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Delivery of Goods

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Title: Delivery of Goods


1
Chapter 4
  • Delivery of Goods

2
  • Delivery Conditions
  • Delivery Vs. Shipment
  • Partial shipments transshipment
  • Shipment Clause
  • Transportation Modes
  • Ocean transport
  • Rail transport
  • Road transport
  • Air transport
  • Container transport
  • Multi-modal transport land-bridge transport

3
  • Delivery of the goods refers to the act of the
    seller transferring the title of the goods to the
    buyer in accordance with the stipulations in the
    contract.
  • Shipment means the loading of goods.

4
  • Delivery conditions include
  • the time of delivery, and in some cases
  • including the time of loading and unloading
    operations,
  • the port of shipment,
  • the port of destination,
  • partial shipments and transshipment, etc.

5
  • Time of Delivery
  • The time of delivery refers to the time limit
    during which the seller shall deliver the goods
    to the buyer at the agreed place by the agreed
    methods.
  • Ways of delivery
  • ? Physical delivery or actual delivery the
    seller delivers the goods into the actual
    possession of the buyer, for example, delivery of
    the goods under EXW and DES trade terms.

6
  • ? Constructive delivery or symbolic delivery
    after the seller loads the goods on board the
    vessel and presents the whole qualified documents
    which include certificates of title to the goods,
    the seller is said to have finished delivery of
    the goods. It is unnecessary for the seller to
    guarantee the goods to be received by the buyer
    actually. In the actual delivery contract, there
    are two different time limits, one is the time of
    shipment, the other is the time of delivery. In
    the contract under F and C group trade terms, the
    time of shipment and the time of delivery belong
    to the same concept while in the contract under D
    terms , they are different.

7
  • Delivery vs. Shipment
  • Under FOB, CFR, CIF and FCA, CPT, CIP
  • Delivery Shipment

8
  • UCP500 Article 46. a.
  • Unless otherwise stipulated in the Credit, the
    expression "shipment" used in stipulating an
    earliest and/or a latest date for shipment will
    be understood to include expressions such as,
    "loading on board," "dispatch," "accepted for
    carriage," "date of post receipt," "date of pick-
    up," and the like, and in the case of a credit
    calling for a multi-modal transport document the
    expression "taking in charge."

9
  • Delivery in a certain month
  • Delivery in several months
  • Delivery at the end of a certain month, or before
    a certain date
  • Delivery within xx days after receipt of L/C
  • Others

10
  • Delivery in a certain month
  • Shipment during March 20
  • Shipment during June 20
  • Delivery in several months
  • Shipment during Feb./Mar. 20
  • Shipment during Feb./Mar./Apr. 20

11
  • Delivery at the end of a certain month, or before
    a certain date
  • Shipment at or before the end of May 20
  • Shipment not later than the end of June 20
  • Delivery within xx days after receipt of L/C
  • Shipment within 45 days after receipt of L/C

12
  • Others
  • Shipment on certain date
  • e.g. Shipment on 5th March
  • Prompt shipment/ Immediate shipment/ Shipment as
    soon as possible
  • Shipment under certain situations
  • e.g. subject to shipping space available
  • subject to approval of export license

13
  • Place of Delivery
  • Place of delivery refers to the prescribed place
    where the goods are to be delivered to the buyer
    or the carrier.
  • A Port of shipment
  • B Port of destination

14
  • Partial shipments Transshipment
  • In case of an export covering a large amount of
    goods, it is necessary to make shipment in
    several lots by several carriers sailing on
    different dates. This is done because of
  • the limitation of shipping space available,
  • poor unloading facilities at the port of
    destination,
  • dull market season, or
  • possible delay in the process of manufacturing
    the goods, etc.
  • And this is allowable only if the clause Partial
    shipment to be allowed is agreed upon in the
    sales contract. If partial shipment is not
    allowed, the clause No partial shipment or the
    like should be given in the contract.

15
  • Transshipment in maritime transport is the
    movement of goods in transit from one carrier to
    another at the ports of transshipment before the
    goods reach the port of destination.
    Transshipment is necessary when
  • ships going directly to the port of destination
    are not available, or
  • the port of destination does not lie along the
    sailing route of the liner,
  • transshipment is allowed when the sales
    contract has a clause like transshipment to be
    allowed.

16
  • Shipment Clause
  • Shipment during Oct./Nov./Dec.20---, with partial
    shipments and transshipment allowed.
  • Shipment during Jan./Feb.20---in two about equal
    lots.
  • Shipment during Jan./Feb.20---in two equal
    monthly lots( in two equal monthly shipments),
    transshipment to be allowed.

17
  • During Mar./Apr. in two shipments, transshipment
    is prohibited.
  • During Mar./Apr. in two equal monthly shipments,
    to be transshipped at Hong Kong.
  • Shipment during May from London to Shanghai. The
    sellers shall advise the Buyers 45 days before
    the month of shipment of the time the goods will
    be ready for shipment. Partial shipments and
    transshipment allowed.

18
  • Modes of Transportation
  • Ocean Transport (Sea Transport)
  • Ocean Transport is the most widely used mode
    of transportation in international trade, with
    advantages of easy passage, large capacity and
    low cost. However, it is slow, vulnerable to bad
    weather and less punctual if compared with road
    or air transport.

19
  • Kinds of vessels
  • General cargo vessels ???
  • Oil tankers
  • Container vessels
  • Oil/Bulk/Ore (OBO) vessels
  • Ro/Ro vessels ???
  • LASH (Lighter Aboard Ship)???
  • Refrigerated ship ???
  • Timber ship ???

20
  • Liner transport
  • and charter transport
  • According to the ways of operation, ocean
    transport can be divided into liner transport and
    charter transport. Comparatively speaking, liner
    transport prove to be more economical of
    international cargo distribution.

21
  • A liner is a vessel that operates over a regular
    route, stops at fixed ports according to an
    advised schedule.
  • Its freight is relatively fixed with loading
    and unloading charges included. Its suitable for
    cargo of small quantity.

22
  • The main features of liners are usually concluded
    by 41
  • 4 FIXED fixed line, fixed ports, fixed sailing
    schedule and comparatively fixed freight
  • 1 RESPONSIBLE The carrier is responsible for
    loading and unloading operations, i.e. , gross
    terms.

23
  • A tramp is a freight-carrying vessel which has no
    regular route or schedule of sailings. It is
    first in one trade and then in another, always
    seeking those ports where there is a demand at
    the moment for shipping space.

24
  • The shipper charters the ship from the ship owner
    and uses it to carry the goods. It falls into 3
    kinds
  • Voyage charter/ Trip charter
  • Time charter
  • Bare boat charter/ Demise charter

25
  • Voyage charter It includes single trip charter,
    return trip charter and consecutive voyages.
    According to the route stipulating in the charter
    party , the ship owner is responsible for
    delivering the goods to the port of destination
    and for managing the ship as well as bearing all
    expenses.
  • Voyage charter is used the most frequently, it is
    suitable for big lot of bulk goods, such as ore,
    grants, oil and chemical materials.

26
  • Time charter The charter party charters the ship
    for a period of time during which the ship is
    deployed and managed by the charter party. A
    series of work, such as loading, unloading,
    stowing and trimming and the so-caused fuel
    expenses, etc., should be borne by the charter
    party. The ship owner should bear the wages and
    board expenses of the crew and be responsible for
    seaworthiness during the period of chartering and
    the so-caused expenses and the vessel insurance
    premium.

27
  • Demise charter Demise charter is also called
    bare boat charter, which belongs to time charter,
    but there are some differences as to time
    charter, during the period of chartering, the
    ship owner provides the charter party with crew,
    while as to bare boat charter, the ship owner
    only provides the charter party with a bare boat,
    the charter party should employ the crew himself.

28
  • Freight
  • Liner Freight
  • Voyage Charter Freight
  • Time Charter Rent

29
  • Liner Freight
  • Bulk transport
  • ? includes the freight in the sea and loading
    and unloading fees.
  • ? is calculated according to liners freight
    tariff.
  • Container transport

30
  • The basic standards for calculating freight are
    stipulated as follows
  • ? According to gross weight, i.e.,
  • weight ton, which is indicated by W in the
    tariff.
  • ? According to volume, i.e., measurement ton,
    which is indicated by M in the tariff.
  • ? ? are two forms of freight ton.

31
  • ? According to value of the cargo, i.e., a
    certain percentage of FOB price which is
    indicated by A.V. (Ad Valorem) in the liner
    freight tariff.
  • ? According to gross weight or volume, i.e.,
    choosing the higher rate between the two, which
    is indicated by W/M in the tariff.

32
  • ? According to gross weight or volume or A.V.,
    i.e., choosing the highest rate of the three,
    which is indicated by W/M or A.V.
  • ? According to gross weight or volume, and then
    plus a certain percentage of A.V., which is
    indicated by W/M plus A.V.

33
  • ? According to the number of the cargo. E.g.,
    per head for big animals, per unit for
    automobiles.
  • ? According to the temporary agreement entered
    into between the ship owner and the consignor,
    open rate sometimes is decided temporarily.
  • In practice, W, M and W/M are frequently
    used for usual cargoes, while A.V. is used more
    for valuable goods.

34
  • The main surcharges in liner freight includes
  • Bunker adjustment factor (BAF)
  • Heavy lift additional
  • Long length surcharge
  • Direct additional
  • Transshipment surcharge
  • Port surcharge
  • Port congestion surcharge
  • Optional fees
  • Alternation of destination surcharge
  • Deviation surcharge.

35
  • In addition to the above-mentioned surcharges,
    ice surcharge, cleaning tank surcharge, currency
    adjustment factor, fumigation surcharge etc. are
    sometimes included.

36
  • Example
  • A company exports 15 cartons of diesel
    engines, the total gross weight is 5.65 M/T, and
    total volume is 10.676 m3, the lot is shipped
    from Qingdao to Sultan port, transported in H.K..
    How much is the freight?

37
  • In Goods Levels, diesel engines are in level 10,
    and should be calculated with W/M
  • According to the liner freight tariff,
    the freight is USD 22 per freight ton from
    Qingdao to H.K.. The transport fees in H.K. are
    USD 13.
  • According to the liner freight
    tariff, the freight is USD 95 per freight ton
    from H.K. to Sultan.

38
  • Finally, it is found that Port Congestion
    Surcharge would be collected in Sultan port, and
    the rate is 10.
  • As measure ton for the lot is 10.676
    freight ton, while weight ton is 5.65 freight
    ton, the former one is bigger and should be
    selected.

39
  • The freight per freight ton should be
  • USD (22139595x10)USD 139.5
  • The total freight
  • USD 139.5 X10.676USD 1489.302

40
  • Voyage Charter Freight
  • ? according to rate of freight
  • Freight per unit
  • Intaken quantity or delivered quantity
  • ? lump-sum freight

41
  • The freight may be stipulated in the charter
    party as follows
  • ?Freight can be paid in advance
  • ?Freight can be paid after the goods have been
    arrived at the port of destination
  • ?Part of freight is paid in advance, the rest
    of which is paid after the goods have arrived at
    the port of destination.

42
  • Before the charter pays off freight and other
    charges, the ship owner is entitled to refuse to
    deliver the goods, this kind of right is called
    lien.

43
  • There are 4 methods to be used to stipulated the
    expenses of loading unloading
  • ? gross terms/ liner terms/ berth terms
  • The ship owner bears gross terms
  • ? free out, F. O. The ship owner is free
  • ? free in, F. I. The ship owner is free
  • ? free in and out, F.I.O.

44
  • ? free in and out, F.I.O. The ship owner is free
    in and out.
  • When adopting this method , the interested
    parties should indicate who will bear the
    expenses of stowing and trimming. If they agree
    that the charter party shall be responsible for
    them, the interested parties shall stipulate
    ship owner is free in and out, stowed, trimmed(
    F.I.O.S.T).

45
  • The main terms in the charter party include the
    interested parties, name of the ship, description
    and quantity of the shipments, time of
    chartering, freight, loading and unloading
    expenses, time limit of loading and unloading,
    demurrage and dispatch money.

46
  • The time of loading and unloading will affect the
    turn-over rate of the ship, and thus, will affect
    the interest of the ship owner. Therefore it is
    the main clause specified in the charter party.

47
  • Demurrage (???)
  • During the time limit of loading and unloading,
    in case the charter party does not finish the
    work of loading and unloading, in order to
    compensate the ship owner for his losses, the
    charter party should pay certain amount of fine
    for the exceeding time, this is the so-called
    demurrage.

48
  • dispatch money (???)
  • During the time limit of loading and unloading,
    in case the carrier finishes the work of loading
    and unloading ahead of schedule, then the ship
    owner shall pay certain amount of bonus to the
    charter party, this is called the dispatch money.

49
  • dispatch money demurrage x ½

50
  • Shipping Documents
  • Shipping documents indicate that the goods
    have been loaded on board the vessel or have been
    delivered into the custody of the carrier. In
    constructive delivery, shipping documents are the
    main function for the seller to prove that he has
    fulfilled the duty of delivery, as well as for
    the buyer to pay the purchase price.

51
  • Ocean Bill of lading
  • the document for sea transport is called B/L,
    which is a receipt from the shipping company,
    giving details of a particular shipment.
  • The B/L drawn by the shipping company is the
    shipping contract between the carrier and the
    consignor. The rights and obligations of the
    carrier and the consignor are based on the B/L
    drawn by the shipping company.
  • Bill of lading, means a document which evidences
    a contract of carriage by sea and the taking over
    or loading of the goods by the carrier, and by
    which the carrier undertakes to deliver the goods
    against surrender of the document. A provision in
    the document that the goods are to be delivered
    to the order of the document. A provision in the
    document that the goods are to be delivered to
    the order of a named person, or to order, or to
    bearer, constitutes such an undertaking. (Hamburg
    Rules)

52
  • Roles of B/L
  • ?receipt for goods (????)
  • ?document of title (????)
  • ?evidence of the contract of carriage
  • (??????)

53
  • receipt for goods
  • B/L is issued by the ship owner or his agent
    evidencing the receipt of the goods mentioned in
    B/L.

54
  • document of title
  • Any lawful holder of B/L may take the delivery
    of the goods from the shipping company against
    B/L, or transfer the title to the goods by
    transferring the B/L from the bank before the
    arrival of the shipment.

55
  • evidence of the contract of carriage
  • The rights and obligations of the two parties
    are listed on the B/L.

56
  • Kinds of B/L
  • ? According to whether the goods have been loaded
    on board the vessel, the B/L is divided into
  • Shipped B/L (also called on board B/L) and
  • Received for shipment B/L (????).
  • An on board B/L evidences that the
    goods have been loaded on board a certain
    steamer. In general trade practices, only the
    shipped on board B/L is accepted by banks for
    payment under a letter of credit. The seller is
    responsible to offer on board B/L.

57
  • A received for shipment B/L is the evidence given
    by the ship owner to indicate that the goods have
    been received for shipment but have not been
    actually loaded on a particular ship yet.
  • It is therefore uncertain whether the goods
    would be shipped or loaded on board a vessel
    within a short period of time.

58
  • ? According to whether there are notes on the
    bill of loading, it falls into two kinds clean
    B/L(????) and unclean B/L(?????).
  • A clean B/L shows that the goods have been
    shipped on board a vessel in apparent good order
    or condition.
  • Unclean B/L are generally marked insufficiently
    packed, carton old and stained, packed in
    damaged condition etc.

59
  • A clean B/L is issued to the shipper when the
    goods do not have any exterior defects at the
    port of shipment. Actually on every B/L, there
    are words shipped in apparent good order and
    condition. The carrier will not modify this
    statement if the goods are in good order,
    therefore making the bill of lading clean. The
    carrier undertakes full liability for the goods
    and will carry and deliver them in the same good
    order as he received them. The carrier will be
    liable if the goods are found damaged.

60
  • Not all bills of lading which are noted are
    unclean bills of lading. The following kinds are
    not regarded as unclean bills of lading.
  • ?The notes do not indicate clearly that the goods
    or packing are unsatisfactory , e.g., old
    packing or old carton etc.
  • ?The purpose of the note is to emphasize that the
    carrier shall not be responsible for the risks
    resulting from the quality of the goods or
    packing.

61
  • ? According to whether the B/L is transferable,
    it is divided into 3 kinds
  • straight B/L (????),
  • bearer B/L (?????),
  • order B/L (????).

62
  • A straight B/L is made out so that only the named
    consignee at the destination is entitled to take
    delivery of the goods under the bill.
  • The consignee is designated the shipper. The
    carrier has to hand over the cargo to the named
    consignee, not to any third party in possession
    of the bill. This kind bill of lading is not
    transferable. The shipper cannot pass the bill to
    a third party by endorsement. So the bill is of
    very restricted application. When the goods are
    shipped on a non-commercial basis, such as
    samples or exhibits, or extremely valuable goods,
    a straight bill of lading is generally issued.

63
  • A bearer B/L is also called open B/L or blank
    bill of lading. It refers to the bill in which
    the name of a definite consignee is not
    mentioned. There usually appear in the box of
    consignee words like to bearer and the holder
    of the B/L can take delivery of the goods against
    the surrender of B/L.
  • Open B/L is rarely used in international trade

64
  • An order bill of lading indicates that the bill
    is made out to the order of any person named in
    such a bill. This kind of bill may be transferred
    after endorsement. When the bill is made out to
    order of shipper it is necessary for the shipper
    to endorse the bill either in blank or in full,
    to the consignee to whom he wishes the delivery
    of the goods is to be made. If the shipper does
    not endorse such a bill, he reserves the right to
    dispose of the goods to himself. Often used in
    trade.

65
Case Risk by 1/3 Blank B/L
  • A foreign trade corporation A applied to Bank B
    for the issuance of a Credit in favor of C, which
    stipulated that 1/3 original bill of lading made
    out to order should be posted by C himself to the
    Applicant within two days after the cargo is
    loaded. Beneficiary C acted in accordance with
    that and presented the other two copies of the
    original bill of lading together with other
    documents under the Credit for negotiation. The
    Issuing bank made payment as the documents and
    the Credit were consistent with each other, and
    later found, when requesting the payment from
    Corp.A, that A had disappeared after picking up
    the goods with the 1/3 original bill of lading.

66
  • ? According to the modes of transport, it can be
    divided into
  • direct B/L (????),
  • transshipment B/L (????),
  • through bill of lading (????).

67
  • Direct B/L
  • is evidence that the goods are shipped and
    carried by the steamer and transported from the
    port of loading direct to the port of destination
    without transshipment during the voyage. The
    buyer usually prefers such a B/L, because the
    possible cargo damage or losses is usually caused
    by transshipment.

68
  • Transshipment B/L
  • is a document showing that when there is no
    direct service between two ports, the goods are
    transited by another steamer during the voyage,
    generally at the port of transshipment mentioned
    in the B/L , to the port of destination where an
    ocean-going liner does not call during its
    voyage.

69
  • Through bill of lading
  • is issued when the entire voyage involves more
    than one carrier. The first carrier issues the
    bill and collects the freight for the entire
    voyage, and arranges transshipment and forwarding
    of the goods at the intermediate port. The
    shipper prefers this kind of B/L because of the
    trouble having been saved to deal with other
    carriers by himself.

70
  • ? According to modes of operation and
    transportation, it can be divided into
  • liner B/L (????),
  • charter party B/L (????)
  • ? According to the validity, it can be divided
    into
  • original B/L (????)
  • copy B/L (????) only for reference

71
  • ? According to the time for payment of freight,
    it can be divided into
  • Freight prepaid B/L (????) means that all the
    freight is paid by the consignor when the B/L is
    issued by the carrier.
  • Freight to be collected B/L (????) refers to the
    B/L on which freight payable at destination is
    indicated.

72
  • ? According to the contents of the B/L, it can be
    divided into Long Form B/L and short form B/L.
  • A Long Form B/L (????) refers to the bill of
    lading on the back of which all the detailed
    terms and conditions about the rights and
    obligations of the carrier and the consignor are
    listed as an integral part of the bill.
  • A short form B/L (????) is a document which omits
    the terms and conditions on the back of the B/L.

73
  • Other types of B/L
  • Stale B/L (????) A stale bill of lading is a
    bill when it is presented to the consignee or
    bank later than a specified time after issuance.
    In order to safeguard the interests of its
    principal, the bank usually refuses to accept a
    stale B/L, because the delay in the presentation
    of the B/L might lead to additional costs, such
    as warehousing expenses etc.

74
  • On Deck B/L (????). An on deck bill is issued
    when the goods are stowed on deck. Some cargoes,
    such as inflammable goods, explosive goods and
    poisonous goods, cargoes in large volume or of
    backward sizes, live cattle, plants, etc, must be
    loaded on deck.

75
  • Groupage B/L(????) and House B/L (???????) The
    forwarding agent(?????) usually groups together
    particular compatible goods of consignees
    situated usually in the same area, and dispatches
    them as one consignment. After taking over the
    consignment, the ship-owner will issue a groupage
    B/L to the forwarding agent. And then several
    house B/L are issued by the forwarding agent to
    the individual consignors. At the destination,
    the forwarding agents representative or another
    agent will break bulk(????) the consignment and
    distribute the goods, to their representative
    consignees on their production of the house B/L.

76
Case
  • The British seller Glass Fibres and Equipments
    Ltd. signed a contract with the Peruvian buyer
    for equipment of glass fibres factories. The
    Peruvian Bcomo Continental S.A. issued a credit,
    of which the latest date for shipment Dec. 15,
    1976, and Royal Bank of Canada added its
    confirmation to the credit on the beneficiarys
    request. The vessel American Accord arrived at
    the port of shipment on Dec.16. The broker in
    charge of shipment modified the issuing date of
    the bill of lading to Dec.15 so that the date
    could comply with the shipping date stipulated in
    the credit. He also marked the B/L as on Board.

77
  • The buyer found the vessel arriving at the port
    on deferred date and gave notice to the issuing
    bank that the on Board notation of the offered
    shipping document might not comply with the terms
    of the credit. The issuing bank contacted the
    confirming bank and by this reason, Royal bank of
    Canada rejected the documents against which the
    seller requested payment. Then, the seller lodged
    a complaint to court.

78
  • Contents of B/L
  • Every liner company in the world has its own B/L
    form and clauses, but the basic contents are
    stipulated according to the International
    Convention for the Unification of Certain Rules
    of Law Relating to Bill of Lading.
    (????????????????(Hague Rules)(????)

79
  • On the face of the B/L, the following particulars
    are to be noted
  • Consignor / Consignee / Party to be notified /
    Name of the vessel /Ships nationality / Voyage /
    Port of shipment and port of destination /
    Freight
  • Number of the copies of the B/L, date, signature
    of the ship-owner or his agent or capital of the
    steamer.

80
  • Main particulars regarding the goods loaded on
    the steamer
  • description, marks, number of package, weight
    or measurement.
  • Declaration shall be made that the goods have
    been loaded on board in apparent good order and
    should be discharged at the port of destination
    or the port as near as the vessel may safely get
    and be always afloat.

81
  • After one of the original B/L(????) has
    accomplished the formality of taking delivery ,
    the others stand null and void.
  • The consignor, consignee and bearer declare that
    they accept and agree the B/L and its
    stipulations and exclusion clauses printed,
    written or typed on the back of the B/L.

82
  • Clauses on the back of the B/L
  • Obligations and responsibility of the carrier
  • Exceptions
  • Claim and action clauses
  • Duty and obligation of the consignor
  • Transportation clauses for special goods
  • Other clauses.

83
  • Railway Transport
  • Railway transport does not tend to be effected
    by weather conditions , so it is available for
    transportation for almost the whole year. Rail
    way transport is fast, delivery quantity is
    large. It can guarantee the successive transport
    of the goods. Risks of damage to the goods are
    comparatively small.

84
  • According to the stipulations of the
    International Union of Railways (????), the
    International Railway Cargo Through Transport
    Agreement and the International Convention
    Concerning the Carriage of Goods by Rail, the
    goods belong to the export country may be
    transported directly to the place of destination
    as long as the carrier issues a railway bill of
    lading at the place of dispatch.

85
  • The main transport documents are the railway bill
    (????) and its duplicate. The railway bill is the
    transportation contract and binding upon the
    consignee, the consignor and the railway
    department. The railway bill together with the
    goods is transported from the place of dispatch
    to the place of destination and then is delivered
    to the consignee after he has paid off the
    freight and other charges. The consignor may make
    exchange settlement with the bank against the
    duplicate of railway bill.

86
  • Air Transport
  • Air transport is fast and safe, the risk of or
    damage to the goods is reduced to the lowest
    degree. It is not restricted by ground
    conditions. It is especially suitable for
    transporting fresh, live, perishable, seasonable
    goods and samples .

87
  • The airway bill (????) is a document supplied by
    the carrier to the consignor. It is a transport
    contract signed between the consignor and the
    carrier. After the goods have arrived at the
    place of destination, the consignee may take
    delivery of the goods against the advice of
    arrival given by the carrier. The consignor fills
    in this document in triplicate, and one of these
    copies shall be sent with the goods.

88
  • Air transport services are divided into four
    categories
  • ? Airliner transport (scheduled airlines)(??)
    operates on a scheduled service, over a fixed
    airline and between fixed airports.
  • ? Chartered carriers (??)
  • are the hire of an aircraft by a shippers to
    deliver cargoes. They are ideal for carrying
    cargoes of large quantities or carrying cargoes
    of different shippers to the same destination.

89
  • ? Consolidated consignments (consolidation
    transport)(????)
  • mean that a number of individual shipments into
    one consignment and dispatches them on one air
    waybill. A consolidated shipment made by several
    shipments can be dispatched to one common
    destination. Many shippers prefer this kind of
    shipment as the freight rate is lower than that
    of a scheduled airline.
  • ? Air express service ( desk to desk service)
  • (??????)

90
Case
  • An export company received an L/C issued by an
    English bank, requiring them to export a cargo
    lot by air to the London airport. The negotiation
    bank accepted the documents after examination and
    asked the reimbursement from the issuing bank.
    Half month later, they received a cable from the
    issuing bank, saying that they refused to make
    payment. The reason for the refusal was that
    there was no shipped typeface in the Air
    waybill. The issuing bank also pointed out,
    according to the statements made by the buyer,
    the goods had not reached the airport. Please
    tell the whereabouts of the goods.

91
  • The negotiating bank consulted with the export
    company after receiving the cable. Both them
    thought that the refusal of payment was
    groundless. The negotiating bank cabled back
    the Air waybill submitted by the beneficiary
    conformed to the requirement of L/C, and the
    payment should be made immediately. As for the
    goods, you can consult the local airline agency.

92
  • Parcel post transport
  • Parcel post transport is relatively a simple
    method of transportation, the seller fulfills the
    duty of delivery only if he delivers the parcel
    to the post office, pays off the postage, and
    gets the receipt. It includes two kinds regular
    mail/surface parcel post and air mail.

93
  • Road transport
  • The road vehicle, used between countries by
    roads, is a low capacity but very
    versatile(???)unit of transport, very flexible in
    its operation. It has a high distributive ability
    of offering a door-to-door service. Road
    transport is ideal for general merchandise and
    selective bulk cargoes in small quantities.

94
  • Inland waterway transport
  • The inland waterway system is usually linked to
    the seaport and thereby acts as a distributor and
    feeder (??)to the shipping services. In some
    countries, especially underdeveloped countries,
    inland waterways a major form of distribution as
    the road and rail systems are unable to cope or
    nonexistent in many areas.

95
  • Container transport
  • Containers are constructed of metal and of
    standard lengths, mostly ranging from twenty to
    forty feet. The use of containers provides a
    highly efficient form for transport by road, by
    rail and air.

96
  • Features of container transport
  • It offers a door to door service under FCL / FCL
    (????), door to container freight station (CFS)
    service under FCL/LCL(????), CFS to CFS service
    under LCL / LCL(????), or CFS to door service
    under LCL / FCL(????).
  • FCL full container load
  • LCL less than container load
  • CFS container freight station ??????

97
  • Quickly
  • It can handled quickly and easily by
    standardized equipment and can thus saves labor
    and loading and unloading charges.
  • low risk
  • The low risk of cargo damage and pilferage
    enables more favorable cargo premiums to
    obtained, compared with break-bulk cargo
    shipments.

98
  • Less packing
  • is required for containerized consignments.
  • Faster transit
  • coupled with more reliable maritime schedules,
    and ultimately increased service frequency,
    produces savings in warehouse accommodation
    needs, lessen risks of obsolescent stock and
    speed up capital turnover.
  • Container transport falls into two kinds
  • Full container load (FCL)
  • Less than container load (LCL)

99
Modes of Transportation
  • Process of Container Transport
  • Port to port
  • consignor

Port of shipment CY/CFS
Ocean transport
Port of destination CY/CFS
Container yard(?????)
consignee
CFS(??????)
100
Modes of Transportation
  • Door to door
  • Warehouse of factory
  • of the consignor

????
Inland transport
Port of shipment CY
Ocean transport
Port of destination CY
Warehouse or factory of the consignee
Inland transport
Carrier takes delivery of the container at inland
depot consignor
Inland transport
Port of shipment CY/CFS
Inland depot
Port of destination CY/CFS
???? Ocean transport
Inland transport
Inland depot
consignee
101
  • Land Bridge Transport
  • Land bridge transport is a mode of transport that
    connects the ocean transport on the two sides of
    the land by the railway which runs across the
    continent.
  • Land bridge transport uses the container as a
    medium, so it has all advantage of container
    transport.

102
  • There are two main land bridges in the world
  • American land bridge
  • New European Asian land bridge.
  • The advantages of land bridge transport are
    obvious
  • Make exchange settlement earlier. As soon as the
    container is delivered, the seller may make
    exchange settlement against combined transport
    documents
  • The formality is simple. All that the consignor
    should do is to apply for consignment and the
    general carrier will be responsible for arranging
    and transporting the goods from the place of
    delivery to the place of destination.

103
  • International Multi-modal Transport
  • International multi-modal transport
    (international combined transport) means the
    carriage of cargo by at least two modes of
    transport on the basis of a multi-modal transport
    contract from a place at which the cargos are
    collected in one country to a place designated
    for delivery in another country. Although
    different modes of transport are combined, only
    one multi-modal transport operator is responsible
    for taking the cargo from the consignor and
    delivering them to the consignee. Multi-modal
    transport document is the only one document used.

104
  • The basic conditions of international multi-modal
    transport are
  • Transport documents, i.e., combined transport
    documents shall cover the whole journey
  • It includes two or more different modes of
    successive transportation
  • It shall be international transportation
  • The multi-modal transport operator
    (MTO)(???????)shall be responsible for the whole
    journey
  • The whole journey shall use a single factor
    rate.(???????)
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