Service
Search
Schedule New booking Join us Contact

The Cargo Integrity Group (CIG) is urging national administrations to conduct and report the results of their container inspection programs and is calling the International Maritime Organization (IMO) to continue compiling and making these findings publicly accessible.

This initiative aims to support efforts to enhance safety in the transport of goods by sea.

More than 20 years ago, IMO member governments adopted resolutions committing to routinely inspect containers and their packed cargoes consistently.

The results of these inspections are to be submitted annually to the IMO for collation and reporting, allowing for a global overview of compliance with international regulations and recommended practices, and enabling the identification of potential safety improvements.

However, an analysis by CIG partner organizations shows that fewer than 5% of the 167 national administrations involved are regularly submitting their inspection findings to the IMO in a publicly available format.

The CIG is concerned about the low reporting rate, as the lack of sufficient data undermines efforts to improve the safety and sustainability of sea shipments.

The CIG acknowledges that some countries may be inspecting containerized goods entering or leaving their ports but are failing to submit their findings to the IMO as agreed. Without these submissions, there is no shared benefit to the global community, according to CIG.

CIG partners stress that consistent reporting of inspection findings is critical to directing communication and training programs aimed at raising awareness of safe practices for container transport. These include the SOLAS Convention, CSC Convention, IMDG Code, and CTU Code.

The risks posed by improperly packed, mishandled, or mis-declared containerized cargo have been highlighted by recent fires and explosions on container ships. While investigations into these incidents are ongoing, the CIG is concerned that existing measures to identify potential weaknesses are not being fully enforced, missing opportunities to improve safety standards.

Additionally, CIG is alarmed by reports that the IMO may consider stopping the collation and publication of these inspection findings in an easily accessible format.

You might be interested in

Containership 2050: When the box becomes the customer
Containership 2050: When the box becomes the customer 17/11/2023

What could a sophisticated data- and analytics-driven supply chain in the container segment look like? Jan-Olaf Probst, Business Director – Containerships at DNV, shares a possible future of a fully digitalized and decarbonized market and what it will take to get there.

Indonesia Oct coal exports rise to multi-yr high, Kpler
Indonesia Oct coal exports rise to multi-yr high, Kpler 17/11/2023

Indonesia Oct coal exports rise to multi-yr high, Kpler

Container Shipping Bracing for Downturn, Hapag-Lloyd Chief Says
Container Shipping Bracing for Downturn, Hapag-Lloyd Chief Says 17/11/2023

The container shipping industry faces a few years of headwinds as low freight rates, a weak European economy and widening geopolitical turmoil cloud the outlook, the head of the world’s fifth-biggest carrier said.

India’s New Mega Port Hopes To Attract The World’s Biggest Ships
India’s New Mega Port Hopes To Attract The World’s Biggest Ships 24/10/2023

(Bloomberg) –When Zhen Hua 15 — a heavy load cargo carrier sailing from the East China sea — unloaded at Vizhinjam port on Sunday, it did more than just setting down the site’s first gigantic cranes. It also put India on the map for the world’s biggest container ships.