The importance of accurate cargo declaration

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We refer to the below article of a recent incident of a fire explosion at a depot near Port of Chittagong. The importance of declaring correct cargo details cannot be stressed enough.

Accurate declaration at point of booking to shipping lines as well as to customs at time of clearing on import and export, internationally and locally in South Africa, is a core non-negotiable and essential element to any efficient supply chain process.

SCT have a very experienced team that ensure upmost attention to every declaration. Our team can also assist with a full customs consultancy service covering amongst other services, tariff determinations, tariff rulings, bond and rebate store applications, DTI applications, importer, and exporter registrations etc.

For more information, please contact your local SCT Representative.

Fire rips through container depot, kills 49

06 Jun 2022 – by Eugene Goddard

Fire rips through container depot, kills 49

Scorched containers continued smouldering into Sunday after Saturday’s chemical fire explosion at a depot near the Port of Chittagong.

Source: Kamruzzaman Nabil via Twitter.

Serious questions about suspected cargo misdeclaration and inadequate fire-fighting capacity are being asked this morning after a chemical blaze ripped through a container depot in Bangladesh, killing 49 people and seriously injuring more than 300. Early indications are that Saturday night’s fire at the Port of Chittagong was caused by hydrogen peroxide igniting inside a container.

The fire rapidly spread to other containers that purportedly also contained volatile cargo, causing a ripple effect of eruptions, finally setting off a massive explosion, shaking nearby buildings and shattering windows. Firefighters rushing to the BM Container Depot 40 kilometres from the port, soon found themselves engulfed in what seems to have been an uncontrollable blaze, losing nine of their own.

Now, with authorities still looking for people unaccounted for and the death toll expected to rise even further, officials are beginning to look for causes that may have led to the catastrophe.

One of them is Purnachandra Mutsuddi, assistant director of the Chittagong fire station. Mutsuddi said firefighters were not properly prepared for fighting a chemical fire like Saturday’s, because of non-disclosure by depot officials.

The depot, a joint venture run by a Dutch-Bangladeshi company, allegedly failed to reveal the amount and types of dangerous cargo kept at the facility. Because of the suspected non-disclosure, firefighters had no idea how serious the situation was when they arrived, Mutsuddi stressed.

Had proper procedures been followed, the station’s response would have been different and handled according to proper methods to fight a chemical blaze. He told news agency AFP that if more had been known about the depot and its dangerous cargo, loss of life could have been a lot less.

Saturday’s fire again raises the spectre of dangerous goods misdeclaration and the potential consequences of chemical cargo fires. Volatile cargo requires proper declaration according to Institute Cargo Clauses (ICC), insurance requirements laid down by International Maritime Organization. Unfortunately, shippers and agents often knowingly declare cargo incorrectly to avoid hefty ICC insurance rates driving up freight costs.

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