The use of freight containers, swap bodies, vehicles or other cargo transport units
substantially reduces the physical hazards to which cargoes are exposed. However,
improper or careless packing of cargoes into/onto such units, or lack of proper
blocking, bracing and lashing, may be the cause of personnel injury when they are
handled or transported. In addition, serious and costly damage may occur to the
cargo or to the equipment.
The types of cargoes carried in freight containers has expanded over many years and
innovations such as use of flexitanks and developments allow heavy, bulky items
which were traditionally loaded directly into the ships' hold (e.g. stone, steel,
wastes and project cargoes), to be carried in cargo transport units.
The person who packs and secures cargo into/onto the cargo transport unit (CTU) may
be the last person to look inside the unit until it is opened at its final
destination. Consequently, a great many people in the transport chain will rely on
the skill of such persons, including:
-
road vehicle drivers and other road users when the unit is transported by
road;
-
rail workers, and others, when the unit is transported by rail;
-
crew members of inland waterway vessels when the unit is transported on
inland waterways;
-
handling staff at terminals when the unit is transferred from one transport
mode to another;
-
dock workers when the unit is loaded or unloaded;
-
crew members of a seagoing ship during the transport operation;
-
those who have a statutory duty to inspect cargoes; and
-
those who unpack the unit.
All persons, such as the above, passengers and the public, may be at risk from a
poorly packed freight container, swap body or vehicle.