference to a carrier not registered in the USA that
flies the American flag. The term applies to air and sea transportation.
FOREIGN TRADE ZONE: FTZs are the U.S. form of free trade zones. These
zones are restricted-access sites in or near ports of entry, that operate
under public utility principles to create and maintain employment by
encouraging operations in the U.S. which might otherwise have been carried
on abroad. Goods brought into a zone for a bona fide Customs reason are
exempt from state and local ad valorem tax. The zones are licensed by the
Commerce Department's Foreign-Trade Zones Board and operate under the
supervision of the Customs Service. Quota restrictions do not normally
apply to foreign goods stored in zones, but the Board can limit or deny
zone use in specific cases on public interest grounds. Domestic goods
moved into a zone for export may be considered exported upon entering the
zone for purposes of excise tax rebates and drawback. A foreign trade "subzone"
is a non-contiguous zone site located at a manufacturing plant.
Foreign Trade Zone Entry: A form declaring goods which are brought duty
free into a Foreign Trade Zone for further processing or storage and
subsequent exportation.
FORKLIFT: Freight/material handling vehicle used in loading and unloading.
FORMAL ENTRY: Generally, a formal entry is filed when an informal entry is
inappropriate, usually when the value of a shipment exceeds US$1,250. It
must be noted that U.S. Customs may require a formal entry at any time,
and some commodity restrictions apply (i.e. All textile products,
antidumping, plastic or rubber articles and merchandise having Visa or
Quota conditions).
FORWARDING AGENT: Individual or company specializing in shipping goods.
Payments made for insurance and other expenses can be charged to foreign
buyers. See also FREIGHT FORWARDER.
FOUL BILL OF LADING: A receipt for goods issued by a carrier with
indication that the goods were damaged when received from the shipper.
FPA: Abbreviation for “Free of Particular Average” A marine insurance
term. A term used in marine insurance policies to indicate that while the
underwriter is unwilling to assume liability for ordinary partial losses
due to the peculiar qualities of the particular article or to its form of
package, he is willing to bear partial losses, the direct result of
stranding, sinking, burning, collision, or other named peril
FPAAC: Abbreviation for “Free of Particular Average, American Conditions.
An marine insurance term. The American form of clause commonly used, as
distinguished from that used by the English underwriters. Under the
American clause the underwriter does not assume responsibility for partial
losses unless caused by stranding, sinking, burning or collision with
another vessel whereas under the English clause, the underwriter assumes
responsibility for partial losses if the vessel be stranded, sunk, burnt
or in collision even though such an event did not actually cause the
damage suffered by the goods. Conditions.
Free Alongside Ship (FAS) (...named port of shipment): The seller fulfills
his obligation to deliver when the goods have been placed alongside the
vessel on the quay or in lighters at the named port of shipment. This
means that the buyer has to bear all costs and risks of loss or of damage
to the goods from that moment. The FAS term requires the buyer to clear
the goods for export. FAS is also a method of export and import
valuation.
Free Carrier (FCA) (...named place or point): The seller fulfills his
obligation to deliver when he has handed over the goods, cleared for
export, into the charge of the carrier named by the buyer at the named
place or point. This term replaces the former "FOB named inland port" to
designate the seller's responsibility for the cost of loading goods at the
named shipping point. It may be used for multi-modal transport, container
stations, and any mode of transport, including air.
FREE DOMICILE: A term used in international transportation where the
shipper pays all transportation charges and any applicable duties and/or
taxes.
Free In: A pricing term indicating that the charterer of a vessel is
responsible for the cost of loading goods onto the vessel.
Free In and Out: A pricing term indicating that the charterer of a vessel
is responsible for the cost of loading and unloading goods from the
vessel.
Free In and Out: Cost of loading and unloading a vessel is borne by the charterer.
Free of Particular Average (FPA): A type of marine insurance, is the
minimum coverage in use and covers total and partial losses if the ship
carrying an exporter's goods is involved in a collision or fire, or is
stranded or sunk.
Free of Capture & Seizure: See FC&S
Free On Board (FOB) (...named port of shipment): A pricing term indicating
that the quoted price includes the cost of loading the goods into
transport vessels at the specified place. The seller fulfills his
obligation to deliver when the goods have passed over the ship's rail at
the named port of shipment. This means that the buyer has to bear all
costs and risks of loss of or damage to the goods from that point. The FOB
term requires the seller to clear the goods for export. This term can only
be used for sea or inland waterway transport. When the ship's rail serves
no practical purpose, such as in the case of roll-on/roll-off or container
traffic, the FCA term is more appropriate to use. North American sellers
and buyers tend to use the term "FOB" inappropriately.
Free On Rail/Free On Truck: These terms are synonymous, since the word
"truck" relates to the railway wagons. The terms should only be used then
the goods are to be carried by rail. Free on Railroad defines seller's
responsible for the cost of goods is to the point of loading it to the
trains' loading deck. FOR normally comes with loading railroad station
where the goods is to be loaded.
Free Out: A pricing term indicating that the quoted prices includes the
cost of unloading the goods from the vessel.
Free Port: A port which is a foreign trade zone, open to all traders on
equal terms. More specifically a port where merchandise may be stored
duty-free, pending re-export or sale within that country. Examples include
Hong Kong and Singapore.
FREE TIME: The amount of time allowed by a carrier for the loading or
unloading of freight at the expiration of which demurrage or detention
charges will accrue.
FREE TRADE ZONE: "Free Trade Zones" (sometimes called "customs free zones"
or "duty free zones") is a generic term referring to special commercial
and industrial areas at which special customs procedures allow the
importation of foreign merchandise (including raw materials, components,
and finished goods) without the requirement that duties be paid
immediately. If the merchandise is later exported, duty free treatment is
given to re-exports. The zones are usually located in or near ports of
entry. Merchandise brought into these zones may be stored, exhibited,
assembled, processed or used in manufacture prior to re-export or entry
into the national customs territory. When manufacturing activity occurs in
free trade zones, it usually involves a combination of foreign and
domestic merchandise, and usually requires special governmental authority.
Types of free trade zones include: foreign trade zones (and foreign trade
sub-zones); free ports; and transit zones. See FOREIGN TRADE ZONE.
FREIGHT: 1) Property and commodities of all kinds, including small package
service, tendered to a carrier for transportation. Does not include mail,
express, or passenger baggage. 2) The money charged by the carrier for
transporting goods.
Freight All Kinds: Uniform airline charging scale applying to a number of
commodities as opposed to SCR (Specific Commodity Rate) applying to one
commodity only.
FREIGHT BILL: The carrier’s invoice for transportation charges applicable
to a freight shipment.
Freight Carriage ... paid to: Like C & F, "Freight/Carriage paid to ..."
means that the seller pays the freight for the carriage of the goods to
the named destination. However, the risk of loss of or damage to the
goods, as well as of any cost increases, is transferred from the seller to
the buyer when the goods have been delivered into the custody of the first
carrier and not at the ship's rail. The term can be used for all modes of
transport including multi-modal operations and container or "roll on-roll
off" traffic by trailer and ferries. When the seller has to furnish a bill
of lading, waybill or carrier's receipt, he duly fulfills this obligation
by presenting such a document issued by the person with whom he has
contracted for carriage to the named destination.
Freight Carriage ... and Insurance paid to: This term is the same as
"Freight/Carriage Paid to ..." but with the addition that the seller has
to procure transport insurance against the risk of loss of damage to the
goods during the carriage. The seller contracts with the insurer and pays
the insurance premium.
FREIGHT FORWARDER: 1) Individual or company that accepts
less-than-truckload (LTL) shipments and consolidates them into truckload
lots on for-hire basis for shippers. 2) Agent who helps expedites
shipments by preparing necessary documents and making other arrangements
for the moving of freight. 3) Designated as a common carrier under the ICC.
4) An independent business which handles export shipments for
compensation. At the request of the shipper, the forwarder makes the
actual arrangements and provides the necessary services for expediting the
shipment to its overseas destination. The forwarder takes care of all
documentation needed to move the shipment from origin to destination,
making up and assembling the necessary documentation for submission to the
bank in the exporter's name. The forwarder arranges for cargo insurance,
makes the necessary overseas communications, and advises the shipper on
overseas requirements of marking and labeling. The forwarder operates on a
fee basis paid by the exporter and often receives an additional percentage
of the freight charge from the common carrier. An export freight forwarder
must be licensed by the Federal Maritime Commission to handle ocean
freight and by the International Air Transport Association (IATA) to
handle air freight. An ocean freight forwarder dispatches shipments from
the United States via common carriers, books or arranges space for the
shipments, and handles the shipping documentation.
FREIGHT IN BOND: Goods shipped under control/ownership of Government until
duty is paid. See also IN BOND.
FREIGHTER: See ALL-CARGO AIRCRAFT.
FTP: Abbreviation for “File Transfer Protocol”.
G-7 (GROUP OF SEVEN): Seven industrial countries (The USA, Japan, Germany,
France, the United Kingdom, Italy and Canada): whose leaders have met at
annual economic summits since 1975 to coordinate economic policies.
GA: See General AVERAGE
GAGE (GAUGE OF TRACK): Distance between heads of rails, measured at right
angles at a point 5/8 inches below the top of the rail. Standard gage is 4
ft. 8 ¼ inches. Narrower gage is frequently employed in
construction/scenic areas.
Gang: Group of stevedores usually 4 to 5 members with supervisor assigned
to a hold or portion of the vessel being loaded or unloaded.
GAO: Abbreviation for “General Accounting Office”
GATEWAY: Point at which freight is interchanged/interlined between
carriers or at which carriers joins two operating authorities provision of
through service. In the context of travel activities, gateway refers to a
major airport or seaport. Internationally, gateway can also mean the port
where customs clearance takes place.
GATT (GENERALIZED AGREEMENT ON TARIFFS AND TRADE): A multilateral treaty
designed to help reduce trade barriers between signatory countries and to
promote trade through tariff elimination and concessions. The GATT is a
binding contract among (in early 1992) 103 governments. GATT was
established in 1947 as an interim measure pending the establishment of the
International Trade Organization, under the Havana Charter. The
International Trade Organization (ITO) was never ratified by Congress.
Operating in the absence of an explicit international organization, GATT
has provided the legal framework for international trade with its primary
mission being the reduction of trade barriers.
gathering lines: Oil pipelines that bring oil from the oil well to storage
areas.
GAUGE OF TRACK: See GAGE.
GBL: Abbreviation for “Government Bill of Lading”.
GCR: Abbreviation for “General Cargo Rate”. The basic tariff category
which was introduced to cover most air cargo now covers only a minority,
the remainder being under SCR or class rates.
GENERAL AVERAGE: Ancient principle of equity in which all parties in a sea
adventure (ship, cargo, and freight) proportionately share losses
resulting from a voluntary and successful sacrifice of part of the ship or
cargo to save the whole adventure from an impending peril, or
extraordinary expenses necessarily incurred for the joint benefit of ship
and cargo.
GENERAL AVERAGE SECURITY: Documents the cargo owner presents to the
General Average Adjuster to replace the vessel owner's maritime lien on
cargo for its share of General Average and to obtain release of the goods
by the Steamship Company. G.A. Security consists of a G.A. Bond and either
a cash deposit or an Underwriter's Guarantee.
GENERAL CARGO: Term applying to ship’s loading comprising a variety of
goods/articles and not confined to a single commodity.
general-commodities carrier: A common motor carrier that has operating
authority to transport general commodities or all commodities not listed
as special commodities.
GENERAL COMMODITY RATE: A rate applicable on all commodities except those
for which specific rates have been filed. Such rates are usually based on
weight and distance for each pair of cities served. See also ALL-COMMODITY
RATE.
GENERAL LICENSE: There are licenses, authorized by the Bureau of Export
Administration, that permit the export of non-strategic goods to specified
countries without the need for a validated license. No prior written
authorization is required and no individual license is issued.
GENERAL LICENSE G-DEST: General license-shipments of commodities to
destinations not requiring a validated license. The majority of all items
exported fall under the provisions of General License G-DEST.
general-merchandise warehouse: A warehouse used to store goods that are
readily handled, are packaged and do not require a controlled environment.
GENERAL ORDER (GO): Government contract warehouse for the storage of
cargoes left unclaimed for ten working days after availability. Unclaimed
cargoes are auctioned publicly after one year.
General Tariff: A tariff that applies to countries that do not enjoy
either preferential or most-favored-nation tariff treatment. Where the
general tariff rate differs from the most-favored-nation rate, the general
tariff rate is usually the higher rate.
GENERALIZED AGREEMENT ON TARIFFS AND TRADE: See GATT.
GENERALIZED SYSTEM OF PREFERENCE: This is a set of non-reciprocal trade
concessions which industrialized countries have agreed to extend to
qualified “Less Developed Countries (LDCs). It permits duty-free entry of
numerous manufactured or agricultural products, in addition to those
products already classified as duty-free under MFN status. To qualify for
GSP, all articles must satisfy the relevant rules of origin and be
imported from the beneficiary country. It is a framework under which
developed countries give preferential tariff treatment to manufactured
goods imported from certain developing countries. GSP is one element of a
coordinated effort by the industrial trading nations to bring developing
countries more fully into the international trading system. The U.S. GSP
scheme is a system of non-reciprocal tariff preferences for the benefit of
these countries. The U.S. conducts annual GSP reviews to consider
petitions requesting modification of product coverage and/or country
eligibility. United States GSP law requires that a beneficiary country's
laws and practices relating to market access, intellectual property rights
protection, investment, export practices, and workers rights be considered
in all GSP decisions.
GNP- See Gross National Product
going-concern value: The value that a firm has as an entity, as opposed to
the sum of the values of each of its parts taken separately. Particularly
important in determining a reasonable railroad rate.
GONDOLA: A railcar with a flat platform and slides 3 to 5 feet high used
for top loading of items that are long and heavy.
GOODS: Cargo shipped by sea or air.
GOOSENECK: The front rails of the chassis that raise above the plane of
the chassis and engage in the tunnel of a container.
GRACE, DAYS OF: A certain number of days allowed by law for payment of due
bill.
GRANDFATHER CLAUSE: 1) Allows individual or company that has been doing
business in a area to continue, despite new regulations that might
ordinarily preclude operation. 2) Term used by ICC to grant authority to
carrier to operate over routes where it or a predecessor was in bona fide
operation at June 1, 1935.
granger laws: State laws passed before 1870 in mid-western states to
control rail transportation.
Gray Market Imports: This term refers to imports bearing a genuine
trademark but imported by a party other than the trademark holder or
authorized importer.
Great Lakes carriers: Water carriers that operate on the five Great Lakes.
grid technique: A quantitative technique to determine the least-cost
center, given raw materials sources and markers, for locating a plant or
warehouse.
Gross National Product: A measure of a nation's output; the total value of
all final goods and services a nation produces during a time period.
GROSS WEIGHT: 1) Entire weight of a shipment including containers and
packaging material. 2) The combined weight of a container, its payload and
any other loose internal fittings.
Group of ...: 5: Similar to the Group of Seven (G-7), with the exception
of Canada and Italy. 7: This term refers to seven major economic powers
(Canada. France, Germany, Great Britain, Italy, Japan, and the United
States) whose finance ministers seek to promote balanced economic growth
and stability among exchange rates. The leaders of these seven countries
have met at annual economic summits since 1975 to coordinate economic
policies. 10: Under the International Monetary Fund's General Agreements
to Borrow (GAB), established in 1962, 10 of the wealthiest industrial
members of the IMF "stand ready to lend their currencies to the IMF up to
specified amounts when supplementary resources are needed." The finance
ministers of these countries comprise the Group of 10 (also called the
Paris Club). Members include: Belgium, Canada, France, Germany, Italy,
Japan, Netherlands, Sweden, Switzerland, the United Kingdom, and the
United States. Though numbering 11 with the addition of Switzerland in
1984, the numerical name persists. 11: The G-11 (also known as the
Cartagena Group) was established in 1984 and comprises the largest debtor
nations in Latin America: Argentina, Bolivia, Brazil, Chile, Colombia,
Dominican Republic, Ecuador, Mexico, Peru, Uruguay, and Venezuela. 15: The
G-15, established in 1990, consists of relatively prosperous or large
developing countries. The G-15 discusses the benefits of mutual
cooperation in improving their international economic positions. Members
include: Algeria, Argentina, Brazil, Egypt, India, Indonesia, Jamaica,
Malaysia (a very active member), Mexico, Nigeria, Peru, Senegal,
Venezuela, Yugoslavia, and Zimbabwe. 24: A grouping of finance ministers
from 24 developing country members of the International Monetary Fund. The
Group, representing eight countries from each of the African, Asian, and
Latin American country groupings in the Group of 77, was formed in January
1972 to counterbalance the influence of the Group of 10. 77: A grouping of
developing countries which received its name in connection with 77
countries issuing a joint statement in Geneva, Switzerland in 1964. The
G-77's primary focus is serving as a caucus for articulating members'
collective interests primarily in areas of promoting economic cooperation
among developing countries and in negotiations on economic matters with
developing countries. G-77 membership has increased since 1964 to over 125
countries.
GROUP OF SEVEN: See G-7.
GSP: See GENERALIZED SYSTEM of PREFERENCE.
GST: Abbreviation for “Goods and Services Tax”. Specific to goods going
into Canada.
GSA: General Sales Agent acting on behalf of an airline. Usually Broker or
Forwarder.
GUARANTEED FREIGHT: Freight payable whether the goods are delivered or
not, provided the failure to deliver the goods resulted from causes beyond
the carrier's control.
guaranteed loans: Railroad loans that the federal government co-signs and
guarantees
GW: Abbreviation for “Gross Weight”.
Hard Currency: The currency of a nation which may be
exchanged for that of another nation without restriction. Sometimes
referred to as convertible currency. Hard currency countries typically
have sizeable exchange reserves and surpluses in their balance of
payments.
Harmonized Code: An internationally accepted and uniform description
system for classifying goods for customs, statistical and other purposes.
HARMONIZED COMMODITY DESCRIPTION AND CODING SYSTEM: A multipurpose
international goods classification system designed to be used by
manufacturers, transporters, exporters, importers, Customs, statisticians
and others in classifying goods moving in international trade under a
single commodity code. Developed under the auspices of the Customs
Cooperation Council (CCC), an international Customs organization in
Brussels. This code is a hierarchically structured product nomenclature
containing approximately 5,000 headings and subheadings describing the
articles moving in international trade. It is organized into 99 chapters
arranged in 22 sections with the sections generally covering an industry
(e.g., Section Xl, Textiles and Textile Articles) and the chapters
covering the various materials and products of the industry (e.g., Chapter
50-Silk; Chapter 55-Manmade Staple Fibers; Chapter 57-Carpets). The basic
code contains 4-digit headings and 6-digit subheadings. The USA has added
digits for tariff and statistical purposes and duty rates are in the
8-digit level. Statistical suffixes are in the 10-digit level. This
Harmonized System (HS) supplanted the U.S. Tariff Schedule (TSUSA) in
January 1988.
Harmonized System: The Harmonized Commodity Description and Coding System
(or Harmonized System, HS) is a system for classifying goods in
international trade, developed under the auspices of the Customs
Cooperation Council. Beginning on January 1, 1989, the new HS numbers
replaced previously adhered-to schedules in over 50 countries, including
the United States. For the United States, the HS numbers and four
additional digits are the numbers that are entered on the actual export
and import documents. Any other commodity code classification number (SITC,
end-use, etc.) are just rearrangements and transformations of the original
HS numbers.
HATCH: The cover of or opening in the deck of a vessel, through which
cargo is loaded.
HAWB: House Air waybill issued by carrying airlines' agent, normally
freight forwarder.
HAZARDOUS MATERIALS: Means a substance or material which has been
determined by the U.S. Secretary of Transportation to be capable of posing
an unreasonable risk to health, safety, and property when transported in
commerce and which has been so designated. Title 49, Code of Federal
Regulations (U.S.) Transportation: Parts 100199, govern the transportation
of hazardous materials. Hazardous materials may be transported
domestically, but they may be classified as Dangerous Goods when
transported internationally by air. Also see RESTRICTED ARTICLES and
DANGEROUS GOODS.
Heavy Lifts: Freight too heavy to be handled by regular ship's tackle.
Heavy Lift Vessel: Specifically designed to be self sustaining with heavy
lift cranes, to handle unusually heavy and/or out-sized cargoes.
HIGH CUBE: Any container which exceeds 8’6” (102 inches) in height.
HIGHWAY CARRIERS: Divided into the following classes: Regular route (LINE
HAUL) long haul/transcontinental carriers, regular route (LINE HAUL)
short-haul carriers, irregular route carriers, specific commodity
carriers, intrastate carriers, interstate carriers and local
cartage/pickup/distribution carriers.
HOLD FOR PICKUP: Freight to be held at the carrier's destination location
for pickup by the recipient.
House Air Waybill: An air waybill issued by a freight consolidator. See
Air Waybill.
Hub: A central location to which traffic from many cities is directed and
from which traffic is fed to other areas.
HUB AND SPOKE ROUTING: Aircraft routing service pattern that feeds traffic
from many cities into a central hub designed to connect with other flights
to final destinations. The system maximizes operating flexibility by
connecting many markets through a central hub with fewer flights than
would be required to connect each pair of cities in an extensive system.
HUNDREDWEIGHT: The pricing unit used in transportation. A hundredweight is
equal to 100 pounds or 112 pounds avoirdupois. Abbreviated as CWT.
HUNDREDWEIGHT PRICING: Special pricing for multiple-piece shipments
traveling to one destination which are rated on the total weight of the
shipment (usually over 100 pounds) as opposed to rating on a per package
basis.
Husbanding: Term used by steamship lines, agents, or port captains who are
appointed to handle all matters in assisting the master of the vessel
while in port to obtain bunkering, fresh water, food and supplies, payroll
for the crew, doctors appointments, ship repair, etc.
IAOPA: See International Aircraft Owner and Pilot Associations.
IATA: See INTERNATIONAL AIR TRANSPORT ASSOCIATION.
IATA Designator: Two-character Airline identification assigned by
IATA in accordance with provisions of Resolution 762. It is for use in
reservations, timetables, tickets, tariffs as well as air waybill.
iatan: see International Airlines Travel Agent Network.
IBID: Latin term meaning “in the same place”.
icc –See MOTOR CARRIER ACT OF 1935. Also abbreviation for
“International Chamber of Commerce”
Ice Clause: An ice clause is a standard clause in the chartering of
ocean vessels. It dictates the course a vessel master may take if the ship
is prevented from entering the loading or discharge port because of ice,
or if the vessel is threatened by ice while in the port. The clause
establishes rights and obligations of both vessel owner and charterer if
these events occur.
ICTF: Abbreviation for “Intermodal Container Transfer Facility” An
on-dock facility for moving containers from ship to rail or truck.
IFF: Abbreviation for the “Institute of Freight Forwarders”.
Igloo: Container designed to occupy full main deck width of
carrying aircraft.
Image processing: Allows a company to take electronic photographs
of documents. The electronic photograph then can be stored in a computer
and retrieved from computer storage to replicate the document on a
printer. The thousands of bytes of data composing a single document are
encoded in an optical disk. Many carriers now use image processing to
provide proof-of-delivery documents to a shipper. The consignee signs an
electronic pad that automatically digitizes a consignee's signature for
downloading into a computer. A copy of that signature then can be produced
to demonstrate that a delivery took place.
IMMEDIATE DELIVERY: A procedure allowing more rapid release to
importers of imports flown into the USA each year. Under the “Immediate
Delivery Program”, an importer can take delivery almost immediately of
virtually all of an incoming shipment while Customs retains a sample for
the purposes of appraisal. On the basis of this appraisal, the importer is
billed later for the payment of duties.
Import Certificate: The import certificate is a means by which the
government of the country of ultimate destination exercises legal control
over the internal channeling of the commodities covered by the import
certificate.
IMPORT LICENSE: A certificate, issued by countries exercising
import controls, that permits importation of the articles stated in the
license. The issuance of such a permit frequently is connected with the
release of foreign exchange needed to pay for the shipment for which the
import license has been requested.
Import Quota: A means of restricting imports by the issuance of
licenses to importers, assigning each a quota, after determination of the
total amount of any commodity which is to be imported during a period.
Import licenses may also specify the country from which the importer must
purchase the goods.
Import Quota Auctioning: The process of auctioning the right to
import specified quantities of quota-restricted goods.
Import RESTRICTIONS: Import restriction, applied by a country with
an adverse trade balance (or for other reasons), reflect a desire to
control the volume of goods coming into the country from other countries
may include the imposition of tariffs or import quotas, restrictions on
the amount of foreign currency available to cover imports, a requirement
for import deposits, the imposition of import surcharges, or the
prohibition of various categories of imports.
IMPORT SERVICE: See EXPORT SERVICE.
Importer of Record: The U.S. Customs Service defines the importer
of record as the owner or purchaser of the goods; or, when designated by
the owner, purchaser, or consignee, a licensed Customs broker.
Imports for Consumption: "Imports for Consumption" measure the
total of merchandise that has physically cleared through U.S. Customs
either entering consumption channels immediately or entering after
withdrawal for consumption from bonded warehouses under Customs custody or
from Foreign Trade Zones. Many countries use the term "special imports" to
designate statistics compiled on this basis.
IN BOND: As applied to freight coming into the USA, the term “In
Bond” designates a procedure under which US Customs clearance of cargo is
postponed until the cargo reaches an inland Customs point rather than
subjecting the cargo to clearance procedures at the first arriving United
States gateway port where the process might be more time consuming. The
procedure is so named because the cargo moves under the carriers bond
(financial liability assured by the carrier) from the gateway port and
remains “In Bond” until Customs releases the cargo at the inland Customs
point.
IN TRANSIT: Load proceeding along route between home terminal and
destination point.
Inbound logistics: Covers: Determining most efficient routing and
scheduling, Time-scheduled component parts pickup, Satellite tracking of
shipment movements, Bar code verification at pick-up points, Supplier
coordination, Material management, Returnable container control.
INCENTIVE RATE: A rate designed to induce the shipper to ship
greater or heavier volumes per shipment.
INCOTERMS: Maintained by the International Chamber of Commerce (ICC).
This codification of terms is used in foreign trade contracts to define
which parties incur the costs and at what specific point the costs are
incurred. Maintained by the International Chamber of Commerce.
Incremental Cost to Export: The additional costs incurred while
manufacturing and preparing a product for export ( e.g., product
modifications, special export packaging and export administration costs.)
This does not include the costs to manufacture a standard domestic
product, export crating and transportation to the foreign market.
INDEMNIFY: To compensate or repay for a loss sustained.
Independent Action: A move by whereby a member of a shipping conference
elect to depart from the specific service rates set forth by the
conference, giving ten calendar days notice of such action. The conference
member's new schedule of rate, or rates, officially takes effect no later
than ten days after receipt of notice by the conference.
INDIRECT AIR CARRIER: See AIR FREIGHT FORWARDER.
Indirect Offset: Involves goods and services unrelated to the
aerospace/defense material being sold. See also OFFSET.
Individual Validated License: An IVL is written approval by which
the U.S. Department of Commerce grants permission, which is valid for 2
years, for the export of a specified quantity of products or technical
data to a single recipient. IVLs also are required, under certain
circumstances, as authorization for the re-export of U.S.-origin
commodities to new destinations abroad.
Inducement: Some steamship lines publish in their schedules the
name of a port and the words by inducement in parentheses. This means the
vessel will call at the port if there is sufficient amount of profitable
cargo available and booked.
INFLATABLE DUNNAGE: Flexible bags usually made from vinyl material
which can be inflated within the void spaces of a container/trailer to
prevent the movement of cargo.
Infopartnering: An efficient consumer response enabler where
retailers, wholesales and manufacturers develop partnerships based on
shared "actionable information" and real-time communications links.
INFORMAL ENTRY: A simplified import entry procedure accepted at the
option of Customs for any noncommercial shipment (baggage) and any
commercial shipment not over $1,000 in value.
Inherent Vice: An insurance term referring to any defect or other
characteristics of a product which could result in damage to the product
without external cause. Insurance policies may specifically exclude losses
caused by inherent vice.
Inland Bill of Lading: A bill of lading used in transporting goods
overland to the exporter's international carrier. Although a through bill
of lading can sometimes be used, it is usually necessary to prepare both
an inland bill of lading and an ocean bill of lading for export shipments.
INLAND CARRIER: A transportation line which hauls exports or import
traffic between ports and inland points.
Inspection Certificate: A document certifying that merchandise (such as
perishable goods) was in goods condition immediately prior to shipment.
Insourcing: The opposite of outsourcing, that is, a service
performed in-house.
INSURANCE: Contractual relationship which exists when one party,
for a consideration, agrees to reimburse another from loss caused by
designated contingencies. The first party is the insurer; the second is
the insured; the contract is the Insurance Policy, the consideration is
the premium, the property in question is risk and the contingency in
question is the hazard or the peril.
Insurance Certificate: This certificate is used to assure the
consignee that insurance is provided to cover loss of or damage to the
cargo while in transit.
INSURANCE RIDER: Additional clause amending or supplementing the
insurance policy.
INTEGRATED CARGO SERVICE: A blend of segments of the cargo system
providing the combined services of air carrier, forwarder, ground handling
and agents.
Integrated Carriers: Carriers that have both air and ground fleets;
or other combinations, such as sea, rail, and truck. Since they usually
handle thousands of small parcels an hour, they are less expensive and
offer more diverse services than regular carriers.
Integrated Logistics: A system-wide management view of the entire
supply chain, from raw materials supply through finished goods
distribution. It requires managing all functions that make up the supply
chain as a single entity, rather than managing individual functions
separately.
Integrated operator: A service that controls the total process of
moving cargo from pickup to delivery. The rationale is that tighter
scheduling and total control lead to better service. Integrated operators
usually fly their own cargo planes.
Integrated Tariff of the European Community: TARIC is a publication which
presents the regulations pertaining to import of products into the EC as
well as for some exports. TARIC adopts the provisions of Community
legislation, the harmonized system, and the combined nomenclature (CN).
INTEGRATED TOW BARGE: A series of barges that are connected
together to operate as one unit.
Intellectual Property: Ownership of the legal rights to possess,
use or dispose of products created by human ingenuity, including patents,
trademarks and copyrights.
INTER ALIA: Latin phrase meaning “amongst other things”.
INTERCHANGE: Process of passing freight from one carrier to another
between lines.
INTERCOASTAL CARRIER: Vessels that transport freight between the
east coast and west coast ports usually by way of the Panama Canal.
INTERLINE: The movement of a shipment via two or more carriers or
transportation lines. See COORDINATED MOVEMENT
INTERLINE FREIGHT: Freight moving from origin to destination over
lines of two or more transportation lines.
Intermeddle: Referring to the capacity to go from ship to train to
truck, or the like. The adjective generally refers to containerized
shipping or the capacity to handle same.
Intermediate Consignee: An intermediate consignee is the bank,
forwarding agent, or other intermediary (if any) that acts in a foreign
country as an agent for the exporter, the purchaser, or the ultimate
consignee, for the purpose of effecting delivery of the export to the
ultimate consignee.
Intermediate Container Transfer Facility: ICTF is a site where
cargo is transferred from one form of transit to another, such as rail to
ship.
Intermodal: Two or more modes of transport used in the continuous
movement of goods from origin to destination. It applies to goods
transported within containers or trailers, most often to join rail/truck
moves. But marine and air modes can also be involved.
INTERMODAL COMPATIBILITY: The capability which enables a shipment
to be transferred from one form of transport to another, as from airplane
to highway truck, to railway freight car, to ocean vessel. Some aircraft
in service today have the capability for intermodal exchange of the large
types of standard containers currently used in surface transport.
Intermodal transportation: Using more than one mode to deliver
shipments. For example: The movement of trailers-container by rail and at
least one other mode of transportation.
INTERNAL WATER CARRIERS: Vessels that operate over the internal
navigable rivers such as the Mississippi, Ohio and Missouri.
INTERNATIONAL AIR TRANSPORT ASSOCIATION (IATA): The trade and
service organization for airlines of more than 100 countries serving
international routes. IATA activities on behalf of shippers in
international air freight include development of containerization
programs, freight handling techniques and, for some airlines, uniform
rates and rules. For information: P.O. Box 800, Victoria Place, Montreal,
Quebec, Canada, 1M1 H4Z. Also see CNS.
International Aircraft Owner and Pilot Associations (IAOPA): A
nonprofit federation of 37 autonomous, non-governmental, national general
aviation organizations. IAOPA has represented international general
aviation for more than 32 years.
International Airlines Travel Agent Network (IATAN): A not-for profit
service organization whose main goal is to assist travel agents to meet
and maintain a specific set of standards that are of value to airlines,
the agency community as well as to consumers.
INTERNATIONAL CIVIL AVIATION ORGANIZATION (ICAO): An agency of the
United Nations whose constitution is the “Convention on International
Civil Aviation” drawn up by a conference in Chicago in November and
December 1944, and to which each ICAO Contracting State is a party. It was
organized to insure orderly worldwide technical development of civil
aviation. For information: International Aviation Square, 1000 Sherbrooke
Street West, Mail Box 400, Montreal, P0, Canada H3A 2R4.
International Court of Justice: The ICJ, established in 1945, is
the principal judicial organ of the UN. The ICJ decides cases submitted to
it by states and gives advisory opinions on legal questions submitted to
it by the General Assembly or Security Council or by UN specialized
agencies. The court is composed of 15 judges elected by the General
Assembly and the Security Council from a list of persons nominated by the
national groups in the Permanent Court of Arbitration. The seat of the
Court is in The Hague, Netherlands.
International Federation of Freight Forwarders' Associations (FIATA):
Founded in 1926 to protect and represent its members at international
level. It’s members include 90 organizations and 1,920 associate members
in 132 countries. For information: Baumackerstr. 24, POB 8050 Zrich,
Switzerland.
International Management Code for the Safe Operation of Ships and for
Pollution Prevention: See ISM CODE.
International Maritime Organization: The IMO was established as a
specialized agency of the United Nations in 1948. The IMO facilitates
cooperation on technical matters affecting merchant shipping and traffic,
including improved maritime safety and prevention of marine pollution.
Headquarters are in London, England.
International Standards Organization: The ISO, established in 1947,
is a worldwide federation of national bodies, representing approximately
90 member countries. The scope of the International Standards Organization
covers standardization in all fields except electrical and electronic
engineering standards, which are the responsibility of the IEC,
International Electrotechnical Commission. Together, the ISO and IEC form
the specialized system for worldwide standardization: - the world's
largest nongovernmental system for voluntary industrial and technical
collaboration at the international level. The result of ISO technical work
is published in the form of International Standards. There are, for
example, ISO standards for the quality grading of steel; for testing the
strength of woven textiles; for storage of citrus fruits; for magnetic
codes on credit cards; for automobile safety belts; and for ensuring the
quality and performance of such diverse products as surgical implants, ski
bindings, wire ropes, and photographic lenses. International Standards
Organization 9000-9004: ISO 9000 is the general name for the quality
standard accepted throughout the European Economic Community. It was
initially adopted in 1987. ISO is a series of documents on quality
assurance published by the Geneva-based International Standards
Organization. The five documents outline standards for developing Total
Quality Management and a Quality Improvement Process. 9000 consists of
guidelines for the selection and use of the quality systems contained in
9001-9003. 9001 outlines a model for quality assurance in design,
development, production, installation, and servicing. 9002 outlines a
model for quality assurance in production and installation. 9003 outlines
model for quality assurance for final inspection and testing. 9004 is not
a standard but contains guidelines for quality management and quality
system elements.
International Trade Commission: An independent U.S. Government
agency concerned with imports, import duties, and the effect of imports on
U.S. industry. The Commission has six commissioners who review and make
recommendations concerning countervailing duty and antidumping petitions
submitted by U.S. industries seeking relief from imports that benefit
unfair trade practices. Known as the U.S. Tariff Commission before its
mandate was broadened by the Trade Act of 1974.
Interplant: Includes Bar code scanning for accurate inventory
management, Consolidate/de-consolidate freight for time-sensitive
delivery, Operate and manage warehouse/distribution centers, Plant-to-plan
shuttle service, Cross-dock operations and Site selection.
INTERSTATE: Literally means between states. Applies to
transportation of goods/persons from point in one state to point in
another; between point in same state but passing within/through another
state en-route or between points in the USA and foreign countries.
INTERSTATE COMMERCE: Business of exchanging goods between buyers
and sellers of two or more states.
Interstate Commerce Commission (ICC): See MOTOR CARRIER ACT OF
1935.
INTRA: Latin term meaning “within”.
INTRASTATE COMMERCE: When all business between buyer and seller is
carried on within one state.
Inventory velocity: The speed with which products move from
receiving dock to shipping dock.
IPA: Abbreviation for “Including Particular Average”
IRREGULAR ROUTE CARRIER: A motor carrier that is permitted to
provide service using any route.
IRREVOCABLE LETTER OF CREDIT: A Letter of Credit in which the
specified payment is guaranteed by the bank if all terms and conditions
are met by the drawee. The opposite is a Revocable Letter of Credit which
can be cancelled or altered by the drawee or buyer after it has been
issued by the drawee’s bank. It is as good as the issuing bank.
IRRITATING MATERIAL: As defined in the HAZARDOUS MATERIAL
REGULATIONS in 49 CFR, liquid or solid substance which, upon contact with
fire or when exposed to air gives off dangerous or intensely irritating
fumes. Does not include any material classed as Poison A.
ISM Code: The ISM Code (International Management Code for the Safe
Operation of Ships and for Pollution Prevention) become international law
on July 1, 1998 for certain categories of vessels: Passenger ships, oil
tankers, chemical tankers, gas carriers, bulk carriers and high speed
cargo craft of 500 gross tonnage and over. Other cargo vessels and mobile
offshore drilling units of 500 gross tonnage and over will be required to
comply with the ISM Code by July 1, 2002.
ISO: The International Organization for Standardization (ISO) is a
worldwide federation founded in 1946 to promote the development of
international manufacturing, trade and communication standards. ISO is
composed of member bodies from more than 90 countries. The American
National Standards Institute (ANSI) is the United States' representative
to ISO. ISO develops standards in all industries except those related to
electrical and electronic engineering. Standards in these areas are made
by the Geneva-based International Electrotechnical Commission (IEC) which
has representatives from more than 40 member countries including the USA.
ISO 9000: A set of generic standards that provide quality assurance
requirements and quality management guidance. They include a broad range
of quality system elements. The basic ISO 9000 series comprises five
standards: ISO 9000, ISO 9001, ISO 9002, ISO 9003, and ISO 9004. The
standards are of two types: Guidance and Conformance. ISO 9000 and ISO
9004 are guidance standards. That is, they are descriptive documents, not
prescriptive requirements. Companies do not register to either ISO 9000 or
ISO 9004. Instead, they register to one of the conformance standards, ISO
9001, ISO 9002 or ISO 9003. These are models for quality systems.
ISP: Abbreviation for “Internet Service Provider”.
J&WO: Abbreviation for “Jettison and Washing
Overboard”.
JETSAM: Goods from a ship's cargo, or parts of its equipment, that
have been thrown overboard to lighten the load in time of danger, or to
set a stranded ship adrift.
JIT (JUST IN TIME): The principle of production and inventory
control that prescribes precise controls for the movement of raw
materials, component parts, and work-in-progress. Goods arrive when needed
(just in time) for production or use rather than becoming expensive
inventory that occupies costly warehouse space. JIT is an umbrella term
including the elements of both KANBAN and MRP II systems.
JIT II (JUST IN TIME II): Vendor-managed operations taking place
within a customer's facility. JIT II was popularized by the Bose
Corporation.
joint cost: A common cost in cases where a company produces
products in fixed proportions and the cost the company incurs to produce
one product entails producing another; the backhaul is an example.
JOINT RATE: Agreed upon by two or more carriers, published in a
single tariff, and applying between point on line of one and point on line
of another. May include one or more intermediate carriers in route.
JOINT VENTURE: An international business collaboration between
foreign interests and private parties in which two or more parties
establish a new business enterprise to which each contributes and in which
ownership and control are shared.
KANBAN: Japanese word translated as “visible
record” for manufacturing control systems in which suppliers deliver
needed parts to the assembly line “just in time” for use. E.g. parts are
not stocked. Affects purchasing, material management, inventory control
and production management. Papercards are used for record keeping/control.
Pronounced “conbon”, this term is primarily associated with Toyota but has
become a generic term in the USA.
KD Flat: An article taken apart, folded, or telescoped to reduce
its bulk at least 66 2/3% below its assembled size.
KDCL: Abbreviation for “Knocked down in carload lots”
KDLCL: Abbreviation for “Knocked down in less than carload lots”.
KEIRETSU: Refers to the horizontally and vertically linked
industrial structure of post-war Japan. The horizontally linked groups
include a broad range of industries linked via banks and general trading
firms.
KICKBACK: Rebate usually given to person who is in position to
purchase or order transportation for his/her company. See also REBATE.
KITTING: The process by which individual items are grouped or
packaged together to create a special single item.
Knock Down: An article taken apart, folded or telescoped in such a
manner as to reduce its bulk at least 33 1/3% below its assembled bulk.
KNOT: Equivalent to one nautical mile (6,080.20 feet) per hour or
1.85 kilometers per hour.
L&D: See LOSS AND DAMAGE.
L/C: See Letter of Credit.
LADING: The cargo carried in a transportation vehicle.
Lagan: Cargo or equipment to which an identifying marker or buoy is
fastened, thrown over-board in time of danger to lighten a ship's load.
Under maritime law if the goods are later found they must be returned to
the owner whose marker is attached; the owner must make a salvage payment.
LAN: Abbreviation for “Local Area Network”
LAND BRIDGE: Intermodal system of getting international cargo
across intervening continent from one seacoast to another by special
through trains.
land grants: Grants of land given to railroads to build tracks during
their development stage.
LANDED COST: Total expense of receiving merchandise/goods at place
of retail sale including retail purchase price and transportation charge.
LANDING GEAR: Device that supports at the end of semi-trailer when
not attached to the tractor.
LASH: Lighter-Aboard-Ships vessels that carry barges. Designed to
load internally, barges specifically designed for the vessel. The concept
is to quickly float the barges to the vessel (using tugs or ships wenches)
load these barges through the rear of the vessel, then sails. Upon arrival
at the foreign port, the reverse happens; Barges are quickly floated away
from the vessel and another set of waiting barges quickly are loaded.
Designed for quick vessel turn-around. Usually crane-equipped; handles
mostly breakbulk cargo. They are equipped with an overhead crane capable
of lifting LASH barges and stowing them into cellular slots in athwartship
position. See also SEA-BEE VESSEL.
Lash Vessel: Lay Days: The dates between which a chartered vessel
is to be available in a port for loading of cargo.
LASHING: Rope/wire use to secure two objects together by binding.
LAST IN, FIRST OUT (LIFO): Accounting method of inventory valuation
that assumes latest goods purchased are first goods used during the
accounting period. Opposite of FIFO.
LAY ORDER: The period during which the imported merchandise may
remain at the place of unlading without some action being taken for its
disposition, i.e. Beyond the 5-day General Order period.
LAY TIME: Period of time in which the ship is loaded/discharged and
for which no demurrage is charged.
LAZARETTO: Quarantined area for fumigating goods that might be
carrying insects/dangerous germs.
LCL: Maritime terms meaning “Less than container load” or railroad
term meaning “less than carload” e.g. Weighing less than the amount
necessary to apply a carload rate charged by railroads for transportation.
LD3: Lower deck type 3 container. This is the most commonly used
container in passenger aircraft.
LDI: See logistics data interchange
LDP: Abbreviation for “Landed Duty Paid”.
LEAD TIME: The total elapse time between order placement and order
receipt. Includes time required for order transmittal, order processing
and preparation as well as the time in transit.
LEGAL WEIGHT: 1) Weight of goods sold and interior packing but not
the container’s weight (term commonly used in foreign trade). 2) A maximum
weight limitation for a total highway unit as established by the highway
authorities which, if exceeded, may subject the carrier to a fine or
impounding of the vehicle.
LENGTH & GIRTH: Some carriers may apply this limitation on
shipments. The equation used to calculate length and girth: Length + (2 x
width) + (2 x height). The largest measurement will always be used as the
length in the equation.
Less Developed Country: An LDC is a country with low per capita gross
national product. Terms such as third world, poor, developing nations, and
underdeveloped have also been used to describe less developed countries.
Lesser Developed Countries: The classification LLDC (sometimes also
known as "Least" Developed Countries) was developed by the United Nations
to give some guidance to donor agencies and countries about an equitable
allocation of foreign assistance. The criteria for designating a country
an LLDC, originally adopted by the UN Committee for Development Planning
in 1971, have been modified several times. Criteria have included low:
per-capita-income, literacy, and manufacturing share of the country's
total gross domestic product. There is continuing concern that the
criteria should be more robust and less subject to the possibility of easy
fluctuation of a country between less developed and least developed
status.
LESSEE: Individual, party or company with legal possession/control
of vehicle (with/without driver) or other equipment from another party
under the terms of a lease agreement.
LESSOR: Individual, party or company granting legal use of vehicle
(with/without driver) or other equipment to another party under the terms
of a lease agreement.
Letter of Credit: A financial document issued by a bank at the
request of the consignee guaranteeing payment to the shipper for cargo if
certain terms and conditions are fulfilled. Normally it contains a brief
description of the goods, documents required, a shipping date, and an
expiration date after which payment will no longer be made. An Irrevocable
Letter of Credit is one which obligates the issuing bank to pay the
exporter when all terms and conditions of the letter of credit have been
met. None of the terms and conditions may be changed without the consent
of all parties to the letter of credit. A Revocable Letter of Credit is
subject to possible recall or amendment at the option of the applicant,
without the approval of the beneficiary. A Confirmed Letter of Credit is
issued by a foreign bank with its validity confirmed by a U.S. bank. An
exporter who requires a confirmed letter of credit from the buyer is
assured payment from the U.S. bank in case the foreign buyer or bank
defaults. A Documentary Letter of Credit is one for which the issuing bank
stipulates that certain documents must accompany a draft. The documents
assure the applicant (importer) that the merchandise has been shipped and
that title to the goods has been transferred to the importer.
LETTER OF INDEMNITY: Issued by the shipper to the carrier to secure
a clean Bill of Lading for damaged goods. Usually to protect the carrier
and for the purpose of avoiding collection difficulties with bank. Also,
when a bank refuses to accept a foul bill of lading, the shipper (so that
there shall be nothing to prevent the questionable draft from being
discounted, among other reasons) may obtain a clean bill of lading. To
acquire this, the shipper signs a letter of indemnity, which is an
inducement to obtain the clean bill of lading through the dock or mate's
receipt, given on delivery of the goods to dock or ship, showed that the
shipment was damaged or in bad condition. This acts as a form of guarantee
whereby the shipper accords a claim settlement against a steamship by a
bill of lading holder resulting from a clean bill being issued.
LICENSE: A general export license covers the exportation of goods
that are not restricted under the terms of a validated export license. No
formal application or written authorization is needed to ship exports
under a general export license.
LIFO: See LAST IN, FIRST OUT.
LIFT-ON/LIFT-OFF (LOLO): Carriage of containers on decks or on
flatcars of water vessels.
LIGHTER: Flat bottomed boat, usually moved by tugs but can also be
steam-powered. Used to transfer freight between cars, piers and vessels.
LIGHTERAGE: The cost of loading or unloading a vessel by means of
barges alongside.
line functions: The decision-making areas companies associate with
daily operations. Logistics line functions include traffic management,
inventory control, order processing, warehousing, and packaging.
LINER: Ocean vessel engaged in the carriage of general cargo
(including passengers) along definite route on a fixed schedule. The word
"liner" is derived from the term "line traffic" which denotes operation
along definite routes on the basis of definite, fixed schedules; a liner
thus is a vessel that engages in this kind of transportation, which
generally involves the haulage of general cargo as distinct from bulk
cargo.
LINEHAUL: Movement of freight between cities, usually more than
1,000 miles, not including pickup and delivery services.
liner servicE: International water carriers that ply fixed routes
on published schedules.
Link: The transportation method a company uses to connect nodes
(plants, warehouses) in a logistics system.
Liquidation: The finalization of a customs entry.
LIST: (Of ship), means to lean to one side due to shifting of
cargo.
LivE: A situation in which the equipment operator stays with the
trailer or boxcar while it is being loaded or unloaded.
Live Animal: Commodities classified by IATA referring live animals
such as horse, cow, ... also known as Livestock.
LIVE AXLE: Axle driven by engine as compared to dead axle which
only follows as pulled.
Livestock: Common farm animals.
Lkg & Bkg: Abbreviation for “Leakage and Breakage”.
LLOYD’S REGISTER: Yearly document issued by Lloyds of London that
contains tonnage, age, build, character and condition of registered ships.
Lo/Lo: The acronym meaning "lift-on, lift-off," denoting the method
by which cargo is loaded onto and discharged from an ocean vessel, which
in this case is by the use of a crane.
LOAD DISPLACEMENT: Vessel’s load capacity according to structure
displacement.
load factor: A measure of operating efficiency used by air carriers to
determine a plane's utilized capacity percentage or the number of
passengers divided by the total number of seats.
loading allowance: A reduced rate that carriers offer to shippers and/or
consignees who load and/or unload LTL or AQ shipments.
LOADING LINE: Guide on ship indicating to what depth it has sunk
with lading. Serves as a safety factor. See also PLIMSOLL LINE.
LOAN RECEIPT: Document signed by the Assured where he acknowledges
receipt of money advanced by the insurance company as an interest-free
loan (instead of payment of a loss) repayable to the insurance company
only if the loss is recovered from a third party and then only to the
extent of the recovery.
local rate: A rate published between two points served by one
carrier.
local service carriers: A classification of air carriers that
operate between less-populated areas and major population centers. These
carriers feed passengers into the major cities to connect with trunk
(major) carriers. Local service carriers are now classified as national
carriers.
localized raw material: A raw material found only in certain
locations.
locational determinant: The factors that determine a facility's
location. For industrial facilities, the determinants include logistics.
Logbook: A daily record of the hours an interstate driver spends
driving, off duty, sleeping in the berth, or on duty but not driving.
Logistics: 1) All of the activities involved in planning and
carrying out the handling, storage and transport of goods and materials
along the supply chain, including the recovery of used or waste materials.
2) The function that encompasses materials management and physical
distribution. 3) The management of inventory in motion and at rest.
Logistics Channel: The network of supply chain participants engaged
in storage, handling, transfer, transportation, and communications
functions that contribute to the efficient flow of goods.
logistics data interchange: A computerized system that
electronically transmits logistics information.
LOLO: See LIFT-ON/LIFT-OFF.
Long-Dated Forward: The long-dated forward is a foreign exchange
contract whose maturity exceeds one year; a few have extended over ten
years.
LONG TON: Equivalent to 2,240 pounds or 20 long hundredweight. Also
called a GROSS TON.
LONGSHOREMAN: Person employed on wharves of port to load/unload
vessels.
LOSS AND DAMAGE (L&D): Report usually applicable when loss or
damage is discovered when shipment is delivered.
LOSS OF MARKET: A situation in which, for one reason or another,
sound cargo is no longer wanted by the consignee when it arrives. This is
a "business loss" not recoverable under a Marine Cargo Policy; e.g.,
Christmas trees arriving in January undamaged.
LOT LABELS: Labels attached to each piece of a multiple lot
shipment for identification purposes.
lot size: The quantity of goods a company purchases or produces in
anticipation of use or sale in the future.
Louvre Accord: The Louvre Accord (February 1987) attempted to stop
the dollar's fall and stabilize currency relationships by introducing
reference ranges among the G-7 currencies.
Lower Deck: The compartment below the Main Deck (also synonymous
with lower hold and lower lobe).
LOWER DECK CONTAINERS: Air carrier owned containers specially
designed as an integral part of the aircraft to fit in the cargo
compartments (lower deck) of the wide body aircraft.
LTL: Abbreviation for “Less than Truckload”. This term refers to
less than quantity of freight required to apply a truckload (TL) rate
charged by motor carriers for transportation. Also, a shipment weighting
less than the minimum weight needed to use the lower truckload rate.
LUFFING: Angular movement of a crane in vertical plane.
Lumping: The act of assisting a motor carrier owner-operator in the
loading and unloading of property. Commonly used in the food industry.
LWR: Most commonly used type of pallet at lower deck of passenger
aircraft and full cargo freighter.
M/R: See Mate's Receipt
M/T: Abbreviation for “Metric Ton” (2204 lbs.)
M/V or MV: Abbreviation for “Motor Vessel”
Maastricht Treaty: The Maastricht Treaty (named for the Dutch town
in which the treaty was signed) is also known as the Treaty of European
Union. The treaty creates a European Union by: (a) committing the 12
member states of the European Economic Community to both European Monetary
Union (EMU) and political union; (b) introducing a single currency
(European Currency Unit, ECU); (c) establishing a European System of
Central Banks (ESCB); (d) creating a European Central Bank (ECB); and (e)
broadening EEC integration by including both a common foreign and security
policy (CFSP) and cooperation in justice and home affairs (CJHA). The
treaty, negotiated in 1991 and signed in February 1992, entered into force
on November 1, 1993. The Maastricht Treaty envisioned EMU being achieved
in three stages: A first stage (encompassing treaty negotiations and
lasting through January 1, 1994) concludes with ratification of treaty
amendments needed to establish EMU, including participation by all 12 EEC
member states in the Exchange Rate Mechanism; A second stage (January 1,
1994 through no later than January 1, 1999) involves establishment of the
European Monetary Institute (EMI) to support development of a single
currency (the ECU) and development of the ECB; A third stage (starting no
later than January 1, 1999) involves irrevocable fixing of exchange rates
and the debut of the ECB with transfer of powers necessary for
administering economic and monetary union.
Main Deck: The deck on which the major portion of payload is
carried, normally known as Upper Deck of an airplane. The full cargo
freighter aircraft has it entire upper deck equipped for main deck type of
containers/pallets while Combi aircraft uses it rear part of the upper
deck for cargo loading. There is no upper deck or main deck type of
container/pallet at passenger aircraft.
MAJOR CARRIER: A for-hire certified air carrier with annual
operating revenues of $1 billion or more. Carrier usually operates between
major traffic centers.
MANDAMUS: Writ issued by court requiring specific actions to be
taken.
MANIFEST: 1) Document signed by Master of ship setting forth
description/destination of goods shipped. 2) Listing of shipments in load
by pro number, consignee, destination, weight, etc.
MARAD: A US government agency, while not actively involved in
vessel operation, administers laws for maintenance of merchant marine for
the purposes of defense and commerce.
MAQUILADORA: The maquiladora (or "in-bond" industry) program allows
foreign manufacturers to ship components into Mexico duty-free for
assembly and subsequent re-export. Industry established under the
maquiladora program is Mexico's largest source of foreign revenue
(following oil exports). In December 1989, the Mexican government
liberalized the maquiladora program to make this a more attractive and
dynamic sector of economy. As a result, maquiladora operations may import,
duty and import license free, products not directly involved in
production, but that support production, including computers and other
administrative materials and transportation equipment.
MARINE REGISTRY: Listing vessels under then name of the nation
whose flag it flies. Shipowners most often register under most
favorable/lenient flags.
Manufacturing Resource Planning System: See MRP II
marginal cost: The cost to produce one additional unit of output; the
change in total variable cost resulting from a one-unit change in output.
Marine Cargo Insurance: Broadly, insurance covering loss of, or
damage to, goods at sea. Marine insurance typically compensates the owner
of merchandise for losses in excess of those which can be legally
recovered from the carrier that are sustained from fire, shipwreck,
piracy, and various other causes. Three of the most common types of marine
insurance coverage are "free of particular average" (FPA), "with average"
(WA), and "All Risks Coverage."
MARITIME: Commerce/navigation at sea or in seaports.
MARITIME ADMINISTRATION: A US Agency that promotes the merchant
marine, determines ocean ship routes and services equipment and awards
maritime subsidies.
Mark: As used on containers in foreign trade, a symbol or initials
shown together with the port of importation and the final destination, if
different. Example: A.G. y Cia., Bogota via Barranquilla. Marks are
registered at appropriate customs houses; they also appear on bills of
lading and invoices. In domestic trade, it is common to mark containers
with the name and address of the recipient, but this is rarely done in
foreign trade.
Market Access: Market access refers to the openness of a national
market to foreign products. Market access reflects a government's
willingness to permit imports to compete relatively unimpeded with similar
domestically produced goods.
Market Disruption: Market disruption refers to the situation which
is created when a surge of imports in a given product line causes sales of
domestically produced goods in a particular country to decline to an
extent that the domestic producers and their employees suffer major
economic hardship.
market dominance: The absence of effective competition for
railroads from other carriers and modes for the traffic to which the rail
rate applies. The Staggers Act stated that market dominance does not exist
if the rate is below the revenue-to-variable-cost ratio of 160 percent in
1981 and 170 percent in 1983.
Marking: Every article of foreign origin, or its container,
imported into the United States shall be permanently marked in a
conspicuous place in a manner which would indicate to the ultimate
purchaser the English name of the country of origin of the article.
MARKS: Letters, numbers or other symbols placed on outer surface of
shipping containers or packages to facilitate identification and handling
procedures. Examples are address labels, box specifications, caution, or
directional warnings. See also CASE MARKS.
Marks of Origin: The physical markings on a product that indicate
the country of origin where the article was produced. Customs rules
require marks of origin of most countries.
Mass Customization: The flexibility to meet the demands of a
customer base whose needs are diverse and/or changing.
MATE’S RECEIPT: Receipt of cargo by the vessel, signed by the mate
(similar to Dock Receipt)
material index: The ratio of the sum of the localized raw material
weights to the weight of the finished product.
materials handling: Short-distance movement of goods within a
storage area.
materials management: The movements and storage functions
associated with supplying goods to a firm.
materials planning: The materials management function that attempts
to coordinate materials supply with materials demand.
Materials REQUIREMENT Planning: See MRP II.
matrix organization: An organizational structure that emphasizes
the horizontal flow of authority; the company treats logistics as a
project, with the logistics manager overseeing logistics costs but
traditional departments controlling operations.
MAXIMUM CUBE: A level of cube utilization that closely approximates
the stated cubic capacity of a container.
MAXIMUM GROSS WEIGHT: Weight of a container and its payload.
MD2: Commonly used container/pallet at Main Deck or Upper Deck.
Non-Airplane Unit Load
measurement ton: The measurement ton (also known as the cargo ton or
freight ton) is a space measurement, usually 40 cubic feet or one cubic
meter. The cargo is assessed a certain rate for every 40 cubic feet or 1
cubic meter it occupies. Used in water transportation rate making
MEMORANDUM TARIFF: Publications, which contain rule and rate
information extracted from official tariffs. Memorandum tariffs are
published by many carriers and are available from these carriers upon
request.
Merger: The combination of two or more carriers into one company
that will own, manage and operate the properties that previously operated
separately.
METRIC TON: Measure of weight equal to 1,000 kilograms or about
2,206.6 pounds. Symbol is “t”. Also called tonne. See TON.
MFN: See MOST-FAVORED-NATION STATUS.
MICROBRIGDE: Provides for intermodal transport of freight from
inland city to seaport with through movement of container freight onto
overseas ship.
micro-land bridge: An Intermodal movement in which the shipment is
moved from a foreign country to the U.S. by water and then moved across
the U.S. by railroad to an interior, non-port city, or vice versa for
exports from a non-port city.
mileage allowance: An allowance, based upon distance that railroads
give to shippers using private railcars.
mileage rate: A rate based upon the number of miles the commodity
is shipped.
mini-land bridge: An Intermodal movement in which the shipment is
moved from a foreign country to the U.S. by water and then moved across
the U.S. by railroad to a destination that is a port city, or vice versa
for exports from a U.S. port city.
MINIMUM CHARGE: The lowest rate applicable on each type of service
no matter how small the shipment.
minimum weight: The shipment weight the carrier's tariff specifies as the
minimum weight required to use the TL or CL rate; the rate discount
volume.
MIS: Abbreviation for “Management Information System”.
mixed loads: The movement of both regulated and exempt commodities in the
same vehicle at the same time.
MM: Abbreviation for “Mercantile marine”.
modal split: The relative use that companies make of transportation modes.
The statistics include ton-miles, passenger-miles and revenue.
MORTGAGE: Conveyance of property, real or personal, to person
called mortgagee to secure performance of some act such as payment of
money to mortgagor which become void upon performance of act.
MOST-FAVORED-NATION STATUS: A provision of certain international
agreements, including the General Agreement on Tariffs and Trade (GATT),
which affords countries the right to have their goods treated no less
favorably than the goods of any other country. For example, the GATT MFN
clause gives each member the right to have customs duties levied upon its
products at the lowest rate offered to any other member nation. This is no
longer the best tariff structure available. All contracting parties
undertake to apply such treatment to one another under Article I of GATT.
When a country agrees to cut tariffs on a particular product imported from
one country, the tariff reduction automatically applies to imports of this
product from any other country eligible for most-favored nation treatment.
This principle of nondiscriminatory treatment of imports appeared in
numerous bilateral trade agreements prior to establishment of GATT. A
country is under no obligation to extend MFN treatment to another country
unless both are bilateral contracting parties of the General Agreement on
Tariffs and Trade or MFN treatment is specified in a bilateral agreement.
MOTOR CARRIER ACT OF 1935: Act of Congress effective October 1,
1935; Part II of the Interstate Commerce Act brought motor common and
contract carriers under the jurisdiction of the ICC, incorporated into
Revised Interstate Commerce Act of 1978.
MOTOR CARRIER ACT OF 1980: Act of Congress that initiated
deregulation of for-hire trucking.
MOTOR COMMON CARRIER: Entity holding itself out to general public
to provide motor vehicle transportation for compensation over regular or
irregular routes, or both.
MOU: Abbreviation for “Memorandum of Understanding”.
MRO items: Maintenance, repair, and operating items--office
supplies, for example.
MRP II: Manufacturing Resource Planning System of manufacturing
controls using computers, as in KANBAN. Systems affects purchasing,
material management, inventory control and production management as well
as peripheral activities. The older meaning of MRP was “Materials
REQUIREMENT Planning” and the roman numeral “II” was added to flag the
change.
MULE: 1) Small vehicle used for moving two-axle dollies. 2) Yard
tractor or hostler.
MULTI-FIBER ARRANGEMENT: An international umbrella compact,
authorized by GATT, that allows contracting parties to negotiate
bilaterally quantitative restrictions on textile imports (which normally
would be considered contrary to GATT provisions) to the extent the
importing country considers them necessary to prevent market disruption.
This agreement provides that such restrictions should not reduce imports
to levels below those attained during the preceding year. Bilateral
agreements usually allow for import growth tied to anticipated greater
demand. The Uruguay Round Agreement on Textiles and Clothing contains an
agreed schedule for the gradual phase-out of quotas established pursuant
to the MFA over a ten-year transition period, after which textile and
clothing trade will be fully integrated into the GATT and subject to the
same disciplines as other sectors.
MULTIMODAL: Using more than one mode of transportation to move a
load of goods. E.g. Truck, train, ship, etc. Usually for imported or
exported goods.
multinational company: A company that both produces and markets
products in different countries.
multiple-car rate: A railroad rate that is lower for shipping more
than one carload at a time.
MW: Abbreviation for “Minimum weight factor”
NAFTA: See North American Free Trade NAMED
PERILS POLICY: Any marine policy limiting coverage to perils specifically
listed in the policy; opposed to All Risks policy. See "ALL RISKS."
national carrier: A for-hire certificated air carrier that has annual
operating revenues of $75 million to $1 billion. The carrier usually
operates between major population centers and areas of lesser population.
Also, a flag carrier owned or controlled by the state.
National Customs Brokers & Forwarders Association of America, Inc.:
See NCBFAA.
National Industrial Traffic League: An association representing
shippers' and receivers' interests in matters of transportation policy and
regulation.
National Motor Bus Operators Organization: An industry association
representing common and charter bus firms. Now known as the American Bus
Association.
National Transportation Act of 198: Federal legislation that
governs transport by air, commodity, pipeline, federally regulated motor
vehicles, northern marine re-supply and rail. A major goal of the Act was
to increase competition among transportation firms.
National Railroad Corporation: Also known as Amtrak, the
corporation established by the Rail Passenger Service Act of 1970 to
operate most of the United States' rail passenger service.
Nationalization: Public ownership, financing and operation of a
business entity.
NATO: See North Atlantic Treaty Organization.
NCBFAA: The National Customs Brokers & Forwarders Association of
America, Inc. A trade association representing the licensed customs
brokers, international freight forwarders, international air cargo agents
and NVOCCs located throughout the USA. For information: 1200 18th Street,
Suite 901, Washington, DC 20036.
NEGLIGENCE: Failure to exercise degree of care as demanded by law.
NEM: Abbreviation for “Not Elsewhere Mentioned” (English)
NES: Abbreviation of “Not Elsewhere Specified”. This often appears
in air freight tariffs. For example: "advertising matter, NES" or "printed
matter, NES" indicating that the rate stated in the tariff applies to all
commodities within the commodity group except those appearing under their
own rate. The abbreviation NES, as used in air freight tariffs, is
comparable to the abbreviation NOIBN. “Not Otherwise Indexed By Number)
and NOS (Not Otherwise Specified) which appear in tariffs published by the
surface modes.
Nested: Three or more different sizes of an article are placed
within each other so that each article will not project above the next
lower article by more than 33 1/3% of its height.
Nested Solid: Three of more different sizes of an article are
placed within each other so that each article will not project above the
next lower article by more than 1/4 inch.
NESTING: Fitting one article of cargo inside the other to economize
on space.
NET: Figures/totals remaining after all charges/deductions have
been subtracted.
NET TARE WEIGHT: The weight of an empty container plus any fixtures
permanently attached.
Net Terms: Free of charters' commission
NET TON: 2,000 pounds.
NET TONNAGE: Gross tonnage minus deductions for space occupied by
crew quarters, machinery for navigation, engine room and fuel.
NET TON-MILE: Movement of ton of freight one mile.
NET WEIGHT: 1) Weight of article without packing and container. 2)
Weight of entire contents of vehicle.
NEUTRAL AIR WAYBILL: A standard air waybill without identification
of the issuing carrier. Also called a UNIVERSAL AIR WAYBILL.
Newly Independent States: The NIS is a collective reference to 12
republics of the former Soviet Union: Russia, Ukraine, Belarus (formerly
Byelorussia), Moldova (formerly Moldavia), Armenia, Azerbaijan,
Uzbekistan, Turkmenistan, Tajikistan, Kazakhstan, and Kirgizstan (formerly
Kirghiziya) and Georgia. Following dissolution of the Soviet Union, the
distinction between the NIS and the Commonwealth of Independent States
(CIS) was that Georgia was not a member of the CIS. That distinction
dissolved when Georgia joined the CIS in November 1993.
Newly Industrializing Countries: The term, originated by the
Organization for Economic Cooperation and Development (OECD), describes
nations of the Third World that have enjoyed rapid economic growth and can
be described as "middle-income" countries (such as Singapore and the
Republic of Korea).
Newly Industrializing Economies: NIE's is a term generally applied
to the more advanced developing countries in East Asia. The reference
includes Hong Kong, Korea, Singapore, and Taiwan; occasionally its use
encompasses other countries as well, such as Indonesia and Thailand.
NFO: Abbreviation for “Next Flight Out”
NMFC: Abbreviation for “National Motor Freight Classification”.
no location: A received item for which the warehouse has no previously
established storage slot.
No Objection Certificate: Document provided by scheduled or
national airlines of many countries declaring no objection to a proposed
charter flight operated by another airline. Often demanded by government
authorities before they grant permission for a charter flight to take
place.
No Objection Fee: Sum of money paid by a charter airline normally
to a scheduled airline in order that it waives its right of objection to
its government, thus allowing a charter to take place. Tantamount to a
bribe. The amount is usually a fixed percentage of the gross cost of a
charter. Common practice in the Middle East and Africa.
NODE: A fixed point in a company’s logistics system where goods
come to rest: plants, warehouses, supply sources, market destinations,
etc.
NOE: Abbreviation for “Not otherwise enumerated”.
NOI: Abbreviation for “Not Otherwise Indexed”.
NOHP: Abbreviation for “Not otherwise herein provided”.
NOI: Abbreviation for “Not more specifically described
NOIBN: Abbreviation for “Not otherwise indicated by number” or “Not
otherwise indicated by name”.
Non-asset provider: A logistics company with no ties to a
transportation or warehouse firm.
NON-CONFERENCE: Independent steamship lines that cannot provide the
schedules or direct service that conference lines can.
NON-DOCUMENT SURCHARGE: Surcharges on exported commodities
classified as dutiable in the foreign destination.
NONSTRUCTURAL CONTAINER: An ULD composed of a bottomless rigid
shell used in combination with a pallet and net assembly. NOTE: The
expression "Nonstructural Container" is also used to refer to the shell
part of a device.
Non-Tariff Barriers: Market access barriers that result from
prohibitions, restrictions, conditions or specific requirements and make
exporting products difficult and/or costly. The term covers any
restriction or quota, charge, or policy, other than traditional customs
duties, domestic support programs, discriminatory labeling and health
standards, and exclusive business practices which limit the access of
imported goods. May result from government or private sector actions.
NON-VESSEL OPERATING COMMON CARRIER (NVOCC): A company that
consolidates small shipments from different sources consigned to the same
destination into a single container for shipment overseas by either air or
ocean carrier. An FMC registered cargo consolidator of small shipments in
ocean trade, generally soliciting business and arranging for or performing
containerization functions at the port. These carriers issue their own
bill of lading referred to as a house bill of lading.
North American Free Trade Agreement: NAFTA, which entered into
force in January 1994, is a free trade agreement comprising Canada, the
United States and Mexico. NAFTA exceeds 360 million consumers and a
combined output of $6 trillion: -approximately 20 percent larger than the
European Community. NAFTA's consumer population is slightly smaller than
the European Economic Area which has over 380 million consumers. The
Agreement: Progressively eliminates almost all U.S.-Mexico tariffs over a
10-year period, with a small number of tariffs for trade-sensitive
industries phased out over a 15-year period. Mexico-Canada tariffs are
also phased out over a 10-year period. Tariff reduction schedules between
the United States and Canada negotiated in the Canadian Free Trade
Agreement are retained. Eliminates other barriers to trade such as import
licensing requirements and Customs user fees. Establishes the principle of
national treatment, for ensuring that NAFTA-origin products trade between
NAFTA countries will receive treatment equal to similar domestic products.
Guarantees service providers of the three countries equal treatment in the
NAFTA area, including the right to invest and the right to sell services
across borders. Establishes five basic principles to protect foreign
investors and their investment in the free trade area: (a)
nondiscriminatory treatment, (b) freedom from performance requirements,
(c) free transference of funds related to an investment, (d) expropriation
only in conformity with international law, and (e) the right to seek
international arbitration f or a violation of the agreement's protections.
The Agreement contains special provisions for sensitive economic sectors,
including agriculture, automotive products, energy, and textiles and
apparel. The Agreement also created a Border Environment Cooperation
Commission and a North American Development Bank.
North Atlantic Treaty Organization: NATO members include Belgium,
Canada, Denmark, France (which has only partial membership), Greece,
Iceland, Italy, Luxembourg, Netherlands, Norway, Portugal, Spain, Turkey,
United Kingdom, United States, and Germany. With the end of the "cold
war," NATO's role, originally defense-oriented is being redefined.
NOS: Abbreviation for “Not Otherwise Specified”. See NES.
Abbreviation indicating an article in general class in consolidating
freight classification.
NOSE: Front of a container.
NOTICE OF ARRIVAL: See ARRIVAL NOTICE.
NT: Abbreviation for “Net tons”.
NVOCC: See NON-VESSEL OPERATING COMMON CARRIER.
O/A: See OPEN ACCOUNT.
O/N: Abbreviation for “Order notify; own name”
O/o: Abbreviation for “Order of”
O/R: Abbreviation for “Owner's risk”
O&R: Abbreviation for “Ocean and Rail”.
OA: Abbreviation for “Office Automation”.
OBC: On Board Courier.
Ocean Bill of Lading: A receipt for the cargo and a contract for
transportation between a shipper and the ocean carrier. It may also be
used as an instrument of ownership which can be bought, sold, or traded
while the goods are in transit. To be used in this manner, it must be a
negotiable "Order" Bill-of-Lading. A Clean Bill-of-Lading is issued when
the shipment is received in good order. If damaged or a shortage is noted,
a clean bill-of-lading will not be issued. An On Board Bill-of-Lading
certifies that the cargo has been placed aboard the named vessel and is
signed by the master of the vessel or his representative. On letter of
credit transactions, an On Board Bill-of-Lading is usually necessary for
the shipper to obtain payment from the bank. When all Bills-of-Lading are
processed a ship's manifest is prepared by the steamship line. This
summarizes all cargo aboard the vessel by port of loading and discharge.
An Inland Bill-of-Lading (a waybill on rail or the "pro forma"
bill-of-lading in trucking) is used to document the transportation of the
goods between the port and the point of origin or destination. It should
contain information such as marks, numbers, steamship line, and similar
information to match with a dock receipt.
OCR: See OPTICAL CHARACTER RECOGNITION.
OD: Abbreviation for “Outside diameter”
ODS: An acronym commonly used for the term "Operating Differential
Subsidy," which is a payment to an American-flag carrier by the federal
government to offset the difference in operating costs between US and
foreign vessels.
OEM: See Original Equipment Manufacturers
Off-Line: Describes an airline that sells in a market to which it
does not operate. An Off-Line carrier will use another operator to link
with its network.
OFF ROUTE POINTS: Points locate off regular route highways of
linehaul carriers. Generally served only on irregular basis.
Offset: Compensatory, reciprocal trade agreements for industrial
goods and services as a condition of military-related export sales and
services. It is also used in the purchase of civilian aircraft and has
become the norm in the aerospace/defense sector. Offset is divided into
two categories, Indirect Offset and Direct Offset.
Offshore Banking Unit: An OBU is normally a foreign bank which
conducts domestic money market, Eurocurrency, and foreign exchange
settlements. OBUs cannot accept domestic deposits but their activities are
unrestricted by domestic authorities. OBUs are located in major financial
centers (known as offshore banking centers) with liberal reserve, tax, and
capital market requirements.
Offshore Manufacturing: Offshore manufacturing is the foreign
manufacture of goods by a domestic firm primarily for import into its home
country.
ON THE BERTH: Term denoting that ship is ready to load/discharge
cargo.
OPEN ACCOUNT (O/A): A trade arrangement in which goods are shipped
to a foreign buyer without the guarantee of payment. Because this method
poses an obvious risk to the supplier, it is essential that the buyer's
integrity be unquestionable.
OPEN END LEASE: Lease guaranteeing that lessor will realize minimum
value from sale of equipment at the end of the lease period.
OPEN INSURANCE POLICY: An insurance policy that applies to all
shipments made over a period of time rather than to one shipment only.
OPEN POLICY: A cargo policy with no expiration date that provides
automatic coverage of cargo to or from an Assured in a specified trade at
agreed rates, terms, and conditions. Usually consists of separate Marine
and War policies.
OPERATING AUTHORITY: Routes, points and types of traffic that may
be served by carrier. Authority is granted by state or federal regulatory
agencies.
OPERATING RATIOS: 1) Comparison of carrier’s operating expenses
with gross receipts or income divided by expenses. 2) A measure of
operating efficiency defined as Operating expenses divided by Operating
revenues x 100 order cycle time. The time that elapses from placement of
order until receipt of order. This includes time for order transmittal,
processing, preparation, and shipping.
OPTICAL CHARACTER RECOGNITION (OCR): Reading of data scanning
location or shape of data on a document.
OPTIMUM CUBE: The highest level of cube utilization that can be
achieved when loading cargo into an ocean container.
ORB: Abbreviation for “Owner's risk or breakage”.
ORDER BILL OF LADING: Contains four distinguishing features: 1)
Goods are consigned to order of the party named on the Bill of Lading. 2)
Name and post office address of party to notify on arrival of the
consignment at destination must always be written on the Bill of Lading.
3) Negotiable document most frequently used when shippers wish to collect
for value of the shipment prior to making delivery and 4) Printed on
yellow paper to make it readily distinguishable.
order picking: Assembling a customer's order from items in storage.
order processing: The activities associated with filling customer
orders.
ordering cost: The cost of placing an inventory order with a
supplier.
ORDet: Abbreviation for “Owner's risk of deterioration”
ORDINARY LIVESTOCK: Defined in the Interstate Commerce Act as “all
cattle, swine, sheep, goats, horses and mules except as such as are
chiefly valuable for breeding, racing, show purposes and other special
uses”
Organization for International Standards: See ISO.
ORF: Abbreviation for “Owner's risk of fire or freezing”
Original Equipment Manufacturers: Customers who incorporate the
exporter's product into their own merchandise for resale under their own
brand names.
Orient Airlines Association: see Association of Asia Pacific
AirlineS.
ORL: Abbreviation for “Owner's risk of leakage”
ORM (OTHER REGULATED MATERIAL): See HAZARDOUS MATERIALS and
RESTRICTED ARTICLES.
ORW: Abbreviation for “Owner's risk of becoming wet”
OS&D: Abbreviation for “Over, Short and Damaged”. Normally a report
used to file a claim with a carrier.
OSHA: The Occupational Safety and Health Administration.
out-of-pocket cost: The cost directly assignable to a particular
unit of traffic and which a company would not have incurred if it had not
performed the movement.
OUTAGE: Empty space in container/drum to accommodate natural
expansion, density change etc due to temperature changes.
Outbound logistics: Includes to deliver product to retail stores,
to return warranty and scrap product to distribution center, to
computerized information management to provide real-time view of the
entire operation, to contract warehousing.
Outsource: To hire a third-party provider.
Outsourcing: Subcontracting business functions or processes such as
logistics and transportation services to an outside firm, instead of doing
them in-house.
OVERAGE: Freight in excess over quantity believed to have been
shipped, or more than quantity shown on the shipping document.
OVER, SHORT AND DAMAGED: See OS&D.
OVER THE COUNTER SMALL PACKAGE SERVICE: See SMALL PACKAGE SERVICE.
OVER THE ROAD: A motor carrier operation that reflects long
distance, intercity moves. The opposite of local operations.
OVER PIVOT RATE - The rate per kilo to be charged for the Over
Pivot weight.
OVER PIVOT WEIGHT: The weight in excess of the pivot weight.
OVERHEIGHT CARGO: Cargo stowed in an open-top container that
projects above the uppermost level of the roof struts.
OWNER-OPERATOR: Driver who owns and operates his/her own truck. The
owner-operator may be a common carrier or exempt carrier. Such contractor
may lease his/her rig/driver to another carrier.
OWNER’S RISK: When the owner of goods remains responsible during
shipping, relieving the carrier of part of the risk.
OXIDIZING MATERIAL: As defined in the HAZARDOUS MATERIAL
REGULATIONS in 49 CFR. Any substance that yields oxygen readily to
simulate combustion of organic matter.
PA: Abbreviation for “Particular average”
Pacific Rim: The Pacific Rim, referring to countries and economies
bordering the Pacific ocean, is an informal, flexible term which generally
has been regarded as a reference to East Asia, Canada, and the United
States. At a minimum, the Pacific Rim includes Canada, Japan, the People's
Republic of China, Taiwan, and the United States. It may also include
Australia, Brunei, Cambodia, Hong Kong/Macau, Indonesia, Laos, North
Korea, South Korea, Malaysia, New Zealand, the Pacific Islands, the
Philippines, Russia (or the Commonwealth of Independent States),
Singapore, Thailand, and Vietnam. As an evolutionary term, usage sometimes
includes Mexico, the countries of Central America, and the Pacific coast
countries of South America.
PACKING: any container or covering in which the contents of a
shipment is packed.
PACKING LIST: List showing merchandise packed and all particulars.
Usually prepared by the shipper but not necessarily required by the
carrier. A copy is usually sent to the consignee to assist in verifying
shipment receipt.
Paid by Agent (PBA): See ADVANCEMENT OF CHARGES
Paired: Abbreviation for “Port of Arrival Immediate Release and
Enforcement Determination”. A U.S. Customs program that allows entry
documentation for an import shipment to be filed at one location, usually
an inland city, while the merchandise is cleared by Customs at the port of
entry, normally a seaport. May be ineffective with certain types of
high-risk cargoes, such as quota-regulated textiles or shipments from
drug-production regions. Cities where there is a natural flow of cargo are
actually "paired" in the program; e.g., Atlanta, an inland city, is linked
with Savannah, a seaport. Tested in '87-'88, it became generally available
in mid- '88.
PALLET: 1) A platform with a flat metal framed undersurface on
which goods are assembled and secured by nets and straps. See Aircraft
Pallet. 2) Load board with two decks separated by bearers or single deck
supported by bearers constructed for transport/stacking and with overall
height reduced to minimum compatible with handling by forklift/pallet
trucks. 3) Platform used for utilizing loads for storage/shipping. The
standard pallet is 48 x 40 x 5 ½ inches and usually made of wood.
Pallet Extender: Fashionable metal or cardboard device to increase
pallet capacity.
PALLET LOADER: A device employing one or more vertical lift
platforms for the mechanical loading or unloading of palletized freight at
planeside.
PALLET TRANSPORTER: A vehicle for the movement of loaded pallets
between the aircraft and the freight terminal or truck dock. Sometimes the
functions of both the pallet loader and pallet transporter are combined
into a single vehicle.
pallet wrapping machine: A machine that wraps a pallet's contents in
stretch-wrap to ensure safe shipment.
PALLETIZATION: System for shipping goods on comparatively
lightweight double-decked wooden platforms called PALLETS. Permits
shipment of multiple units as one large unit.
Paperless Release: Under ABI, certain commodities from low-risk
countries not designated for examination may be released through an ABI-certified
broker without the actual submission of documentation.
PARCEL POST AIR FREIGHT: An airline service through which a shipper
can consolidate a number of parcel post packages (with destination postage
affixed by the shipper) for shipment as air freight to the postmaster at
another city for subsequent delivery within local postal zones or beyond.
Part Charter: Where part of an airline's scheduled flight is sold
as if it were a charter in its own right (Often wrongly used as a synonym
for split charter).
Part Load Charter: Where a part of an aircraft's load is discharged
at one destination and a part of it at another. This is distinct from a
split charter where a number of consignments are carried to the same
destination. Inbound, part loads are treated as single entity charters
under the regulations of most countries.
Particular Average: Partial loss or damage to goods.
passenger-mile: A measure of output for passenger transportation
that reflects the number of passengers transported and the distance
traveled; a multiplication of passengers hauled and distance traveled.
PAYLOAD: In freight transportation, means “profitable cargo”
PARTICIPATING CARRIER: A carrier participating in a tariff and who
therefore applies that rates, charges, routings and regulations of the
tariff.
PBA (Paid by Agent): See ADVANCEMENT OF CHARGES
peak demand: The time period during which customers demand the
greatest quantity.
Pegging: A technique in which a DRP system traces demand for a
product by date, quantity, and warehouse location.
PER: 1) Latin term meaning “by”. 2) “means of”. 3) “according to”.
PER DIEM: 1) Latin term meaning “by the day”. 2) Daily rate charged
by rail carriers for use of railcars by any other rail carriers.
PERFORMANCE BOND: Bond executed in connection with contract
securing performance/fulfillment of terms.
PERILS OF THE SEA: An insurance term used to designate heavy
weather, grounding, stranding, collision, water damage or lightning, etc.
PERISHABLE FREIGHT: Commodities subject to a rapid deterioration or
decay (fresh fruits and vegetables, dairy products, meats and fish etc.).
These commodities require special protective services in transit like
refrigeration, heating, ventilation, etc.
PERMITS: Authority granted by the ICC to contract carriers by motor
vehicle or water and freight forwarders to operate in interstate commerce.
personal computer (PC): An individual unit an operator uses for
creating and maintaining programs and files. Can often access the
mainframe simultaneously.
personal discrimination: Charging different rates to shippers with
similar transportation characteristics, or, charging similar rates to
shippers with differing transportation characteristics.
Petrodollars: This term refers to oil earnings of
petroleum-exporting countries in excess of their domestic needs and
deposited in dollars in Western banks. However, a large part of the
revenues that OPEC countries were unable to spend has been recycled to
oil-importing countries in an attempt to balance international accounts.
PHYSICAL DISTRIBUTION: Broad range of activities involving
efficient movement of goods from source of raw materials through
production to consumer. Activities include warehousing, material handling,
packaging, order processing, freight transportation and other related
activities.
PHYTOSANITARY INSPECTION CERTIFICATE: A certificate, issued by the
US Department of Agriculture to satisfy import regulations for foreign
countries, indicating that a US shipment has been inspected and is free
from harmful pests and plant diseases.
physical supply: The movement and storage of raw materials from
supply sources to the manufacturing facility.
pick/pack: Picking and packing immediately into shipment
containers.
picking by aisle: A method by which pickers pick all needed items
in an aisle regardless of the items' ultimate destination; the items must
be sorted later.
picking by source: A method in which pickers successively pick all
items going to a particular destination regardless of the aisle in which
each item is located.
PICKUP AND DELIVERY SERVICE (PU&D): An optional service for the
surface transport of shipments from shipper's door to originating
carrier’s terminal and from the carrier’s terminal of destination to
receiver's door. Pickup service, at an additional charge, is provided upon
shipper's request. In air transportation, delivery service is provided
automatically by the air carrier, at an additional charge, unless the
shipper requests otherwise. PU&D service is provided between all airports
and all local points of such airports. For service beyond the terminal
area, see TRUCK/AIR SERVICE.
PIER: The structure to which a vessel is secured for the purposes
of loading and unloading cargo.
PIER-TO-HOUSE: Ocean carrier containerizes shipper’s cargo on the
loading pier and delivers directly to the consignee’s premises.
PIER-TO-PIER: Ocean carrier containerizes shipper’s cargo on the
loading pier and removes cargo from the container on the arriving pier.
PIGTAIL: Slang term for cable used to transmit electrical power to
trailer.
PIGGYBACK: The point-to-point movement of one transportation
vehicle upon another. A highway semi-trailer on a railroad flat car or
trailer ferry, a van-container on board a ship or new passenger
automobiles on auto-rack cars are all forms of piggyback transportation.
PILFERAGE: Taking the property of others. As used in marine
insurance policies, the term denotes petty thievery, the taking of small
parts of a shipment, as opposed to the theft of a whole shipment or large
unit. Many ordinary marine insurance policies do not cover against
pilferage, and when this coverage is desired, it must be added to the
policy.
PILOT: Person whose duty is to steer ships, particularly along
coasts or into/out of harbor.
pin lock: A hard piece of iron, formed to fit on a trailer's pin,
that locks in place with a key to prevent an unauthorized person from
moving the trailer.
PIVOT WEIGHT: Minimum chargeable ULD weight. That weight of a ULD
above which a higher tariff applies; in effect, an incentive to maximize
cargo density.
Place: A particular street address or other designation of a
factory, store, warehouse, place of business, private residence,
construction camp or the like, at a point.
Place of Rest: The term "Place of Rest" as used in the
Containerized Cargo Rules means that location on the floor, dock, platform
or doorway at the CFS to which cargo is first delivered by shipper or
agent thereof.
PLACE UTILITY: A value created in a product by changing its
location. Transportation creates place utility.
planned order: In DRP and MRP systems, a future order the system plans in
response to forecasted demand.
PLIMSOLL LINE: Statutory load line on a vessel identifying
displacement mark as to where a vessel may safely be loaded to. A
horizontal line painted on the outside of the ship that must remain above
the surface of the water.
POA: Power Of Attorney, an authorization granted by consignee or
importer to its customs broker for the processing of customs clearance on
its behalf.
POC: Abbreviation for “Point of Contact”
POD: See PROOF OF DELIVERY.
Point: A particular city, town, village or other community or area
which is treated as a unit for the application of rates.
POINT OF ORIGIN: Station at which shipment is received from shipper
by the carrier.
point of sale information: Price and quantity data from the retail
location as sales transactions occur.
POISONS: As defined in the HAZARDOUS MATERIAL REGULATIONS in 49 CFR.
These materials are further divided into two groups based on the degree of
hazard posed in transportation. Poison A includes gases and liquids that
are dangerous to life if only a small amount is mixed with air. Poison B
includes substances, liquid and solid, which are known to be toxic to man.
police powers – The US's constitutionally granted right for the
states to establish regulations to protect their citizens' health and
welfare. Truck weight, speed, length, and height laws are examples.
POLITICAL RISK: In export financing, the risk of loss due to
currency inconvertibility, foreign government action preventing the
delivery of goods, revolution, war, expropriation, confiscation, etc.
POOL: A continuous supply of containers at a specific location to
facilitate continuous volume loading.
POOLING AGREEMENT: Dividing of revenue/business amongst two or more
carriers in accordance with previous contracts/agreements. Also an
agreement among carriers to share the freight to be hauled or to share
profits. The Interstate Commerce Act outlawed pooling agreements, but the
Civil Aeronautics Board approved profit pooling agreements for air
carriers during strikes.
PORT: 1) A harbor or haven where ships may anchor. 2) That side of
the vessel on the left hand of a person who stands on board facing the bow
(front) of the vessel.
PORT AUTHORITY: A state or local government that owns, operates or
otherwise provides wharf, dock and other terminal investments in ports.
PORT CHARGES: Charges assessed for services performed at ports
including lighterage, pilotage, towage, harbor dues, dockage and wharfage.
Port Marks: An identifying set of letters numbers and/or geometric
symbols followed by the name of the port of destination, which are placed
on export shipments. Foreign government requirements may be exceedingly
strict in the matter of port marks.
Port of Discharge: Port where vessel is off loaded and cargo
discharges.
PORT OF ENTRY: A port at which foreign goods are re-admitted into
the receiving country . In the USA, any place designated by act of U.S.
Congress, executive order of the President of the United States or order
of the U.S. Secretary of the Treasury, at which a U.S. Customs officer is
assigned with authority to accept entries of merchandise, to collect
duties and to enforce the various provisions of the U.S. Customs laws.
Port of Loading: Port where cargo is loaded aboard the vessel
lashed and stowed.
PORT-OF-ORIGIN AIR CARGO CLEARANCE: For the convenience of
exporters moving goods by air from inland U.S. cities, certain U.S.
Customs formalities can now be handled at the originating Airport City.
This avoids delaying such procedures until the export reaches a gateway
point sometimes hundreds of miles from the exporter's business.
possession utility: The value created by marketing's effort to
increase the desire to possess a good or benefit from a service.
Power of Attorney: A document that authorizes a customs broker to
sign all customs documents on behalf of an importer.
Pre-Advice: Preliminary advice that a letter of credit has been
established in the form of a brief authenticated wire message. It is not
an operative instrument and is usually followed by the actual letter of
credit.
PREDATORY PRICING: Temporary pricing action by one company to point
below variable costs that has the effect of removing competing company
from market.
PREPAID CHARGES: Generally speaking, freight charges both in ocean
and air transport may be either prepaid in the currency of the country of
export or they may be billed collect for payment by the consignee in his
local currency. However, on shipments to some countries freight charges
must be prepaid because of foreign exchange regulations of the country of
import and/or rules of steamship companies or airlines.
Pre-Slung Cargo: Cargo shipped already in a cargo sling or net.
Usually prepared and loaded at pier ready for arrival of vessel and
subsequent loading (i.e. coffee in bags, coconut shells, etc).
Price Quotation: An invoice prepared by the seller in advance of
shipment that documents the cost of goods sold, freight, insurance, and
other related charges. It is often used by the buyer to secure a letter of
credit, an import license or a foreign currency allocation.
Prima Facie: Latin, "on first appearance." A term frequently
encountered in foreign trade. When a steamship company issues a clean bill
of lading, it acknowledges that the goods were received "in apparent good
order and condition" and this is said by the courts to constitute prima
facie evidence of the conditions of the containers; that is, if nothing to
the contrary appears, it must be inferred that the cargo was in good
condition when received by the carrier.
primary-business test: A test the ICC uses to determine if a
trucking operation is bona fide private transportation. The private
trucking operation must be incidental to and in the furtherance of the
firm's primary business.
PRIORITY AIR FREIGHT: Reserved air freight or Air Express service
wherein shipments have a priority after mail and the small package
services. Any size or weight allowed within air freight service limits is
acceptable. Advanced reservations are permitted for movement on a given
flight and, in some cases, a partial refund is paid the shipper if the
shipment is not moved on the flight specified.
PRIORITY LOGISTICS MANAGEMENT: The application of the JIT
(Just-In-Time) transportation theory.
PRIVATE CARRIER: A carrier that provides transportation services to
the company that owns or leases the vehicles and does not charge a fee.
Private motor carriers may haul freight at a fee for their wholly owned
subsidiaries.
private warehousing: The storage of goods in a warehouse owned by the
company that has title to the goods.
PRO NUMBER: A progressive or serial number applied for
identification purposes to freight bills, Bills of Lading, etc.
production planning: The decision-making area that determines when
and where and in what quantity a manufacturer is to produce goods.
Productivity: A measure of resource utilization efficiency defined
as the sum of the outputs divided by the sum of the inputs.
profit ratio: The percentage of profit to sales--that is, profit
divided by sales.
PROFORMA: When coupled with the title of another document (proforma
invoice, proforma manifest), it means an informal document presented in
advance of the arrival or preparation of the required document in order to
satisfy a Customs requirement.
PROFORMA INVOICE: An invoice provided by a supplier prior to the
shipment of merchandise, informing the buyer of the kinds and quantities
of goods to be sent, their value, and important specifications (weight,
size, and similar characteristics). When an importer applies for Letter of
Credit as the means of payment, a Pro Forma Invoice from the beneficiary
of such Letter of Credit, usually the exporter, is required by the L/C
issuing bank.
PRODUCT LIABILITY: Liability imposed for damages caused by accident
and arising out of goods/products manufactured, sold, handled or
distributed by insured or others trading under it’s name.
PROject License: The Bureau of Export Administration uses the
project license to authorize large-scale exports of a wide variety of
commodities and technical data for specified activities. Those activities
are restricted to capital expansion, maintenance, repair or operating
supplies, or the supply of materials to be used in the production of other
commodities for sale. Items intended for resale in the form received are
not permitted and must be effected under a Distribution License.
PROMOTIONAL RATE: A rate applying to traffic under special
conditions and usually confined to movement between a limited number of
cities. Early rates on fresh farm produce which helped develop increased
air freight volumes from the west coast to eastern cities are examples of
promotional rates. See SPECIAL RATES.
PROOF OF DELIVERY (POD): Information provided to payer containing
name of person who signed for the package with the date and time of
delivery. This term has been widely used in courier and express industry
and also gaining more attention and implementation at air cargo industry.
See also AUTOMATIC POD.
PROOF OF PERFORMANCE: See PROOF OF DELIVERY.
PROPORTIONAL RATE: See ARBITRARY.
PRORATE: A portion of a joint rate between the carriers concerned,
on an agreed basis.
PROTECTIVE SERVICE: Many airlines offer a protective service where
shippers can arrange to have their shipments under carrier surveillance at
each stage of transit from origin to destination. This service can be
extended to pickup and delivery. Shippers can also arrange for armed guard
protection. There is usually an extra charge for various levels of
protective service. See SIGNATURE SERVICE.
Protest: Customs Form 19 allows for a refund of an overpayment of
duty if filed within 90 days of liquidation.
PUBLIC WAREHOUSE: Storage place renting space to anybody desiring
it. There are 5 types: 1) Ordinary or merchandise. 2) Commodity. 3)
Household goods. 4) Cold storage and 5) Field or branch. Some states
regard public warehouses as public utilities and fix their rates.
public warehouse receipt: The basic document a public warehouse
manager issues as a receipt for the goods a company gives to the warehouse
manager. The receipt can be either negotiable or nonnegotiable.
Pull or Pull-through distribution: Supply-chain action initiated by
the customer. Traditionally, the supply chain was pushed; manufacturers
produced goods and "pushed" them through the supply chain, and the
customer had no control. In a pull environment, a customer's purchase
sends replenishment information back through the supply chain from
retailer to distributor to manufacturer, so goods are "pulled" through the
supply chain.
Pull Ordering System: A system in which each warehouse controls its
own shipping requirements by placing individual orders for inventory with
the central distribution center.
PURCHASE ORDER: Form used by buyer when placing an order for
merchandise or supplies.
purchase price discount: A pricing structure in which the seller
offers a lower price if the buyer purchases a larger quantity.
Purchasing: The functions associated with buying the goods and
services the firm requires.
pure raw material: A raw material that does not lose weight in processing.
Push ordering system: A situation in which a firm makes inventory
deployment decisions at the central distribution center and ships to its
individual warehouses accordingly.
QA: Abbreviation for “Quality Assurance”.
QUALITY CIRCLES: groups of workers formed to improve quality and
productivity that are usually task orientated with voluntary
participation.
QUALITY CONTROL: The management function that attempts to ensure
that the goods or services manufactured or supplied meet the desired
specifications.
QUAY: Manmade docking area for loading/unloading of vessels.
Docking is parallel allowing loading/unloading from one side of the ship.
Quantity discount: A percentage reduction of a rate based on
quantity.
Quick response: A consumer-driven system of replenishment in which
high-quality products and accurate information flow through a paperless
(EDI) system between all distribution points from manufacturing line to
retail checkout counter.
QUOIN: A wedged shaped piece of timber used to secure barrels
preventing movement during transit.
QUOTA: The quality of goods of a specific type that may be imported
without restriction or the imposition of additional duties. Sometimes
importing countries require issuance of licenses before U.S. companies may
ship to them.
Quotas and Quota System: Absolute quotas permit a limited number of
units of specified merchandise to be entered or withdrawn for consumption
during specified periods. Tariff-rate quotas permit a specified quantity
of merchandise to be entered or withdrawn at a reduced rate during a
specified period. Quotas are established by Presidential Proclamations,
Executive Orders, or other legislation. The Quota System, a part of
Customs' Automated Commercial System, controls quota levels (quantities
authorized) and quantities entered against those levels. Visas control
exports from the country of origin. Visa authorizations are received from
other countries and quantities entered against those visas are transmitted
back to them. Control of visas and quotas simplify reconciliation of other
countries' exports and U.S. imports.
R/C: Abbreviation for “Reconsigned”
R&C: Abbreviation for “Rail and Canal”
R&D: Abbreviation for “Research and Development”
R&E: Abbreviation for “Research and Engineering”
RADIOACTIVE MATERIAL: As defined in the HAZARDOUS MATERIAL
REGULATIONS in 49 CFR. Any material or combination of materials which
spontaneously emits ionizing radiation and has a specific gravity greater
than 0.002 microcuries per gram. The regulations include many more
specific definitions of radioactivity.
RAM: Abbreviation for “Random Access Memory”. Temporary memory on
micro chips. Users can store data in RAM or take it out at high speeds.
However, any information stored in RAM disappears when the computer is
shut off.
RATE BASIS: Formula of specific factors/elements which control the
making of a rate.
rate basis number: The distance between two rate basis points.
rate basis point: The major shipping point in a local area.
Carriers consider all points in the local area to be the rate basis point.
rate bureau: A carrier group that assembles to establish joint
rates, to divide joint revenues and claim liabilities, and to publish
tariffs. Rate bureaus have published single line rates, which were
prohibited in 1984.
RATE CLASS: A rate applicable to a specifically designated class of
goods, in or between specified areas.
RATE WAR: When carriers cut rates in an effort to secure tonnage.
RCC: Abbreviation for “Riots and civil commotions”
RCC&S: Abbreviation for “Riots, civil commotions and strikes”
Re-exports: For export control purposes: the shipment of U.S.
origin products from one foreign destination to another.
For statistical reporting purposes: exports of foreign-origin merchandise
which have previously entered the United States for consumption or into
Customs bonded warehouses for U.S. Foreign Trade Zones.
RE-INSURANCE: Insurance of all/part of risk by another insurer
previously assumed by an insurance company.
REASONABLE RATE: A rate that is high enough to cover the carrier’s
cost but not too high to enable carrier to realize monopolistic profits.
REBATE: Unlawful practice in the USA whereby a carrier returns part
of the transportation charges to the shipper in order to encourage the
shipper to use the same carrier again.
Recapture Clause: A provision of the 1920 Transportation Act that
provided for self-help financing for railroads. Railroads that earned more
than the prescribed return contributed one-half of the excess to the fund
from which the ICC made loans to less profitable railroads. The Recapture
Clause was repealed in 1933.
RECIPROCITY: 1) An exchange of rights. 2) In motor transportation,
may involve granting equal rights to vehicles in several states in which
reciprocity agreements are in effect. 3) To give preference in buying to
vendors who are customers of the company.
RECOURSE: An obligation, if not met, goes back to the original
drawer. “Without Recourse” drawing relieves the drawer of liability.
Reconsignment: A carrier service that permits a shipper to change
the destination and/or consignee after the shipment has reached its
originally billed destination and to still pay the through rate from
origin to final destination.
Red Clause Letter of Credit: A letter of credit that allows the
exporter to receive a percentage of the face value of the letter of credit
in advance of shipment. This enables the exporter to purchase inventory
and pay other costs associated with producing and preparing the export
order.
Reed-Bulwinkle Act: Legislation that legalized common carrier joint
rate making through rate bureaus; extended antitrust immunity to carriers
participating in a rate bureau.
REEFER: Slang term for refrigerated trailer for hauling
perishables. Sometimes used in reference to other types of transportation
equipment. E.g. reefer car equipment referring to a railcar with
refrigeration equipment.
Reengineering: A fundamental rethinking and radical design of
business processes to achieve dramatic improvements in performance.
refrigerated warehouse: A warehouse that is used to store
perishable items requiring controlled temperatures.
regional carrier: A for-hire air carrier, usually certificated,
that has annual operating revenues of less than $75 million; the carrier
usually operates within a particular region of the country.
regular-route carrier: A motor carrier that is authorized to provide
service over designated routes.
REGISTER OF SHIPS: Vessels must be registered in the Marine
Registry of some country after inspection, rating, measurement etc. This
register, kept normally by the collector of customs, contains names,
ownership and other facts relative to each vessel.
REGULAR-ROUTE CARRIER: A motor carrier that is authorized to
provide service over designated routes.
RELAY TERMINAL: A motor carrier terminal designed to facilitate the
substitution of one driver for another whom has driven the maximum hours
permitted.
released-value rates: Rates based upon the shipment's value. The maximum
carrier liability for damage is less than the full value, and in return
the carrier offers a lower rate.
RELIABILITY: A carrier selection process that considers the
variation in carrier transit times and the consistency of the transit
times provided.
REMITTANCE FOLLOWING COLLECTION (RFC): In instances when the
shipper has performed services incidental to the transportation of goods,
a carrier will collect payment for these services from the receiver and
remit such payment to the shipper. The carriers charge a nominal fee for
this service.
reorder point: A predetermined inventory level that triggers the need to
place an order. This minimum level provides inventory to meet the demand a
firm anticipates during the time it takes to receive the order.
REPARATION ORDER: Redress in the form of adjustment/reimbursement
on account of unjust/unreasonable charges assesses after submission has
been proven to the ICC.
REPLEVIN: Legal action instituted to recover possession of property
unlawfully taken or detained. This recovery would be accomplished through
court action.
RESERVED FREIGHT SPACE: A service by some airlines enabling
forwarders and shippers to reserve freight space on designated flights.
See PRIORITY AIR FREIGHT. Also RESERVATION.
RESERVATION: See RESERVED FREIGHT SPACE.
RESTRICTED ARTICLES: An airline term meaning a hazardous material
as defined by Title 49, Code of Federal Regulations (U.S.) and Air
Transport Restricted Articles Circular 6-D. Restricted articles may be
transported domestically and be classified dangerous goods when
transported internationally by air. See also HAZARDOUS MATERIAL.
Retaliation: Action taken by a country to restrain its imports from
another country that has increased a tariff or imposed other measures that
adversely affects the firsts country's exports.
RETARDATION: A force causing container and cargo to move fore, aft
and upwards.
RETROACTIVE: Application of law, rule, tariff, provision etc. to
time before the rule, law, etc. became effective.
Reverse logistics: Sometimes called “Green Logistics”. Refers to
aftermarket logistics activities such as returns, repairs, recycling and
disposal.
Reverse Preferences: Tariff advantages once offered by developing
countries to imports from certain developed countries that granted them
preferences. Reverse preferences characterized trading arrangements
between the European Community and some developing countries prior to the
advent of the Generalized System of Preferences (GSP) and the signing of
the Lome Convention.
Revocable Letter of Credit: A letter of credit which can be
cancelled or altered by the drawee (buyer) after it has been issued by the
drawee's bank.
RF: Abbreviation for “Radio Frequency” whereby users relay
information via electromagnetic energy waves from a terminal to a base
station, which is linked in turn to a host computer. The terminals can be
place at a fixed station, mounted on a forklift truck, or carried in the
worker's hand. The base station contains a transmitter and receiver for
communication with the terminals. RF systems use either narrow-band or
spread-spectrum transmissions. Narrow-band data transmissions move along a
single limited radio frequency, while spread-spectrum transmissions move
across several different frequencies. When combined with a bar-code system
for identifying inventory items, a radio-frequency system can relay data
instantly, thus updating inventory records in so-called "real time."
RFC: See REMITTANCE FOLLOWING COLLECTION.
right of eminent domain: A concept that, in a court of law, permits
a carrier to purchase land it needs for transportation right-of-way. Used
by railroads and pipelines.
RISK: 1) A term usually applied to insurance as a measure of the
probability of loss. 2) The degree to which an investor exposes himself to
the possibility of the loss of money.
ROLLING: The side to side (ATHWARTSHIP) motion of a vessel.
ROLLING STOCK: Freight/passenger cars owned by rail carriers. Not
including motive power equipment. Also buses, trucks and trailers owned by
motor carriers.
ROLL-ON/ROLL-OFF (RO/RO): Feature in specially constructed vessels
permitting road vehicles to drive on and off the vessel in
loading./discharging ports.
RO/RO: See ROLL-ON/ROLL-OFF.
ROUTE –1) Course/direction that shipment moves. 2) To designate
course/direction that shipment shall move. 3) Carriers with junction
points over which shipment moves.
ROUTING: 1) Process of determining how shipment shall move between
point of origin and point of destination. 2) Right of shipper to determine
carriers, routes and points of transfer on FTL and FCL shipments.
Royalty: A charge on charter flights levied by some governments
before traffic rights are granted. Sometimes called a "no objection fee."
Usually a fixed proportion of a total charter value.
rule of eight: Before the Motor Carrier Act of 1980, the ICC
restricted contract carriers requesting authority to eight shippers under
contract. The number of shippers has been deleted as a consideration for
granting a contract carrier permit.
rule of rate making: A regulatory provision directing the
regulatory agencies to consider the earnings a carrier needs to provide
adequate transportation.
RATE: The amount charged for a unit of weight (or volume) or value
of goods. Also, the established shipping charge for movement of goods. In
interstate transportation, price/rate is approved by ICC.
RUNNING GEAR: Complementary equipment for terminal and
over-the-road handling of containers.
S&FA: “Shipping and forwarding agent”.
S/N: Abbreviation for “Shipping Note”.
SALVAGE: Rescue of goods from loss at sea or by fire; also, goods
so saved or payment made or due for their rescue.
SALVAGE LOSS: In maritime insurance, the loss sustained by
necessary sale of goods at a port prior to expected destination because of
PERILS OF THE SEA. Treated as total loss with amount realized from the
sale of goods credited on amount payable under policy.
Sanitary and Health Certificate: A statement signed by a health
organization official certifying the degree of purity, cleanliness, or
spoilage of goods, and the health of live animals.
Satellite tracking: Takes advantage of space-age communications to
track the whereabouts of a truck. The communications are actually
facilitated by two orbiting satellites. One serves as the communications
link between driver and dispatcher, the other as the vehicle tracker.
Two-way communications between the truck driver and dispatcher are routed
through the first satellite. The second tracker satellite gives a fix on
location. A truck dispatcher can determine a truck's location by measuring
signal length from the tracker satellite to a communications terminal
mounted in the truck cab.
SCALE OF RATES: Numerous rates adjusted in relation to each other.
SCHEDULE B: Short form of “Schedule B, Statistical Classification
of Domestic and Foreign Commodities Exported from the United States”. All
commodities exported from the USA must be assigned a seven-digit Schedule
B number. A US Bureau of the Census publication and is based on the
Harmonized Commodity Description and Coding System (Harmonized System).
Export statistics are initially collected and compiled in terms of
approximately 8,000 commodity classifications.
Scheduled Flight: Any service that operates to a set timetable.
SCOW: Hollow, flat bottomed boat used for transporting gravel,
sand, and similar bulk commodities.
SCR: “Specified Commodity Rate”. Applied to narrowly specified
commodities. Usually granted on relatively large shipments. Theoretically
is of limited time duration.
SDI: Abbreviation for “Strategic Defense Initiative”.
SEA-BEE VESSEL: Ocean vessel constructed with heavy duty
submersible hydraulic lift or elevator system located in the stern of the
vessel. The Sea-Bee system moves barges from one inland coastal water
system to another. Sea-Bee barges are larger that LASH barges.
SEAL: Device applied to freight containers, railcars and motor
vehicle door fastenings which shows that door fastening where a seal has
been applied has not been tampered with between the time of its
application and the time of breaking the seal.
SEAWORTHINESS: Sufficiency of vessel in materials, construction,
equipment, officers and crew for voyage/service where employed. An implied
condition of all policies of maritime insurance unless otherwise
specifically stipulated.
Sector: Distance between two ground points within a route.
SED: See SHIPPER'S EXPORTATION DECLARATION.
SELF-INSURANCE: Assumption of risk without insurance coverage
through systematic provisions of funds to provide for the loss which
individual/company may suffer.
SELF-SUSTAINING: Vessel has its own cranes and equipment mounted on
board for loading/unloading. Used in ports where shore cranes and
equipment are lacking.
SEMI: Slang term for semi-trailer. Also used loosely in referring
to tractor-trailer combination.
Semiconductor Trade Arrangement: The U.S.-Japan Semiconductor Trade
Arrangement is a bilateral agreement which came into effect on August 1,
1991, replacing the prior 1986 Semiconductor Trade Arrangement. The new
Arrangement contains provisions to: (a) increase foreign access to the
Japanese semiconductor market and (b) deter dumping of semiconductors by
Japanese suppliers into the U.S. market, as well as in third country
markets. In evaluating market access improvement, both governments agreed
to pay particular attention to market share. The expectation of a 20
percent foreign market share by the end of 1992 is included in the
Arrangement. The Arrangement explicitly states, however, that the 20
percent figure is not a guarantee, a ceiling, or a floor on the foreign
market share.
separable cost: A cost that a company can directly assign to a
particular segment of the business.
SERVICE COMMITMENTS: Pickup and/or delivery commitments agreed to
the carrier and shipper.
setup costs: The costs a manufacturer incurs in staging the
production line to produce a different item.
Service: The defined, regular pattern of calls made by a carrier in
the pick-up and discharge of cargo.
Service Contract: A contract between a shipper and an ocean carrier
of conference, in which the shipper makes a commitment to provide a
minimum quantity of cargo over a fixed time period.
SERVICE SHIP AGENT: A liner company to tramp-ship operator
representative who facilitates ships arrival, clearance, loading/unloading
and fee payment while at a specific port.
Set Up: Articles in their assembled condition.
SHIP BROKER: An individual or company that serves as a go-between
for the tramp shipowner and the chartering consignor or consignee.
SHIP CHANDLER: One who furnishes everything necessary to equip a
vessel.
ship agent: A liner company or tramp ship operator representative
who facilitates ship arrival, clearance, loading and unloading, and fee
payment while at a specific port.
ship broker: A firm that serves as a go-between for the tramp ship
owner and the chartering consignor or consignee.
Ship's Manifest: A list, signed by the captain of a ship, of the
individual shipments constituting the ship's cargo.
SHIP’S PAPERS: Merchant vessels are required to carry the following
documents: 1) Register. 2) Log book. 3) Charter party if chartered. 4)
Muster roll or list of crew. 5) Ship’s articles. 6) Bill of health. 7)
Bills of Lading or duplicate receipts of cargo from master to shipper. 8)
Manifest or general statement of cargo. 9) Invoice or detailed statement
of cost of goods. 10) Clearance or permission from authorities to sail.
11) Certificate of Inspection. 12) Passenger list if passengers are
carried. 13) Bill of sale if the ship has been sold. 14) Officers licenses
and 15) License to carry on port trade.
Ship's Tackle: All rigging, etc., utilized on a ship to load or
discharge cargo.
SHIPPER: See CONSIGNOR.
SHIPPER'S ACCOUNT NUMBER: See ACCOUNT NUMBER.
SHIPPER’S AGENT: A company that acts primarily to match up small
shipments: especially single traffic piggyback loads to permit the use of
twin-trailer piggyback rates.
shippers association: A nonprofit, cooperative consolidator and
distributor of shipments that member firms own or ship; acts in much the
same way as a for-profit freight forwarder.
Shipper's certificate: Form filled out and presented by shipper to
outbound carrier at transit point, together with instructions and inbound
carrier's freight bill, asking for reshipping privilege and transit rate
on commodity previously brought into transit point.
SHIPMENT: 1) Lot of freight tendered at one place for delivery to
the consignee at one place, on one or more Bills of Lading. 2)
Goods/merchandise in one or more containers, pieces or parcels for
transportation from one shipper to single destination.
SHIPPER’S CERTIFICATE: Form filled out and presented by shipper to
the outbound carrier at transit point (together with instructions and
outbound carrier’s freight bill) which requests re-shipping privileges and
transit rates on commodity previously brought into transit point.
SHIPPER'S EXPORTATION DECLARATION (SED): The SED includes complete
particulars on individual shipments and is used to control exports and act
as a source document for the official US export statistics. SEDs must be
prepared for shipments through the US Postal Service when the shipment is
valued over $500. SEDs are required for shipments, other than by the US
Postal Service, where the value of commodities classified under each
individual Schedule B number is over $2,500. SEDs must be prepared,
regardless of value, for all shipments requiring a validated export
license or destined for countries prohibited by the Export Administration
Regulations. SEDs are prepared by the exporter and the exporter's agent
and delivered to the exporting carrier (such as: post office, airline, or
vessel line). The exporting carrier presents the required number of copies
to the US Customs Service at the port of export. The Foreign Trade
Statistical Regulations (15 CFR, Part 30) provide the statistical
requirements for use by exporters, freight forwarders, and ocean carriers
concerning preparation and filing of SEDs.
SHIPPER'S LETTER OF INSTRUCTION: A form used by a shipper to
authorize an airline, broker or forwarder to issue an air waybill on the
shipper's behalf. The form contains all details of shipment and authorizes
the airline, broker or forwarder to sign the air waybill in the name of
the shipper.
SHIPPER'S LOAD AND COUNT: Note on bill of lading indication that
the contents of a container were loaded and counted by the shipper and not
checked or verified by the Steamship Company.
SHIPPING DOCUMENTS: Documents other than transportation receipts or
transportation contracts requited to enable shipments to be forwarded or
received.
Shipping Mark: The letters, numbers or other symbols placed on the
outside of cargo to facilitate identification.
Shipping Weight: Shipping weight represents the gross weight in
kilograms of shipments, including the weight of moisture content,
wrappings, crates, boxes, and containers (other than cargo vans and
similar substantial outer containers).
short-haul discrimination: Charging more for a shorter haul than
for a longer haul over the same route, in the same direction, and for the
same commodity.
SHORT SHIPMENT: Piece of freight missing from shipment. Cargo
received is less than what is stipulated by documents on hand.
short ton: 2,000 pounds.
SHORT-SHIPPED: Cargo manifested but not loaded.
SIC: See STANDARD INDUSTRIAL CLASSIFICATION.
SIGHT DRAFT: A sight draft is a COD in international trade and
usually calls for the release of the Bill of Lading and all other
documents against cash payment to the collecting bank.
SIGNATURE SERVICE: A service designed to provide continuous
responsibility for the custody of shipments in transit. So named because a
signature is required from each person handling the shipment at each stage
of its transit from origin to destination.
Simulation: A computer model that represents a real-life logistics
operation with mathematical symbols and runs it for a simulated length of
time to determine how proposed changes will affect the operation.
Single Entry Charter- A non-scheduled flight carrying the cargo of
one shipper.
SIT: Abbreviation for “Stopped in Transit”
SITA: See SOCiete International de Telecommunications Aeronautiques.
SITC: See STANDARD INTERNATIONAL TRADE CLASSIFICATION.
Site: A particular platform or location for loading or unloading at
a place.
SKIDS: Battens or a series of parallel runners fitted beneath boxes
or packages to raise them clear of the floor to permit easy access of
forklift blades or other handling equipment.
SKU: See stock-keeping unit:
SL&C: Abbreviation for “Shipper's Load and Count”.
SL&T: Abbreviation for “Shipper's Load and Tally
sleeper team: Two drivers who operate a truck equipped with a
sleeper berth; while one driver sleeps in the berth to accumulate
mandatory off-duty time, the other driver operates the vehicle.
SLIDING TANDEM: An assembly rigged in a chassis that may be shifted
to adjust axle weights.
slip seat operation: A motor carrier relay terminal operation in
which a carrier substitutes one driver for another who has accumulated the
maximum driving time hours.
slip sheet: Similar to a pallet, the slip sheet, which is made of
cardboard or plastic, is used to facilitate movement of unitized loads.
SLURRY: Dry commodities that are made into a liquid form by the
addition of water or other fluids to permit pumping through pipelines.
SMALL PACKAGE SERVICE: A specialized service to guarantee the
delivery of small parcels within specified express time limits, e.g.
“Same-day” or “Next-day”. This traffic is subject to size and weight
limitations. Air carriers that also transport passengers will accept these
packages at the airport ticket counters with delivery at destination
baggage claim area. Many carriers provide door-to-door service on a 24
hour basis.
SOCIETE ANONYME: French name for “corporation”.
SOCiete International de Telecommunications Aeronautiques (SITA):
Since 1949, SITA has been providing communications and information
solutions to the world's air transport community.
Society of Logistics Engineers: A professional association engaged
in the advancement of logistics technology and management.
Soft Currency: The currency of a nation in which exchange may be
made only with difficulty. Soft currency countries typically have minimal
exchange reserves and deficits in their balance of payments.
software - A computer term that describes the system design and
programming that the computer's effective use requires.
SOL: Abbreviation for “Ship Owner's Liability”
South Pacific Forum: The SPF is a regional arrangement for
convening 15 governments and territories for deliberations on issues of
mutual interest. The Forum was established in 1971; headquarters are in
Suva, Fiji; members include: Australia, the Cook Islands, Fiji, Kirbati,
Marshall Islands, Micronesia, Nauru, New Zealand, Niue, Papua New Guinea,
Samoa, Solomon Island, Tonga, Tuvalu, and Vanatu. The South Pacific Bureau
for Economic Cooperation (SPEC) is a subsidiary organization which
promotes regional cooperation in the development of the island members in
partnership with the more industrially developed countries of the region:
Australia and New Zealand.
Special 301: The Special 301 statute requires the United States
Trade Representative (USTR) to review annually the condition of
intellectual property protection among U.S. trading partners. Submissions
are accepted from industry after which the USTR, weighing all relevant
information, makes a determination as to whether a country presents
excessive barriers to trade with the United States by virtue of its
inadequate protection of intellectual property. If the USTR makes a
positive determination, a country may be named to the list of: (a)
Priority Foreign Countries (the most egregious), (b) the Priority Watch
List, or (c) the Watch List. Special 301 (a variation of Section 301) was
created by the Omnibus Trade and Competitiveness Act of 1988.
SPECIAL POLICY OF INSURANCE: Document issued on behalf of the
Underwriter stating the terms and conditions of the marine insurance.
Issued when evidence of insurance is required, as by the bank issuing the
Letter of Credit.
SPECIAL RATES: Rates that apply to traffic under special conditions
and usually at a limited number of cities. Examples of such rates are
container rates, exception ratings, surface-air rates, and import rates.
special-commodities carrier: A common carrier trucking company that
has authority to haul a special commodity; the sixteen special commodities
include household goods, petroleum products, and hazardous materials.
special-commodity warehouses: A warehouse that is used to store
products requiring unique facilities, such as grain (elevator), liquid
(tank), and tobacco (barn).
SPECIFIC COMMODITY RATE: Rate applicable to certain classes of
commodities. Usually commodities moving in volume shipments. Hence
specific commodity rates are usually lower than the general commodity rate
between the same pair of cities.
Split Charter: Where a number of consignments from different
shippers are carried on the same non-scheduled aircraft. Under U.K.
regulations a non-scheduled flight chartered by a single forwarder or
agent on behalf of a number of shippers is still classified as a split
charter. Under U.S. regulations, a forwarder chartered flight is
classified as a single entity although it can consolidate.
SPOTTING: Placing an ocean container or railcar to be
loaded/unloaded.
SPREADER: Device for spreading lifting cables on crane to provide
balanced lift on four corners of an ocean container allowing load to be
lifted straight up.
spur track: A railroad track that connects a company's plant or
warehouse with the railroad's track; the user bears the cost of the spur
track and its maintenance.
SS: Abbreviation for “Steamship” A steam powered ship (Steam driven
turbines)
staff functions: The planning and analysis support activities a firm
provides to assist line managers with daily operations. Logistics staff
functions include location analysis, system design, cost analysis, and
planning.
STANDARD INTERNATIONAL TRADE CLASSIFICATION (SITC): One of a number
of numerical commodity codes developed by the United Nations and adopted
by the US airlines as the basis for numerical identification of
commodities moving in air freight. The SITC was developed in 1950 and is
used solely by international organizations for reporting international
trade. The SITC has been revised several times; the current version is
Revision 3. See HARMONIZED COMMODITY DESCRIPTION AND CODING SYSTEM,
Standard Industrial Classification (SIC): The SIC is the
classification standard underlying all establishment-based U.S. economic
statistics classified by industry.
STARBOARD: Right side of ship.
Statistical Office of the European Community: EUROSTAT provides
European Economic Community-wide statistics on economics, finance, foreign
trade, services, transportation, industry, population, social conditions,
energy, agricultural, forestry, and other topics. Eurostat offices are
located in Luxembourg.
statistical process control: A managerial control technique that
examines a process's inherent variability.
STATUTORY NOTICE: Length of time required by law for carriers to
give notice of changes in tariffs, rates, rules and regulations. Usually
30 days unless otherwise permitted by the relevant regulatory authorities.
Steamship Agent: A duly appointed and authorized representative in
a specified territory acting in behalf of a steamship line or lines and
attending to all matters relating to the vessels owned by his principals.
STEAMSHIP CONFERENCES: Collective rate-making bodies for vessels.
See also CONFERENCE.
Steamship Line: Company is usually composed of the following
departments; vessel operations, container operations, tariff department,
booking, outbound rates, inward rates and sales. the company can maintain
its own in country U.S. offices to handle regional sales, operations
and/or other matters or appoint steamship agents to represent them doing
same. Some lines have liner offices in several regions and have appointed
agents in others.
stock-keeping unit: A single unit that has been completely
assembled. In a DRP system, an item is not considered complete until it is
where it can satisfy customer demand.
stockless purchasing: A practice whereby the buyer negotiates a
purchase price for annual requirements of MRO items and the seller holds
inventory until the buyer orders individual items.
Stockout: A situation in which the items a customer orders are
currently unavailable.
stockout cost: The opportunity cost that companies associate with
not having supply sufficient to meet demand.
stores: The function associated with storing and issuing frequently
used items.
STOW: To arrange in compact mass. E.g. To stow cargo in the hold of
a ship.
Stowage: The lacing of cargo in a vessel in such a manner as to
provide the utmost safety and efficiency for the ship and the goods it
carries.
STRADDLE CARRIER: Mobile truck equipment with the capacity of
lifting an ocean container within its own framework.
strategic planning: Looking one to five years into the future and
designing a logistical system (or systems) to meet the needs of the
various businesses in which a company is involved.
strategic variables: The variables that effect change in the environment
and logistics strategy. The major strategic variables include the economy,
population, energy, and government.
Strategy: A specific action to achieve an objective.
STRAIGHT BILL OF LADING: Non-negotiable document that provides that
shipment is to be delivered direct to the party whose name is shown as the
consignee. Carrier does not require its surrender upon delivery unless
when needed to identify the consignee.
stretch-wrap: An elastic, thin plastic material that effectively
adheres to itself, thereby containing product on a pallet when wrapped
around the items.
STRIPPING: In truck transportation, means the emptying the truck of
its cargo and arranging shipments by destination.
Structural Impediments Initiative: The SII was started in July 1989
to identify and solve structural problems that restrict bringing two-way
trade between the U.S. and Japan into better balance. Both the U.S. and
Japanese governments chose issues of concern in the other's economy as
impediments to trade and current account imbalances. The areas which the
U.S. Government chose as focus included: (a) Japanese savings and
investment patterns, (b) land use, (c) distribution, (d) keiretsu, (e)
exclusionary business practices, and (f) pricing. Areas which the Japanese
Government chose as focus included: (a) U.S. savings and investment
patterns, (b) corporate investment patterns and supply capacity, (c)
corporate behavior, (d) government regulation, (e) research and
development, (f) export promotion, and (g) workforce education and
training. In a June 1990 report, the U.S. and Japan agreed to 7 meetings
in the following three years to review progress, discuss problems, and
produce annual joint reports.
STUFFING: Slang term for loading container with cargo.
SUBROGATION: Right of an insurance company to recover the amount
paid to insured from a third party who may have caused the loss.
Substitution of one creditor for another.
Subsidy: An economic benefit granted by a government to producers
of goods or services, often to strengthen their competitive position.
Substitutability: A buyer's ability to substitute different
sellers' products.
Sue & Labor Clause: A provision in marine insurance obligating the
assured to do things necessary after a loss to prevent further loss and to
act in the best interests of the insurer.
Super 301: This provision was enacted due to Congressional concern
that the regular Section 301 procedures narrowly limit U.S. attention to
the market access problems of individual sectors or companies. Super 301
sets procedures to identify and address within three years certain
"priority", systemic trade restriction policies of other nations. Super
301 was created by the Omnibus Trade and Competitiveness Act of 1988.
Super 301 authority expired May 30, 1990.
supplemental carrier: A for-hire air carrier having no time schedule or
designated route; the carrier provides service under a charter or contract
per plane per trip.
Supply chain: Starting with unprocessed raw materials and ending
with the final customer using the finished goods, the supply chain links
many companies together. Also, the material and informational interchanges
in the logistical process stretching from acquisition of raw materials to
delivery of finished products to the end user. All vendors, service
providers and customers are links in the supply chain.
Supply chain management: The practice of controlling all the
interchanges in the logistics process from acquisition of raw materials to
delivery to end user. Ideally, a network of firms interact to deliver the
product or service. Also, a combination of traditional logistics functions
of distribution and materials management with the procurement of raw
materials and/or inventory and sales, marketing, information technology,
and strategic planning functions.
supply warehouse: A warehouse that stores raw materials; a company
mixes goods from different suppliers at the warehouse and assembles plant
orders.
SURCHARGE: An add-on charge to the applicable charges. Motor
carriers have a fuel surcharge and railroads can apply a surcharge on any
joint rate that does not yield 110 percent of the variable cost.
SURETY BOND: Contract between principal and responsible third party
(surety) which makes the surety monetary responsible for the principal’s
fulfillment of obligation to obligee (party who is protected).
Surety Company: An insurance company
SURVEYOR: A marine specialist who examines damaged property and
determines the cause, nature, and extent of damage and methods of repair
and/or replacement. He is not an adjuster, and all his actions are without
prejudice to policy terms and conditions.
switch engine: A railroad engine that is used to move railcars
short distances within a terminal and plant.
switching company: A railroad that moves railcars short distances;
switching companies connect two mainline railroads to facilitate through
movement of shipments.
System: A set of interacting elements, variables, parts, or objects
that are functionally related to each other and form a coherent group.
SYSTEMS CONCEPT: A decision-making strategy that emphasizes overall
efficiency of the individual parts of the system.
T&E: See TRANSPORTATION AND EXPORTATION
T/T: Abbreviation for “Telegraphic Transfer”. Also referred to as
“Wire Funds”.
Table of Denial Orders: A list of individuals and firms that have
been disbarred from shipping or receiving U.S. goods or technology. Firms
and individuals on the list may be disbarred with respect to either
controlled commodities or general destination (across-the-board) exports.
The list is published in the Export Administration Regulations.
TACM: See TRANSIT AIR CARGO MANIFEST.
TALLY SHEET: List of cargo, incoming and outgoing, checked by a
Tally Clerk on dock. Also, a printed form on which companies record, by
making an appropriate mark, the number of items they receive or ship. In
many operations, tally sheets become a part of the permanent inventory
records.
TANDEM: A truck that has two drive-axles or a trailer that has two
axles.
tank cars: Railcars designed to haul bulk liquid or gas commodities.
TANKTAINER: Tank built into standard container frame and used to
transport liquids.
TAPERING RATE: A rate that increases with distances but not in
direct proportion to the distance the commodity is shipped.
TARE: Amount of gross weight on freight shipment that can be
deducted from packing weight. Usually allowance is about four pounds per
104 pounds.
TARE WEIGHT: The weight of the container before loading of goods
being shipped. The actual weight of the container when empty.
TARIFF: 1) A document setting forth applicable rules, rates, and
charges for the movement of goods. A tariff sets forth a contract of
carriage for the shipper, the consignee, and the carrier. 2) In addition
to the domestic tariffs published by Airline Tariff Publishing Company,
some airlines also publish their own tariffs covering special services.
International tariffs containing freight rates of the U.S. international
carriers are published by the U.S. flag carriers. 3) Offer of goods for
transportation by shipper, or offer of delivery by carrier. 4) A general
term for any listing of rates, charges, etc. the tariffs most frequently
encountered in foreign trade are: tariffs of the international
transportation companies operating on sea, on land, and in the air;
tariffs of the international cable, radio, and telephone companies; and
the customs tariffs of the various countries, which list goods that are
duty free and those subject to import duty, giving the rate of duty in
each case. There are various classes of customs duties. 5) A tax assessed
by a government in accordance with its tariff schedule on goods as they
enter (or leave) a country. May be imposed to protect domestic industries
from imported goods and/or to generate revenue. Types include ad valorem,
specific, variable, or some combination.
Tariff Act of 1930:
Title VII of the Tariff Act of 1930, as amended, provides for the
imposition of antidumping duties on imported merchandise found to have
been sold in the United States at "less than fair value," if these sales
have caused or are likely to cause material injury to, or materially
retard the establishment of, an industry in the United States.
Tariff Anomaly: A
tariff anomaly exists when the tariff on raw materials or
semi-manufactured goods is higher than the tariff on the finished product.
Tariff Escalation: A
situation in which tariffs on manufactured goods are relatively high,
tariffs on semi-processed goods are moderate, and tariffs on raw materials
are nonexistent or very low.
TARIFF QUOTAS: Application of a higher tariff rate to imported
goods after a specified quantity of the item has entered the country at a
lower prevailing rate.
Tariff Schedule: A comprehensive list of the goods which a country
may import and the import duties applicable to each product.
Tariff Schedules of the United
States Annotated: Effective 1979 to January 1989, the U.S.
import statistics were initially collected and compiled in terms of the
commodity classifications in the Tariff Schedules of the United States
Annotated (TSUSA), an official publication of the U.S. International Trade
Commission embracing the legal text of the Tariff Schedules of the United
States (TSUS) together with statistical annotations. This publication was
superseded by the Harmonized Tariff Schedule of the United States
Annotated for Statistical Reporting Purposes (HTSUSA) in January 1989.
Effective 1979 to January 1989, the U.S. export statistics were initially
collected and compiled in terms of the commodity classifications in
Schedule B, Statistical Classification of Domestic and Foreign Commodities
Exported from the United States. Schedule B is a U.S. Bureau of the Census
publication and, during this period, was based on the framework of the
TSUS. In January 1989, this publication was replaced by Schedule B based
on the Harmonized System.
TBL: See Through bill of lading.
Technology: BXA
regulations define technical data as "information of any kind that can be
used, or adapted for use, in the design, production, manufacture,
utilization, or reconstruction of articles or materials. Technology can be
either "tangible" or "intangible." Models, prototypes, blueprints or
operating manuals (even if stored on recording media) are examples of
tangible technology. Intangible technology consists of technical services,
such as training, oral advice, information guidance and consulting.
Technology Transfer:
This term is used to characterize "the transfer of knowledge
generated and developed in one place to another, where is it is used to
achieve some practical end." Technology may be transferred in many ways:
by giving it away (technical journals, conferences, emigration of
technical experts, technical assistance programs); by industrial
espionage; or by sale (patents, blueprints, industrial processes, and the
activities of multinational corporations). Also, the transfer of
technology mandated as part of a COUNTERTRADE or offset agreement, other
than co-production or license production. It may be in the form of
research and development, technical assistance and training, or patent
agreements between manufacturers. This is central to many Third World
enterprises, public and private, and is the focus of a large number of
COUNTERTRADE and offset deals.
Technical Barrier to Trade: According to the Standards Code, a
specification which sets forth characteristics or standards a product must
meet (such as levels of quality, performance, safety, or dimensions) in
order to be imported.
TEMPERATURE CONTROLLED CARGO: Any cargo requiring carriage under
controlled temperature.
TEMPERATURE CONTROLLED GROUND HANDLING: Many of the commodities
moving in air freight must be protected against sudden changes in
temperatures. The temperature of a jet freighters cabin is ideal to
maintain perishables in peak condition but the increase in the shipment of
perishables by air required new strides in ground handling to protect
cargoes from spoilage induced by marked differences in temperatures often
encountered on the ground at points of origin and destination. To meet
these needs, the airlines have, at some cities, special equipment and
facilities ranging from heated vans to temperature controlled holding
rooms in which up to 100,000 pounds of perishables can be held at any one
time.
TEMPORARY AUTHORITY: The ICC may grant a temporary operating
authority as a common carrier for up to 270 days.
TEMPORARY Importation UNDER BOND (TIB): When an importer makes
entry of articles brought into the United States temporarily and claimed
to be exempt from duty under Chapter 98, Subchapter XIII, Harmonized
Tariff Schedule of the United States, a bond is posted with Customs which
guarantees that these items will be exported within a specified time frame
(usually within one year from the date of importation). Failure to export
these items makes the importer liable for the payment of liquidated
damages for breach of the bond conditions. (See 19 CFR 10.31.). The
Temporary Importation under Bond (TIB) is usually twice the amount of
duties and other payments the importer would otherwise be required to pay.
Merchandise imported under TIB is usually for sales demonstration,
testing, or repair.
TENDER: Offer of goods for transportation by shipper or offer of
delivery on part of carrier.
TENOR: The term fixed for payment of a draft.
TERMINAL: An assigned area in which containers are prepared to be
loaded into a vessel or are stacked immediately after discharge from the
vessel. Any assigned area for the loading/unloading, temporary storage of
vehicles or the interchange of freight during transit.
terminal delivery allowance:
A reduced rate that a carrier offers in return for the shipper or
consignee tendering or picking up the freight at the carrier's terminal.
TERMS OF SALE: The invoice is the sales contract between buyer and
seller and indicates the Terms of Sale.
Textile Surveillance Body:
An international body which meets in Geneva at the GATT to monitor
the Multi-Fiber Arrangement. The TSB receives reports of all textile
restrictions and can make recommendations to participants. It can mediate
disputes between parties to the MFA but has no binding powers. Membership
is balanced between importing and exporting members.
TEU: See Twenty-Foot Equivalent Unit
THE INTERNATIONAL AIR CARGO ASSOCIATION (TIACA): A worldwide
organization which brings together all elements of the air logistics
industry into a single, dynamic force for progress and growth in the
ever-expanding arena of world trade and economic development. TIACA's
members include all major components of the industry air and surface
carriers, forwarders, shippers, vendors, manufacturers, airports,
countries, financial institutions and consultants. TIACA also represents
international, national, regional, and city air cargo associations and
their students involved in air cargo training. For information: General
Secretariat, P.O. Box 33069, Miami, FL 33233.
Third-party provider:
A company that supplies goods and services such as transportation and
logistics to another company.
Third-party logistics:
The use of specialist companies to provide several combined logistics
services (for example, storage, transportation, and inventory management)
to manufacturers and their customers. Third-party logistics includes Mode
selection, including truckload, rail, ship, air, Intermodal, plus
expedited and small packages, Carrier management, Private fleet
management, Dedicated contract carriage, Information flow and Single
billing.
three-layer framework: A basic structure and operational activity
of a company; the three layers include operational systems, control and
administrative management, and master planning.
THROUGH BILL OF LADING: A single Bill of Lading covering both the
domestic and international carriage of an export shipment. An air waybill,
for instance, is essentially a Through Bill of Lading used for air
shipments. Many ocean shipments require two separate documents (an inland
Bill of Lading for domestic carriage and an ocean Bill of Lading for
international carriage).
Throughput: A warehousing output measure that considers the volume
(weight, number of units) of items stored during a given time period.
TIA: See TRANSPORTATION INTERMEDIARIES ASSOCIATION or Travel
Industry Association of America.
TIACA: See THE INTERNATIONAL AIR CARGO ASSOCIATION.
TIB: See TEMPORARY IMPORTATION UNDER BOND.
Tied Aid Credit: Tied aid credit refers to the practice of
providing grants and/or concessional loans, either alone or combined with
export credits, linked to procurement from the donor country.
Tied Loan: A loan made by a government agency that requires a
foreign borrower to spend the proceeds in the lender's country.
TIME DRAFT: Draft maturing at certain fixed time after
presentation/acceptance.
TIME DEFINITE DELIVERY: The range of service performance standards
offered by air freight carriers which permit the customer to select a
specific time frame for delivery based on requirement for service and
economy. These service standards provide door-to-door (pickup and
delivery) schedule patterns based on “same day”, “next day”, second or
third day delivery needs.
time service rate: A rail rate that is based upon transit time.
Timetables: Time schedules of departures and arrivals by origin and
destination; typically used for passenger transportation by air, bus, and
rail.
TIME UTILITY: A value created in a product by having the product
available at a time desired. Transportation and warehousing create Time
Utility.
TITLE: Document that confers on holder the right of
ownership/possession/transfer of merchandise specified. E.g. the Bill of
Lading and Warehouse Receipts.
Title, Passing: The passing of title to exported goods is
determined in large measure by the selling terms. For example, if an
exporter sells goods CIF he may be presumed to pass ownership and tender
of documents. However, he may ship on a bill of lading drawn to his own
order, to prevent the buyer from gaining possession of the goods until the
draft is paid or accepted. In this case he retains a security title to the
goods; that is, a title for security purposes only, until the financial
arrangement is carried out. Caution: Depending on the laws of the buyer's
country, you may not be able to force passage of title without payment
having been received or the buyer having accepted delivery of the goods or
a clear understanding by the buyer being understood and accepted.
TL: Abbreviation for “Truckload”.
TOFC: Abbreviation for “Trailer on flatcar”. Also called PIGGYBACK.
Shipments that move TOFC receive special rates from tariffs providing for
that class of traffic.
TON: A Long Ton is 2,240 pounds. A Short Ton is 2,000 pounds. A
Metric Ton is 2,206.6 pounds.
TONNE: See METRIC TON.
TON MILE: One of the most commonly used measures of transportation
service. An output measure that reflects the shipment's weight and the
distance the carrier hauls it; a multiplication of tons hauled and
distance traveled.
TONNAGE: 1) The carrying capacity of a ship or a vessel. 2) The
tax/duty paid on such capacity. 3) The weight the ship can carry expressed
in tons.
TORT: A wrong, other than breach of contract, committed upon
person/property of another.
total cost analysis: A decision-making approach that considers total
system cost minimization and recognizes the interrelationship among system
variables such as transportation, warehousing, inventory, and customer
service.
TOTAL COST OF DISTRIBUTION: The sum total of all the costs incurred
in the distribution of goods. The total cost of distribution includes such
items as transportation charges, inventory carrying costs, warehousing
expenses, packaging, insurance, product obsolescence and pilferage.
Today's growing use of automated information systems enables a company to
identify each element of cost more accurately and more quickly than ever
before. The rise of new concepts of distribution management in which the
selection of a freight transport mode sometimes does not hinge upon direct
freight charges alone, but on the total cost of distribution, along with
service requirements of marketing and sales. Air freight's speed
facilitates a more rapid turnover of inventory. This means a more rapid
return on inventory investment, the elimination or drastic reduction of
warehousing costs, the elimination of the risk of product obsolescence and
the avoidance of such cost items as inventory taxes. Packaging costs are
lower because of the protection afforded by the aircraft and,
increasingly, because of the use of containers. The lower incidence of
damage and pilferage in air freight, as compared with surface modes,
reduces insurance costs. Usually, but not always, the freight charges via
air from point A to point B may be higher than via surface; but savings on
the other elements in the total cost of distribution often result in a net
saving via air. See TRADEOFFS.
total quality management: A management approach in which managers
constantly communicate with organizational stakeholders to emphasize the
importance of continuous quality improvement.
TQM: See TOTAL QUALITY MANAGEMENT.
TRACKING/TRACING: A carrier's system of recording movement
intervals of shipments from origin to destination.
Trade: A term used to define a geographic area or specific route
served by carriers.
TRADE ACCEPTANCE: A draft of which the drawee and acceptor is a
mercantile concern. Such an acceptance usually arises from the sale of
merchandise.
Trade Barriers: The United States Trade Representative classifies
trade barriers into eight general categories: (1) import policies (tariffs
and other import charges, quantitative restrictions, import licensing, and
customs barriers); (2) standards, testing, labeling, and certification;
(3) government procurement; (4) export subsidies; (5) lack of intellectual
property protection; (6) service barriers; (7) investment barriers; and
(8) other barriers (e.g., barriers encompassing more than one category or
barriers affecting a single sector).
Trade Fair Certification Program: The Commerce Department Trade
Fair Certification program was started in 1983 to promote selected
privately organized trade shows. The program helps private sector
organizations in mounting certified international fairs. Commerce
assistance includes promoting the fair among foreign customers and helping
exhibitors to make commercial contacts.
Trade Information Center: A one-stop source for information on
Federal programs to assist U.S. exporters. Telephone: 1-800-USA-TRADE
(1-800-872-8723).
Trade Opportunities Program: An International Trade Administration
service which provides sales leads from overseas firms seeking to buy or
represent U.S. products and services. Through overseas channels, U.S.
foreign commercial officers gather leads and details, including
specifications, quantities, end use, and delivery deadlines. TOPs are
cabled to Washington and listed on the Commerce Department's Economic
Bulletin Board and redistributed by the private sector.
TRADEOFFS: Interaction between related activities such as the
offsetting of higher costs in one area with reduced costs or other
benefits in another. In air freight the classic "Tradeoff" is one of “time
versus money” but there are many others in the total cost of distribution.
TRAFFIC: 1) Department/division responsible for obtaining most
economical commodity classifications and methods of transporting materials
and products, people and/or property carried by transportation companies.
2) People and/or property carried by transportation companies.
Traffic Conferences: Rate-fixing machinery operated by IATA.
TRAFFIC MANAGEMENT: The management of activities associated with
buying and controlling transportation services for a shipper, consignee or
both.
TRAILER ON FLAT CAR (TOFC): Highway trucks trailers are either
lifted on and off in side transfer or else end loaded/unloaded from a
fixed ramp. Probably the most common and best known form of piggyback.
TRAILER SHIPS: A vessel similar to a ferry boat carrying cars and
trucks. Also known as ROLL-ON/ROLL-OFF (RO/RO) ships.
TRAMP: Vessel that does not operate along definite routes on a
fixed schedule but calls at any port where cargo is available. A shipper
charters a tramp ship for a particular voyage or a given time period.
transit privilege: A carrier service that permits the shipper to
stop the shipment in transit to perform a function that changes the
commodity's physical characteristics, but to still pay the through rate.
Transit Zones: Transit zones, a form of free trade zone, are ports
of entry in coastal countries that are established as storage and
distribution centers for the convenience of a neighboring country lacking
adequate port facilities or access to the sea. A transit zone is
administered so that goods in transit to and from the neighboring country
are not subject to the customs duties, import controls or many of the
entry and exit formalities of the host country. Transit zones are more
limited facilities then a foreign trade zone or a free port.
TRANSMITTAL LETTER: A list of the particulars of the shipment and a
record of the documents being transmitted together with instructions for
disposition of documents. Any special instructions are also included.
TRANSACTION STATEMENT: A document that clearly outlines the terms
and conditions agreed upon between an importer and an exporter.
TRANSFER CARGO: Cargo arriving at a point by one flight and
continuing therefrom by another flight of the same or a connecting
carrier.
Transferable Letter of Credit: A letter of credit that allows all
or a portion of the proceeds to be transferred from the original
beneficiary to one or more additional beneficiaries.
TRANSIT AIR CARGO MANIFEST (TACM): Procedures under which air cargo
imports move through the gateway city to the city of final U.S. Customs
destination for the collection of duty and other import processing thereby
expediting shipment movements, reducing gateway congestion and saving
expense for importers, U.S. Customs and airlines.
transit time: The total time that elapses between a shipment's
delivery and its pickup.
TRANSIT CARGO: Cargo arriving at a point and departing therefrom by
the same through flight.
Transport Index: The number expressing the maximum radiation level
in a package of ULD.
TRANSPORTATION AND EXPORTATION (T&E): An entry filed to control the
movement of merchandise being transported through the United States for
exportation.
Transportation Association of America: An association that
represents the entire U.S. transportation system--carriers, users, and the
public; now defunct.
TRANSPORTATION INTERMEDIARIES ASSOCIATION (TIA): Organization
representing the interests of transportation intermediaries of all
disciplines. For information: 3601 Eisenhower Avenue, Suite 110,
Alexandria, VA 22304.
transportation method: A linear programming technique that
determines the least-cost means of shipping goods from plants to
warehouses or from warehouses to customers.
transportation requirements planning: Utilizing computer technology
and information already available in MRP and DRP databases to plan
transportation needs based on field demand.
Transportation Research Board: A division of the National Academy
of Sciences which pertains to transportation research.
Transportation Research Forum: A professional association that
provides a forum for the discussion of transportation ideas and research
techniques.
TRANSLOADING: The practice of breaking (transferring) bulk
shipments from the vehicle/container of one mode to that of another at one
or a series of terminal interchange points. Usually, transloading involves
transporting a continuous volume of simlilar products creating a rolling
(in-transit) inventory of the products.
Transmittal Letter: A list of the particulars of the shipment and a
record of the documents being transmitted together with instructions for
disposition of documents. Any special instructions are also included.
TRANSSHIP: 1) Term commonly used to denote the transfer of goods
from one means of transportation to another. 2) Rehandling of goods
enroute.
TRANSSHIPMENT: Transfer of cargo. The transfer of a shipment from
one carrier to another in international trade, most frequently from one
ship to another. In as much as the unloading and reloading of delicate
merchandise is likely to cause damage, transshipments are avoided whenever
possible.
transshipment problem: A variation of the linear programming
transportation method that considers consolidating shipments to one
destination and reshipping from that destination.
travel agent: A firm that provides passenger travel information;
air, rail, and steamship ticketing; and hotel reservations. The carrier
and hotel pay the travel agent a commission.
Travel Industry Association of America (TIA): A Washington DC based
national, non-profit association that serves as the unifying organization
for all components of the U.S. travel industry, the third largest retail
industry and one of the largest employers in the USA.
Trigger Price Mechanism: An antidumping mechanism designed to
protect U.S. industries from under-priced imports. First used in 1978 to
protect the steel industry, the TPM is the price of the lowest cost
foreign producer. Imports priced below the trigger price are assessed a
duty equal to the difference between their price and the trigger price.
TRIP CHARTER: Hiring of a vessel to haul cargo for a special
voyage.
TRUCK/AIR SERVICE: The surface movement of air freight to and from
airports and origin and destination points beyond the terminal area of
pickup and delivery service.
Truckload: Truckload rates apply where the tariff shows a truckload
minimum weight. Charges will be at the truckload minimum weight unless
weight is higher.
trunk lines: Oil pipelines used for the long-distance movements of crude
oil, refined oil, or other liquid products.
TRUST RECEIPT: Release of merchandise by a bank to a buyer in which
the bank retains title to the goods. The Buyer is obligated to maintain
the goods: or the proceeds from their sale: distinct from the remainder of
his assets and to hold them ready for repossession by the bank. Also
BAILEE RECEIPT.
TSUSA: The Tariff Schedule of the United States, Annotated. TSUSA
is the very detailed classification system in which U.S. import data are
originally recorded and is the legal basis for import duty calculations by
the Customs Bureau. All other import classification systems are some
transformation of TSUSA, since the TSUSA commodity identification numbers
are the only commodity identification numbers recorded on the actual
import declaration documents.
Turnkey Project: Capital construction projects in which the
supplier (contractor) designs and builds the physical plant, trains the
local personnel on how to manage and operate the facility and presents the
buyer with a self-sustaining project (all the buyer has to do is "Turn the
Key").
Twenty-Foot Equivalent Unit (TEU): TEU is a measure of a ship's
cargo-carrying capacity. One TEU measures twenty feet by eight feet by
eight feet: the dimensions of a standard twenty-foot container. An FEU
equals two TEUs or one standard 40-foot, ISO Series 1 container equals 2
TEUs.
TWIST LOCK: A set of four visible bayonet-type, shear keys used as
a part of a SPREADER to pick up containers or as part of a chassis to
secure containers.
two-bin system: An inventory ordering system in which the time to
place an order for an item is indicated when the first bin is empty. The
second bin contains supply sufficient to last until the company receives
the parts.
UCC: Uniform Commercial Code.
UKACC: Abbreviation for “United Kingdom Air Cargo Club”.
ULD (UNIT LOAD DEVICE): Term commonly used when referring to
containers and pallets. Any type of container, container with integral
pallet, aircraft container or aircraft pallet.
ULLAGE: Empty space present when cask/container is not full.
ULTIMATE CONSIGNEE: The ultimate consignee is the person located
abroad who is the true party in interest, receiving the export for the
designated end-use.
umbrella rate: An ICC rate making practice that held rates to a
particular level to protect another mode's traffic.
Unclean Bill of Lading: A bill containing reservations as to the
good order and condition of the goods, or the packaging, or both.
Examples: "bags torn;" "drums leaking;" "one case damaged;" "rolls
chafed."
Unfair Trade Practice: This term refers to any act, policy, or
practice of a foreign government that: (a) violates, is inconsistent with,
or otherwise denies benefits to the U.S. under any trade agreement to
which the United States is a party; (b) is unjustifiable, unreasonable, or
discriminatory and burdens or restricts United States commerce; or (c) is
otherwise inconsistent with a favorable section 301 determination by the
U.S. Trade Representative.
Uniform Warehouse Receipts Act: The act that sets forth the
regulations governing public warehousing. The regulations define a
warehouse manager's legal responsibility and define the types of receipts
he or she issues.
UNIT LOAD DEVICE: See ULD.
UNIT TRAIN: An entire, uninterrupted locomotive car and caboose
movement between an origin and destination. Rail movement of large tonnage
of single-bulk products between two points.
United States Railway Association: The planning and funding agency
for Conrail; created by the 3-R Act of 1973.
unit train: An entire, uninterrupted locomotive, car, and caboose movement
between an origin and destination.
United Nations Commission on International Trade Law: UNCITRAL was
established in 1966 to aid in harmonizing and unifying international trade
law. The Commission has focused on four principal international areas: (a)
sales of goods, (b) payments, (c) commercial arbitration, and (d)
legislation pertaining to shipping. The Commission issues publications and
sponsors training in international trade law.
United Nations Conference on Trade and Development: UNCTAD was set
up in December 1964 as a permanent organ of the UN General Assembly.
UNCTAD promotes international trade and seeks to increase trade between
developing countries and countries with different social and economic
systems. UNCTAD also examines problems of economic development within the
context of principles and policies of international trade and seeks to
harmonize trade, development, and regional economic policies. Headquarters
are in Geneva, Switzerland.
United Nations Industrial Development Organization: UNIDO promotes
accelerated commercial development in developing countries and encourages
industrial cooperation worldwide. As part of its activities, UNIDO
identifies promising entrepreneurs in the developing world to the
attention of potential partners in industrialized countries through a
network of Investment Promotion Services (IPS). IPS offices operate in
Austria, China, France, Germany, Italy, Japan, Korea, Russia, Switzerland,
and the United States (Washington, D.C.) Established in 1967, UNIDO became
a specialized agency on the UN in 1986; headquarters are in Vienna,
Austria.
United States-Asia Environmental Program: The US-AEP, announced in
January 1992, helps U.S. companies compete in expanding Asian markets for
sales of environmental products, services, technologies, and know-how. US-AEP,
coordinated by AID, links the efforts of U.S. government agencies in a
one-stop service.
United States Council for International Business: USCIB is the
American affiliate of the International Chamber of Commerce (ICC), the
Business and Advisory Council (BIAC) to the Organization for Economic
Cooperation and Development, and the International Organization of
Employers (IOE). The Council advocates U.S. business positions to the U.S.
Government, to United Nations bodies, and to other international
organizations. The Council administers the ATA Carnet System, which issues
and guarantees documents that allow duty-free, temporary importation of
merchandise overseas. The Council was established in 1945; headquarters
are in New York City.
United States Trade Representative: The USTR is a cabinet-level
official with the rank of Ambassador who advises the President on trade
policy. The USTR coordinates the development of U.S. trade policy
initiatives; leads U.S. international trade negotiations; and seeks to
expand U.S. exports by promoting removal or reduction of foreign trade
barriers. The Office of the USTR was created as the Office of the Special
Representative for Trade Negotiations by Executive Order (11075) in
January 1963. The Trade Act of 1974 established the Office as an agency of
the Executive Office of the President, charged with administering the
trade agreements program under the Tariff Act of 1930, the Trade Expansion
Act of 1962, and the Trade Act of 1974. Other powers and responsibilities
for coordinating trade policy were assigned to the Office by the Trade Act
of 1974 and by the President by Executive Order in March 1975, as amended.
Reorganization Plan No. 3 of 1979 (implemented by Executive Order in
January 1980), charged the Office with responsibility for setting and
administering overall trade policy and identified the USTR as the chief
representative of the U.S. for all activities of the General Agreement on
Tariffs and Trade, for negotiation on trade and commodity issues in the
Organization of Economic Cooperation and Development, for negotiations in
the United Nations Conference on Trade and Development, and for trade and
commodity negotiations in other multilateral institutions and in other
bilateral and multilateral negotiations concerning trade as a primary
issue.
UNITIZATION: The practice or technique of consolidating many small
pieces of freight into a single unit. Also the loading of one or more
large items of cargo onto a single piece of equipment such as a PALLET.
unitize: To consolidate several packages into one unit; carriers strap,
band, or otherwise attach the several packages together.
UNIVERSAL AIR WAYBILL: See NEUTRAL AIR WAYBILL.
Universal Postal Union: Organization which negotiates international
mail charges.
Upper Deck: See Main Deck
Urban Mass Transportation Administration: A U.S. Department of
Transportation agency that develops comprehensive mass transport systems
for urban areas and for providing financial aid to transit systems.
US Customs Bonded Warehouse: see bonded warehouse.
US Munitions List: The USML identifies those items or categories of
items considered to be defense articles and defense services subject to
export control. The USML is similar in coverage to the International
Munitions List (IML), but is more restrictive in two ways. First, the USML
currently contains some dual-use items that are controlled for national
security and foreign policy reasons (such as space-related or
encryption-related equipment). Second, the USML contains some
nuclear-related items. Under Presidential directive, most dual-use items
are to be transferred from the USML to the Commerce Department's dual-use
list. State, with the concurrence of Defense, designates which articles
will be controlled under the USML. Items on the Munitions List face a
stricter control regime and lack the safeguards to protect commercial
competitiveness that apply to dual-use items.
USANCE: Time allowed for payment of foreign drafts.
USDA: Abbreviation for the “US Department of Agriculture”.
VALUATION, ACTUAL: See ACTUAL VALUATION.
VALUATION CHARGES: Transportation charges assessed on shippers who
declare a value of goods higher than the value of carrier’s limits of
liability. See DECLARED VALUE FOR CARRIAGE.
Value for Customs Purposes Only: The U.S. Customs Service defines
"value for Customs purposes only" as the value submitted on the entry
documentation by the importer which may or may not reflect information
from the manufacturer but in no way reflects Customs appraisement of the
merchandise.
Validated Export License: A document issued by the U.S. government
authorizing the export of commodities for which written export
authorization is required by law. Two types exist: an Individual Validated
License (IVL) and a Special License.
VALUATION CLAUSE: The clause in the Marine Policy that contains a
fixed basis of valuation agreed upon by the Assured and the Underwriter
and which establishes the insured value of the merchandise. The Clause
determines the amount payable under any recoverable loss or General
Average contribution.
Value-Added Tax: A European Community (EC) tax assessed on the
increased value of goods as they pass from the raw material stage through
the production process to final consumption. The tax on processors or
merchants is levied on the amount by which they increase the value of
items they purchase. The EC charges a tax equivalent to the value added to
imports and rebates value-added taxes on exports. Some other countries'
retail sales tax also called VAT, such as Taiwan.
VALUE-OF-SERVICE PRICING: Pricing according to the value of the
product being transported. Third-degree pricing of discrimination.
Demand-orientated pricing. Charging whatever the traffic will bear.
VANNING: A term used for stowing cargo in a container.
VARIABLE COST: A cost that fluctuates with the volume of business.
VAT: See VALUE-ADDED TAX
VENDOR: A firm or individual that supplies goods or services; the
seller.
VENDOR-MANAGED INVENTORY: The process by which the vendor manages
the inventory of its products in its distribution center. The vendor
receives stock information from the customer and then calculates what
should be shipped to maintain adequate inventory levels at the retailer's
facility.
VESSEL: Generally a craft used or intended to be used as means of
transportation by water.
VESSEL TON: 100 cubic feet.
Virtual logistics: A phrase coined by David Frentzel of Mercer
Management Consulting to describe the disappearance of the in-house
logistics function by name and traditional description. In this scenario,
logistics will be managed by many individuals throughout the supply chain,
or be outsourced altogether.
VISA: Visas are required by many countries for entry of a
foreigner. A visa is a stamp in a foreign national's passport issued by a
U.S. consular officer which creates a legal presumption that there are no
apparent reason to deny entry into the U.S. Regardless of the stamp, the
final decision to grant admission is made by an officer of the U.S.
Immigration Service at the port of entry.
VISA WAIVER: A program of selected countries to eliminate the visa
requirement on a test basis.
VOLATILITY: 1) Ability of liquid to vaporize. 2) Explosivity.
VOLUME CHARGE: A charge for carriage of goods based on their
volume.
Voluntary Export Restriction: An understanding between trading
partners in which the exporting nation, in order to reduce trade friction,
agrees to limit its exports of a particular good. Also called Voluntary
Restraint Agreement.
Voluntary Restraint Agreement: Informal bilateral or multilateral
understandings in which exporters voluntarily limit exports of certain
products to a particular country destination in order to avoid economic
dislocation in the importing country and the imposition of mandatory
import restrictions. These arrangements do not involve an obligation on
the part of the importing country to provide "compensation" to the
exporting country, as would be the case if the importing country
unilaterally imposed equivalent restraints on imports.
von Thunen's belts: A series of concentric rings around a city to
identify where agricultural products would be produced according to von
Thunen's theory.
VOYAGE CHARTER: Engaging services of a vessel (cargo) for specified
trip from one port to another at established tonnage rate.
WA: Abbreviation for "With Average"
WACA: See World Airlines Clubs Association.
WAIS: Abbreviation for “Wide Area Information Server”
WAIVER: 1) Written statement canceling previous claim/right.
Usually refers to only one person or specific situation. 2) Intentionally
forfeiting a right.
WAN: Abbreviation for “Wide Area Network”
War Risk: The possible aggressive actions against a ship and its
cargo by a belligerent government. This risk can be insured by a marine
policy with a risk clause.
War Risk Insurance: Insurance issued by marine underwriters against
war-like operations specifically described in the policy. In former times,
war risk insurance was taken out only in times of war, but currently many
exporter cover most of their shipments with war risk insurance as a
protection against losses from derelict torpedoes and floating mines
placed during former wars and also as a safeguard against unforeseen
warlike developments. In the United States, war risk insurance is written
in a separate policy from the ordinary marine insurance. It is desirable
to take out both policies with the same underwriter in order to avoid the
ill effects of a possible dispute between underwriters as to the cause
(Marine peril or war peril) of a given loss.
WAREHOUSE: Place for receiving/storing goods and merchandise
for-hire. The warehouse is bound to use ordinary diligence in preserving
goods.
Warehouse Receipt: A receipt of commodities deposited in a
warehouse, identifying the commodities deposited. It is non-negotiable if
permitting delivery only to a specified person or firm, but it is
negotiable if made out to the order of a person or firm or to a bearer.
Endorsement (without endorsement if made out to bearer) and delivery of a
negotiable warehouse receipt serves to transfer the property covered by
the receipt serves to transfer the property covered by the receipt.
Warehouse receipts are common documents in international banking.
WAREHOUSE-TO-WAREHOUSE CLAUSE: The clause in the Cargo Policy that
defines when coverage commences and terminates. It is the intent of the
policy to attach at the time the goods leave the warehouse of origin named
in the Policy, and to continue while the goods are in due course of
transit until delivered to the warehouse of destination named in the
Policy, where it terminates.
WAREHOUSING: The temporary storing of goods.
WARSAW CONVENTION: An international multilateral treaty which
regulates, in a uniform manner, the conditions of international
transportation by air. Among other things, it establishes the
international liability of air carriers and establishes the monetary
limits for loss, damage, and delay. Specifically, the Convention for the
Unification of Certain Rule Relating to International Carriage by Air,
signed at Warsaw, October 12, 1929, or that convention as amended by the
Hague Protocol, 1955, whichever may be applicable.
WASTAGE: Loss of goods due to handling, decay, leakage, shrinkage,
etc.
waterway use tax: A per-gallon tax assessed barge carriers for waterway
use.
WAYBILL (WB): Document containing description of goods that are
part of common carrier freight shipment. Also shows origin, destination,
consignee, consignor and amount charged. Copies travel with goods and are
retained by originating/delivering agents. Used by carrier for internal
record and control especially during transit. Not a transportation
contract. See also Air waybill.
WB: See WAYBILL.
WEIGHT: In shipping, weight is qualified further as Gross Weight
(weight of goods and container), Net Weight (weight of goods without any
container) and Legal Weight (similar to net, determined in such manner as
the laws of a particular country/jurisdiction may direct).
weight-losing raw material: A raw material that loses weight in
processing.
WEIGHT BREAK: Levels at which the air freight rate per 100 pounds
decreases because of substantial increases in the weight of the shipment.
Examples of levels at which weight breaks occur (in pounds) are 100, 500,
1,000 3,000, 5,000, and 10,000.
WEIGHT CHARGE: A charge for carriage of goods based on their
weight.
WEIGHT STATION: Permanent station equipped with scales at which
motor vehicles transporting property on public highways are required to
stop for checking of gross vehicle and/or axle weights. Many US states
also use portable scales to ensure compliance with their weight limits.
Also often combined with port of entry facilities.
Wet Lease: An arrangement for renting an aircraft under which the
owner provides crews, ground support equipment, fuel and so on (of dry
lease).
WHARF: Loading/discharging terminal built parallel to stream/shore
line.
WHARFAGE: 1) Charge made for handling traffic on wharf. 2) Charge
made for docking vessels at wharf.
WIP: See Work in Progress.
With Average: A marine insurance term meaning that a shipment is
protected from partial damage whenever the damage exceeds 3 percent (or
some other percentage). If the ship is involved in a major catastrophe,
such as a collision, fire or stranding, the minimum percentage requirement
is waived and the insurance company pays for all of the damage.
WITHOUT RECOURSE: When drafts are negotiated “without recourse”,
the beneficiary is relieved of responsibility to the holder of the draft
to the extent permissible under the contract involved and under the law
governing the transaction.
Without Reserve: A term indicating that a shipper's agent or
representative is empowered to make definitive decisions and adjustments
abroad without approval of the group or individual represented.
work in process: Parts and subassemblies in the process of becoming
completed assembly components. These items, no longer part of the raw
materials inventory and not yet part of the finished goods inventory, may
constitute a large inventory by themselves and create extra expense for
the company.
World Airlines Clubs Association (WACA): Established in Cannes,
France, in April 1966 when the Riviera Airlines Club hosted a conference
of the various airline club representatives to discuss the formation of a
world body which would unite and promote the activities of interline clubs
throughout the world.
World Bank: The World Bank is an integrated group of international
institutions which provides financial and technical assistance to
developing countries. The World Bank includes the International Bank for
Reconstruction and Development and the International Development
Association. World Bank affiliates, legally and financially separate,
include the International Center for Settlement of Investment Disputes,
the International Finance Corporation, and the Multilateral Investment
Guarantee Agency. World Bank headquarters are in Washington, D.C.
World Trade Organization: Provisions to establish the WTO were
reached in the Uruguay Round of the General Agreement on Tariffs and Trade
(GATT). The WTO is scheduled to be established no later than 1997 as an
international organization of comparable stature to the World Bank and the
International Monetary Fund. The Organization is expected to facilitate
implementation of trade agreements reached in the Uruguay Round by
bringing them under one institutional umbrella, requiring full
participation of all countries in one new trading system, and providing a
permanent forum to discuss new issues facing the international trading
system. The WTO system will be available only to countries which: (a) are
contracting parties to the GATT, (b) agree to adhere to all of the Uruguay
Round agreements, and (c) submit schedules of market access commitments
for industrial goods, agricultural goods, and services
WWW: Abbreviation for “World Wide Web”.
X Heavy: Extra Heavy
X Strong: Extra strong
XX Heavy: Double extra heavy
XX Strong: Double extra strong
Y/A: York-Antwerp Rules: A code of rules
adopted by an international convention in 1890, amended in 1924 and again
in 1950, for the purpose of establishing a uniform basis for adjusting
general average. Certain nationalities decline to observe certain of the
rules adopted. United States shipping interests generally abide by general
rule "F" and numbered rules 1 to 15 and 17 to 22, inclusive and
specifically set this forth in a Bill Of Lading Clause.
YARD (FREIGHT): Unit of track systems within certain area used for
storing cars, loading/unloading freight and making up trains, over which
movement not authorized by timetable or train order may be made, subject
to prescribed signals/regulations.
YARDAGE: Livestock shipped to stockyards is subject to yardage
charge in addition to transportation and other charges. Usually assessed
on basis of so much per head, varying in amount according to type of
livestock.
YIELD: The air transport revenue derived per unit of traffic
carried in air transportation. Examples: Revenue per freight ton-mile and
revenue per passenger mile flown.
ZIP CODE: A numerical code, established by the US Postal Service,
used for the purpose of routing and to identify delivery zones. Some
carriers apply this code for freight in the same manner.
ZONE: Any one of a number of sections or districts of the United
States used for the purpose of establishing proper rates for parcels,
mail, and pickup/delivery.
ZONE-OF-REASONABLENESS: A zone or limit within which air carriers
are permitted to change rates without regulatory scrutiny. If the rate
change is within the zone, the new rate is presumed to be reasonable.
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