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International Logistics

International Logistics

International Logistics

Let’s learn more about International Logistics. Logistics is a total systems approach in exports or imports management and applies to the timely movement or flow of materials/products from the sources of supply to the point of manufacture, assembly, or distribution.

It involves two categories of operations.

ICD / CFS International Logistics

It was difficult for importers or exporters based in the hinterland, to come to a gateway port for clearance of imported or export goods. The development of multi-modal transport system with its stress on greater facilitation to importers/exporters, a need was felt to develop Inland Container Depots (ICDs) or Container Freight Stations (CFSs). These were to essentially function like a dry port.

An Inland Container Depot / Container Freight Station is a common user facility with public authority status equipped with fixed installations and offering services for handling and temporary storage of import/export laden and empty containers carried under customs control and with Customs and other agencies competent to clear goods for home use, warehousing, temporary admissions, re-export, temporary storage for onward transit and outright export.

Transshipment of cargo can also take place from such stations. The primary functions of ICD/CFS may be summed up as under.

International Commercial Terms (Incoterm)

Incoterms are a set of simple three letter codes which represent the different ways international shipments may be organized. They allow sellers and buyers from different cultures and legal systems to decide at what point the ownership and the obligation to pay for freight, insurance and customs costs transfer from one to the other.

Incoterms were introduced in 1936 and they have been updated six times to reflect the developments in international trade. The latest revisions are sometimes referred to as Incoterms 2000. The Incoterms informs the buyer what is included in the purchase price since the costs of transportation, insurance and customs are split between the buying and the selling parties. The Incoterms determine the mutual responsibilities between the buyer and the seller in the contract and does not indicate the distribution of responsibilities among the consignor, the carrier and the consignee.

Incoterms are invaluable and a cost-saving tool. The exporter and the importer need not undergo a lengthy negotiation about the conditions of each transaction. Once they have agreed on a commercial term as CIF, they can sell and buy the goods without discussing who will be responsible for the freight, cargo insurance and other costs and risks.

Representation of Incoterms – There are thirteen Incoterms that are used by businesses and are used in four different areas.

Group E: used where the seller does not want to arrange transport.

Group F: used where the seller can arrange some transport within his/her own country.

Group C: used where the seller can arrange and pay for most of the freight charges up to the foreign country.

Arrival (Group D): used where the seller can pay for most of the delivery charges to the destination country

Types of Export Documents

In exports, it is quite common for cargos to require a variety of certificates before they are permitted to be imported into the country of destination. The purpose of a certificate is to provide pre-shipment confirmation of the status of a particular aspect (health, value, condition, origin, etc.) of a specific cargo.

Without these certificates, the cargo will not be permitted to be imported and so certificates play a very important role in the export process and one need to ensure that.

It is pointless in having a certificate, which confirms that the cargo does not comply with the import requirements; such cargo will simply not be permitted to be imported. It is important part of International Logistics.

The types of certificates that one may be required to obtain, include.

Cargo Insurance

The term cargo insurance, popularly known as marine insurance, applies to all modes of transportation. The need for export (or import) cargo insurance often differs from exporter to exporter (or importer to importer) and from consignment to consignment.

Cargo insurance provides coverage against physical damage or loss of goods during shipping, whether by land, sea or air. Because of the many dangers inherent in shipping, most individuals and businesses choose to insure their goods while they are in transit even when the insurance is not mandatory in trade term.

Depending on the international commercial terms, either the seller (the exporter) or the buyer (the importer) is responsible for insuring the cargo. The seller is obligated to insure the cargo in the CIF and CIP terms. The seller may opt not to insure the cargo at his/her own risks in the DDU and DDP terms.

The trade terms DDU and DDP are often used in the turnkey projects where the amount at stake is large. In practice, the seller usually insures the cargo in the DDU and DDP terms.

Important aspects of Insurance are as follows.

When the exporter delivers the goods, the insurable interest in such goods transfers at the point and time where the risk shifts from the exporter to the importer, as determined by the international commercial terms used.

The time the insurable interest transfers from the exporter to the importer is, technically, the time the exporter endorses the specific policy or the insurance certificate to the importer, as the case may be.

The insurance certificate bears the open policy number of the exporter and, like in a specific policy, the claim agent at port of destination and that claim payable at destination is also indicated. It is important part of International Logistics.

The importer relies on the specific policy or the insurance certificate and the supporting claims documents as proof that the goods have been insured and that he/she has the insurable interest in the goods when filing for insurance claims against loss or damage. It is important part of International Logistics.

In the trade terms DDU and DDP, the exporter is responsible for the risks up to the delivery of goods to the final point at destination (the project site or importer’s premises usually), as such the insurable interest in the goods does not transfer from the exporter to the importer in the shipment. It is important part of International Logistics.

Some countries may require that the import and/or export shipments be insured with their national insurance companies.

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