Year: 2026 Language: English Author: Britannia P&I Club Genre: Guidance Notes Publisher: Britannia P&I Club Edition: April, 2026 Format: PDF Quality: eBook Pages count: 14 Description: Loss Prevention Guidance | General understanding of Dangerous Goods in Containers When crew confirm a correct UN (United Nations) number is declared, matching placards are affixed, and the container is stowed according to the printed bay plan, it is easy to assume that cargo has been properly declared, and all risks have been adequately managed. However, this assumption is often flawed and relying on paper compliance alone does not guarantee accuracy in practice. This is an issue that has becoming even more prevalent and impactful with mis-declared cargoes. In practice, the most dangerous container on board is often not the one declared as hazardous, but those that are mis-declared or undeclared. When a cargo is incorrectly declared, the cargoes inside the containers may be packed using unsuitable materials, incompatible items may be placed together, wrong placards affixed and the containers loaded without regard to the segregation and compatibility requirements set out by the International Maritime Dangerous Goods Code (IMDG Code).
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Loss Prevention Guidance
Language: English
Author: Britannia P&I Club
Genre: Guidance Notes
Publisher: Britannia P&I Club
Edition: April, 2026
Format: PDF
Quality: eBook
Pages count: 14
Description: Loss Prevention Guidance | General understanding of Dangerous Goods in Containers
When crew confirm a correct UN (United Nations) number is declared, matching placards are affixed, and the container is stowed according to the printed bay plan, it is easy to assume that cargo has been properly declared, and all risks have been adequately managed. However, this assumption is often flawed and relying on paper compliance alone does not guarantee accuracy in practice. This is an issue that has becoming even more prevalent and impactful with mis-declared cargoes.
In practice, the most dangerous container on board is often not the one declared as hazardous, but those that are mis-declared or undeclared. When a cargo is incorrectly declared, the cargoes inside the containers may be packed using unsuitable materials, incompatible items may be placed together, wrong placards affixed and the containers loaded without regard to the segregation and compatibility requirements set out by the International Maritime Dangerous Goods Code (IMDG Code).
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Dangerous Goods in Containers.pdf
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