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==External links==
==External links==
*[http://www.olympicvessels.com/ Olympic Vessel's free gate to the maritime markets]: free access to all the maritime markets and maritime news.
*[http://www.olympicvessels.com/ (www.olympicvessels.com/Olympic Vessel's free gate to the maritime markets]: free access to all the maritime markets and maritime news.


*[http://cargolaw.com/gallery.html The Gallery of Transport Loss -- Photos & Lessons of Disaster]
*[http://cargolaw.com/gallery.html The Gallery of Transport Loss -- Photos & Lessons of Disaster]

Revision as of 16:33, 2 May 2007

Cargo is a term used to denote goods or produce being transported generally for commercial gain, usually on a ship, plane, train, van or truck. Nowadays containers are used in all intermodal long-haul cargo transport.

Marine Cargo Types

There is a wide range of marine cargoes at seaport terminals operated. The primary types are these:

  • Project cargoes and heavy lift cargoes may include items such as manufacturing equipment, factory components, power equipment such as generators and wind mills, military equipment or almost any other oversized or overweight cargo too big or too heavy to fit into a container.
  • Break bulk cargo is typically material stacked on wooden pallets and lifted into and out of the hold of a vessel by cranes on the dock or aboard the ship itself. The volume of break bulk cargo has declined dramatically worldwide as containerization has grown.
  • Bulk Cargoes, such as salt, oil, tallow and scrap metal, are usually defined as commodities that are neither on pallets nor in containers, and which are not handled as individual pieces, the way heavy-lift and project cargoes are. Alumina, grain, gypsum, logs and wood chips, for instance, are bulk cargoes.

See also