Hapag-Lloyd Sees Uptick of Incorrectly Declared Dangerous Goods

February 8, 2016

Year-on-year increase of 65 percent; more than 4,300 cases worldwide

Container shipper Hapag-Lloyd said it registered considerably more incorrectly declared dangerous goods last year, compared to 2014. The Watchdog program developed jointly by Hapag-Lloyd’s IT and dangerous goods experts – a special safety software that continuously checks cargo data to identify anything conspicuous identified 4,314 incorrectly declared dangerous goods cases last year. This is an increase of 65 percent on the previous year’s figure of 2,620 cases. 
Photo: Hapag-Lloyd
Photo: Hapag-Lloyd
Hapag-Lloyd’s dangerous goods experts looked into more than 236,000 suspicious cases picked up by the safety software in 2015 (2014: more than 162,000) – that’s equivalent to an increase of approximately 46 percent. Dangerous goods that are declared imprecisely, incorrectly or not at all have the potential to pose a major risk to crews, ships, other cargo and the environment. 
For Ken Rohlmann, head of the dangerous goods department at Hapag-Lloyd, there are two reasons behind the sharp increase: “Firstly, the volume of cargo shipped by Hapag-Lloyd increased considerably last year due to the company’s merger with CSAV’s container business. Secondly, there was a sharp rise in Watchdog findings following the devastating dangerous goods explosion in the port of Tianjin in mid-August.”
Many ports drastically tightened their dangerous goods guidelines in the wake of the incident or even prohibited dangerous goods from being processed at all. 
Hapag-Lloyd said its Watchdog is considered to be a leading software in the shipping industry, and has been subject to a lot of interest from customs and port authorities, police, as well as from other shipping companies. Rohlmann said, “With the software, our industry can considerably reduce the risk posed to crews, ships, cargo and the environment.”
After all, it’s in the interests of everyone involved that the entire shipping system should be made safer, emphasized the dangerous goods expert.

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