MSC Napoli in 2007

Under-declaration of container weights, or unsafe loading, has been responsible for many serious truck accidents, and was implicated in the sinking of the MSC Napoli in 2007.

A new UN code of practice, requiring container weights to be verified before shipping, will come into force in July 2016.

If the issue sounds dull and procedural, it is nothing of the kind. Under-declaration of container weights, or unsafe loading, has been responsible for many serious truck accidents, and was implicated in the sinking of the MSC Napoli in 2007.

MSC Flamina

Speakers at the recent Multimodal exhibition in Birmingham said better information about box contents could have averted a fire on board the MSC Flaminia (pictured) in 2012, which claimed three lives, as well as last year’s fire on the Maersk Kampala.

The new regulation is relevant and critical to the entire supply chain, prompting the speakers to question why they were addressing so many empty seats.

Peregrine Storrs-Fox, risk management director for the TT Club, said two-thirds of cargo claims could be attributed to poor container packing or misdeclaration of weight.

“Any one container can have a huge impact on lots of others in an 18,000teu ship. The potential for a massive incident is out there,” he said.

Container accident

Alongside the major disasters that create global headlines, Mr Storrs-Fox pointed to many “low-level disruptions”, such as truck accidents caused by unstable loads, or train derailments resulting from overweight cargo falling through the bottom of containers.

Sharon James, secretary of the dockers’ section of the International Transport Workers’ Federation (ITF), said unstable containers moving by road were a public safety issue, not just a threat to drivers. “Who takes it back if a port says it’s illegal?” she asked.

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