Air & Sea Cargo Terminology PDF

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Freight management dictionary

Thousands of words, terms, definitions and abbreviations used in the Freight


management and Logistics industry.
Contents

0-9 ................................................................................................................................................. 2
A ...................................................................................................................................................... 3
B ...................................................................................................................................................... 9
C .................................................................................................................................................... 16
D.................................................................................................................................................... 31
E .................................................................................................................................................... 38
F .................................................................................................................................................... 43
G .................................................................................................................................................... 49
H.................................................................................................................................................... 52
I ..................................................................................................................................................... 54
J ..................................................................................................................................................... 60
K .................................................................................................................................................... 61
L .................................................................................................................................................... 62
M ................................................................................................................................................... 67
N.................................................................................................................................................... 71
O.................................................................................................................................................... 73
P .................................................................................................................................................... 77
Q.................................................................................................................................................... 85
R .................................................................................................................................................... 87
S .................................................................................................................................................... 92
T .................................................................................................................................................. 103
U .................................................................................................................................................. 108
V/W........................................................................................................................................... 110
X .................................................................................................................................................. 114
Y .................................................................................................................................................. 115
Z .................................................................................................................................................. 116

0-9
24/7
3PL (Third-Party Logistics
Provider)
4PL (Fourth-Party Logistics
Provider)

Around-the-clock access, every day of the week


An organization that manages and executes a particular logistics
function, using its own assets and resources, on behalf of
another company.
The term "4PL" was introduced into the supply chain to convey
that deep informational technology skills and deeper analytical
skills were required to achieve supply chain leadership. But the
true evolution of the 4PL term is better defined in context of the
global marketplace where outsourced logistics creates more of a
partnership critical to success than a supplier/customer
relationship. Companies in the global marketplace are finding
that supply chain engineered logistics is not a commodity, and
understand it is a vital means to boost their cost savings,
enhancing their cash flow and improving servicing levels for
getting their products to market.

A
A/C
A/M
A/N
A/or
A/P
A/R
A/S
A/S
AA
AAR
ABC
ABC-Classification

For account of
Above Mention
Above Noted
And/or
Account paid
All risks insurance
Aftersight
Alongside
Always afloat
Against all risks
Activity Based Costing
The classification of inventory, after ABC analysis, into three
basic groups for the purpose of stock control and planning. Active
Inventory
ABC-Analysis
Analysis of an activity according to the so called 80/20-rule, i.e.
that in every series of elements a small element is responsible
for a large part of the effect (Pareto's principle). 80/20 is a
description of a ratio that could just as well be 90/10 or 70/30.
An ABC-analysis can be made of products, customers, suppliers
and means a division of the studied activity into a number of
groups, often 3: A, B and C. The criteria which are used for
division into groups vary partly according to what is to be
analysed, e.g. products, customers or suppliers, and partly
according to what sort of activity is to be analysed. The sales
volume is often used as a basis for such a division. The sales
volume includes value, sales and contribution. However other
division criteria that also can be used are, for example,
customers' growth potential, the strategic importance of a
product or supplier etc.
Absorption
Acceptance by the carrier of a portion of a joint rate or charge
which is less than the amount which it would receive for the
service in the absence of such joint rate or charge.
AC
Account current
ACC
Acceptance: accepted
ACC. COP
According to the custom of the port
Acceptance of Goods
The process of receiving a consignment from a consignor, usually
against the issue of a receipt. As from this moment and on this
place the carrier's responsibility for the consignment begins.
ACEP
See: Approved Continuous Examination Program
Acknowledgement of receipt A notification relating to the receipt of e.g. goods, messages and
documents.
Active Inventory
Covers raw material, work in progress, finished products that will
be used or sold within a given period without extra cost or loss.
This term does not cover the so-called reserve inventory. See
also: cycle stock.
Activity Based Costing (ABC) ABC seeks to relate all relevant revenue and costs to the value
adding activities performed in the supply chain. Revenue and
costs are applied to a relevant activity, independent of when and
where they occur; they are not allocated to an organisational
budget unit.
Actual Demand
Customers orders and often also the allocation of items,
ingredients and/or raw materials to production or distribution.
Actual Voyage Number
A code for identification purposes of the voyage and vessel which

actually transports the container/cargo.


Actual cash value
After date
Ad valorem: according to value
The value attributed to products and services as the result of a
particular process (e.g. production process, storage, transport).
Added Value Services
Services which are often unique to a specific customer and which
represent additional facets to the organisation's basic offer.
Additional Costs
Costs for a resource that is used (or procured) e.g. for a certain
operation but which would not occur if there was no such
operation.
Aditional Ordering Costs
Consist of the additional costs which occur when an order is
placed for input into inventory, i.e. costs which would not have
arisen if the order had not been placed. The additional ordering
costs consist e.g. of tender invitations, order processing,
telephone, postage and a fixed part of the transportation cost.
The additional ordering costs of inventory replenishment orders
within own production consist of administration costs for starting
up the production, setup costs for setting up (engaging) the
factory for the actual order, running-?in costs because of lower
production rate and higher scrap, levels when starting up a batch
production.
Aditional Revenue
Revenue received for a certain activity which one would not have
been obtained if the activity had not been carried out.
Additional Shipping Costs
The additional cost for an extra shipment of goods.
Add-on
...tariff (also proportional rate or arbitrary (in USA)
ADP
Automated data processing
ADR
European Agreement concerning the international carriage of
dangerous goods by road
Advance Arrangement
An agreement between the shipper and the carrier, concerning
contacts between those parties prior to tendering the
consignment.
Advance Notification of
The notification to a receiving warehouse, of an impending
Delivery (AND)
delivery. The message will be transmitted using EDI and give
such details as consignment note number, order number,
quantity and product description, delivery date and time.
Advanced Amount
Cash or cash equivalents expressed in a monetary amount given
to a driver to cover expenses during a trip.
Advanced Charge
A charge paid by a carrier to an agent or to another carrier,
which the delivering carrier then collects from the consignee.
Such charges are usually for agents' forwarding fees and
incidental expenses paid out of pocket for account of the
shipment by an agent or other carrier (air cargo).
Advanced Interline
An interline carrier that picks up cargo from the shipper and
delivers it to another carrier for shipment to the consignee.
Advice Note
A written piece of information e.g. about the status of the goods.
Advisory committee for
See Strategic Programme for Innovation and Technology
Innovation & Tech transfer
Transfer
AETR
European Agreement concerning the work of crews of vehicles
engaged in international road transport
AFRA
Average freight rate assessment
Aft
At, near or towards the stern or rear of a vessel or an aircraft.
Aftermarket Parts Distribution The management, distribution, and delivery of aftermarket parts
through dedicated logistics centers, and specialized
transportation services.
ACV
AD (a/d)
ad val.
Added Value

Agcy
Agency fee
Agents

Aggregate Inventory
Aggregate Inventory
Management

Agt.
AGV
AGWT
AIM
Allocated Stock
Allocation
Allotment

All-Time Order

All-Time Requirement

All-Time Stock

Amidships
AMT
Annual Agreement

Anticipation Stock

AO
AOC

Agency
Fee payable by a ship-owner or ship operator to a port agent.
Intelligent software that can be used in an exchange or auction
to monitor prices and conditions on behalf of buyer and supplier,
and in some cases to automatically execute trades.
The inventory for any group of items or products, involving
multiple stock-keeping units. Synonym: Aggregate Stock.
The size of many inventories requires that they be broken down
into groupings for the purpose of control. Aggregated inventory
is the further collection of these groupings into a single entity to
enable the establishment of operating policies, key performance
indicators, targets and reports. Aggregate Inventory
Management enables such things as the overall level of inventory
desired to be established and then appropriate controls
implemented to ensure that individual operating decisions
achieve that goal, at optimum cost.
Agent
Automated Guided Vehicle
Actual gross weight
See Automatic Identification Manufacturers.
A part that has been reserved, but not yet withdrawn or issued
from stock, and is thus not available for other purposes.
The process of assigning activities, costs or facilities e.g. space to
a certain organizational units.
A share of the capacity of a means of transport assigned to a
certain party, e.g. a carrier or an agent, for the purpose of the
booking of cargo for a specific voyage.
The last order for a particular product in the last phase of its life
cycle. This order is of such a size that the stock provided will
satisfy all expected future demand (see all time requirement
below) for the product concerned. Sometimes known as a life of
type order.
The total requirement for a particular product to be expected in
the future. Normally used for products in the last phase of their
life cycles, when production is (nearly) stopped.
The stock resulting from the assessment of an all-time
requirement and delivery of an all-time order. If necessary,
controls can be set for such stock to avoid consumption of items
for reasons over and above those for which usage was predicted.
At or in the middle of a vessel.
Air Mail Transfer
The period of validity relating to delivery and payment terms,
approximate annual quantities per part, prices, blanket order
procedure and invoicing. Annual agreements normally cover
standard products which are not produced within the company.
They are instead normal assortment products from different
suppliers. The products are often cheap and irregularly bought in
small quantities.
Inventory held in order to be able to: Satisfy a demand with
seasonal fluctuations with a production level that does not
fluctuate at all or that varies to a lesser extent than the demand.
Cope with erratic production or deficiencies in production
capacity.
Account of
Agent of Change

APERAK

Definition: Application error and acknowledgement message.

The function of this message is:

a) To inform a message issuer that his message has been


received by the addressee's application and has been rejected
due to errors encountered during its processing in the
application.

b) To acknowledge to a message issuer the receipt of his


message by the addressee's application.
Apparel
A vessel's outfit, such as rigging, anchor and life boats. The term
used in distribution/transport of clothing for a single piece of
clothing, a garment.
Application service provider
An online outsourcer or hosting service for applications, letting
Net market makers rent instead of buying applications and
services such as auctions, exchanges and catalog aggregation.
Many application vendors are moving to a hosting model, but
ASPs are often application-agnostic, plugging a feature of one
application into a marketplace when appropriate and using
another feature from another vendor elsewhere.
Approved Continuous
An agreement between the owners of the equipment and the
Examination Program (ACEP) responsible governmental body to allow continuous examination
of the equipment (e.g. containers).
Approx.
Approximately
Apron
See Platform.
APRYCLEE
A network of national information centers of information
technologies.
Area Code
A code for the area where a container is situated.
Area of Repair
Geographical area where a container is under repair.
Area Off Hire Lease
Geographical area where a leased container becomes off hire.
Area Off Hire Sublease
Geographical area where a subleased container becomes off hire.
Area On Hire Lease
Geographical area where a leased container becomes on hire.
Area On Hire Sublease
Geographical area where a subleased container becomes on hire.
Arr.
Arrival
Arrd.
Arrived
Arrival Notice
A notice sent by a carrier to a nominated notify party advising of
the arrival of a certain shipment.
Articles Dangereux de Route A European agreement concerning the international carriage of
(ADR)
dangerous goods by road.
AS/RS
Automatic Storage/Retrieval System
ASAP
As soon as possible
Ass.
Associate
Assembly
The stage of production in which components are put together
into an end product appropriate to the process concerned.
Asset Management
A service designed to increase return on investment by
managing, purchasing, and sustaining assets.
Asset Rationalization
A comparative analysis of transportation and distribution assets

Assignment
Assortiment Structure

ATA
ATD
ATP
Atty
Auctions

Audit

Auth.
Authentication
Authorisation levels

Authorization

Auto Container
Automatic Guided Vehicles
(AGV)
Automatic Identification

Automatic Identification
Manufacturers (AIM)
Aux.
Availability

Available Stock
Available to Promise (ATP)

AWB
Average

and optimal supply chain components.


The transfer of certain rights from one party to another.
Structures over the product assortment in the company. It
includes both the assortment range, i.e. the number of different
product types, and the assortment variety, i.e. the number of
different designs within every product type.
Actual rime of arrival
Actual time of departure
Agreement of the International Carriage of Perishable Foodstuffs
Attorney
Let multiple buyers bid competitively for products from individual
suppliers. Suitable for hard-to-move goods such as used capital
equipment (forklifts) and surplus or excess inventory. Prices only
move up, but buyers can buy below list prices while sellers sell
for more than a liquidator pays. Auctions are becoming a feature
of many Net markets, but some use auctions as their primary
market mechanism. Examples: AdAuction, TradeOut.com (used
equipment).
A methodical examination and review of a situation or condition
(as within a business enterprise) concluding with a detailed
report of findings.
Authorized
Proof by means of a signature or otherwise that a certain
document or certain data is of undisputed origin and genuine.
A definition of the information or documents a certain user is
allowed to view, update or amend and what functionality he/she
is entitled to access.
The commission to a certain person or body to act on behalf of
another person or body. The person or body can be authorized
e.g. to issue Bills of Lading or to collect freight.
Container equipped for the transportation of vehicles.
These are battery electronic vehicles which follow a
predetermined track within a warehouse operation.
A means of identifying an item e.g. a product, parcel or transport
unit by a machine (device) entering the data automatically into a
computer. The most widely used technology at present is bar
code; others include radio frequency, magnetic stripes and
optical character recognition.
International organization of companies and/or associations
involved or interested in automatic identification.
Auxiliary
The primary measure of system performance relating to the
expected percentage of the supported system that will be
available at a random point in time and not out of service for lack
of spares.
The stock available to service immediate demand.
The uncommitted portion of a companys inventory and planned
production, maintained in the master schedule to support
customer order promising. The ATP quantity is the uncommitted
inventory balance in the first period and is normally calculated
for each period in which an MPS receipt is scheduled. In the first
period, ATP includes on-hand inventory less customer orders that
are due and overdue.
Air Waybill
In marine insurance: a loss or damage to or in respect of goods

Average Adjusters

Average Inventory

or equipment. The numerical result obtained by dividing the sum


of two or more quantities by the number of quantities.
In general average affairs average adjusters are entrusted with
the task of apportioning the loss and expenditure over the
parties interested in the maritime venture and to determine
which expenses are to be regarded as average or general
average.
Average inventory level measured over a certain period. It is
calculated as follows: (Minimum inventory + maximum
inventory) / 2

B
B/D
B/G
B/L
B/L R 300

B/L R 302

B2B

BAC
BACAT
Back Haul
Back Letter

Back Order
Back Scheduling

Backbone
Back-end systems

Back flushing

Back-handling
Backhaul
Backlog

Backorder

Bank(ers) draft
Bonded goods
See Bill of Lading.
A classic marine Bill of Lading in which the carrier is also
responsible for the part of the transport actually performed by
himself. Sea Waybill: A non-negotiable document, which can only
be made out to a named consignee. No surrender of the
document by the consignee is required.
A modern document for either Combined Transport or Port to
Port shipments depending whether the relevant spaces for place
of receipt and/or place of delivery are indicated on the face of
the document. Synonyms: Combined Transport Bill of Lading or
Multimodal Transport document.
Business-to-business. Describes online transactions between one
business, institution, or government agency and another.
Differentiated from b2c (business-to-consumer) plays such as
Amazon.com, eBay, and Yahoo.
Bunker adjustment charge
Barge aboard catamaran
The return movement of a means of transport which has
provided a transport service in one direction.
Back letters are drawn up in addition to a contract in order to lay
down rights and/or obligations between both contracting parties,
which, for some reason cannot be included in the original
contract. This expression is sometimes used for letters of
indemnity which are drawn up if the condition of the goods
loaded gives rise to remarks and, nevertheless, the shipper
insists upon receiving clean Bills of Lading. Letters of indemnity
are only allowed in very exceptional circumstances.
A customers order or commitment that is unfilled due to
insufficient stock.
A method of obtaining a production schedule by working
backwards from the required due date, in order to predict the
latest start date in consistent with meeting that due date.
A central high speed network that connects smaller, independent
networks. the NSFnet is an example.
Legacy enterprise systems that handle order processing,
inventory, and receivables management for both buyers and
suppliers. To deploy a digital trading platform, companies must
often integrate new technologies with these older systems, which
can include mainframe or ERP applications.
The deduction from inventory, after manufacture, of the
component parts used in a parent by exploding the bill of
materials by the production total of parents produced.
Use of delivery vehicles for return loads in order to optimise the
utilisation of vehicle capacity.
The return movement of parts/material/containers from its
original destination back to its point of origin.
The quantity of goods still to be delivered, received, produced,
issued, etc., for which the planned or agreed date has expired.
The total number of customer orders which have been received
but not yet been shipped. Synonym: Open Order.
Order for a part in stock that cannot be or is not expected to be
shipped directly.

Backorder Routine
BAF
Bags/Bulk
Bale space

Ballast

Banking System

Bar Coding

Bare Boat Charter


Barge

Bars
Base
Basic Stock
Batch

Batch Lot

Batch Number
Batch Production

Battens

Bay

Bay Plan
BC

Those special administrative routines which are needed to handle


an inventory shortage that has arisen.
See Bunker Adjustment Factor.
Part in bags. part in bulk
The bale space of a vessel is the capacity of cargo spaces under
deck (including hatchways but excluding void spaces behind
cargo battens and beams) expressed in cubic meters or cubic
feet.
Materials solely carried to improve the trim and the stability of
the vessel. In vessels usually water is carried as ballast in tanks,
specially designed for that purpose.
For marine purposes the practice of always keeping more than
one piece of cargo on the quay or in the vessel ready for loading
or discharging in order to avoid delays and to obtain optimal use
of the loading gear.
A method of encoding data for fast and accurate electronic
readability. Bar codes are a series of alternating bars and spaces
printed or stamped on products, labels, or other media,
representing encoded information which can be read by
electronic readers, used to facilitate timely and accurate input of
data to a computer system. Bar codes represent letters and/or
numbers and special characters like +, /, -, ., etc.
A charter whereby the charterer leases the bare ship and
appoints the master and crew himself.
Flat bottomed inland cargo vessel for canals and rivers with or
without own propulsion for the purpose of transporting goods.
Synonym: Lighter.
Special devices mounted on container doors to provide a
watertight locking. Synonym: Door lock bars.
Home depot of container or trailer.
Items of an inventory intended for issue against demand during
the resupply lead-time.
A collection of products or data which is treated as one entity
with respect to certain operations e.g. processing and
production.
A definite quantity of some product manufactured or produced
under conditions that are presumed uniform and for production
control purposes passing as a unit through the same series of
operations.
A code used to identify the specific production point, for a
product or an assembly, in a manufacturing or assembly process.
Method for production of a wide assortment in common
production equipment. The setup costs in production can be
reduced by using batch production.
Members protruding from the inside walls of a vessel's hold or a
(thermal) container to keep away the cargo from the walls to
provide an air passage. They may be integral with the walls,
fastened to the walls or added during cargo handling.
A vertical division of a vessel from stem to stern, used as a part
of the indication of a stowage place for containers. The numbers
run from stem to stern; odd numbers indicate a 20 foot position,
even numbers indicate a 40 foot position.
A stowage plan that shows the locations of all the containers on
the vessel.
Bulk cargo

BC Code
Bdi
Bdth.
Bdy.
Benchmarking

Safe working practice code for solid bulk cargo.


Both dates (days) inclusive
Breadth
Boundary
Using specific measurements to compare performance against
another standard.
Bending-moment
It is the result of vertical forces acting on a ship as a result of
local differences between weight and buoyancy. The total of
these forces should be zero; otherwise change of draft will occur.
At sea the bending moment will change as a result of wave
impact which than periodically changes the buoyancy
distribution. Note: The maximum allowed bending moment of a
vessel is restricted by the class bureau to certain limits which are
different under port and sea conditions.
Berth
A location in a port where a vessel can be moored, often
indicated by a code or name.
Beyond Economic Repair
Where the projected cost of repair, normally for a repairable or
(BER)
rotable item, exceeds a management set percentage of the
replacement value of the item concerned.
Bilateral Transport Agreement Agreement between two nations concerning their transport
relation.
Bill of Health
The Bill of Health is the certificate issued by local medical
authorities indicating the general health conditions in the port of
departure or in the ports of call. The Bill of Health must have visa
before departure by the Consul of the country of destination.
When a vessel has free pratique, this means that the vessel has
a clean Bill of Health certifying that there are no questions of
contagious disease and that all quarantine regulations have been
complied with, so that people may embark and disembark.
Bill of Lading (B/L)
A document which evidences a contract of carriage by sea. The
document has the following functions: 1. A receipt for goods,
signed duly by an authorized person on behalf of the carriers. 2.
A document of title to the goods described therein. 3 Evidence of
the terms and conditions of carriage agreed upon between the
two parties.
Bill of Lading Clause
A particular article, stipulation or single proviso in a Bill of
Lading. A clause can be standard and can be preprinted on the
B/L.
Bill of Material
A means of recording all goods, raw materials, semifinished
goods and other components used in a company's production.
This record can e.g. concern the number of parts, the number of
versions of different parts, and the division of parts into standard
and non standard items.
Bill of Materials Function
Ability to present predefined lists of items routinely required by
buyers for a specific purpose. Can greatly reduce the planning
process. In vertical markets, the challenge is developing a
complete list of items that need to be purchased for specific
products or projects. PartMiner (electronic components) uses this
function to create a complete view of buyer activity, both
purchases that go to contract suppliers and purchases made on
its anonymous spot market. Enables a market to combine a
channel enabler approach with an exchange.
Bimodal Trailer
A road semi-trailer with retractable running gear to allow
mounting on a pair of rail boogies. Synonym: Road-Rail trailer A
trailer which is able to carry different types of standardized unit
loads, (e.g. a chassis which is appropriate for the carriage of one

Bk.
Bkge
Blanket Release

Blanket Release Schedule


BL-efficiency

BL-function

Blk.
BL-objectives

BL-perspective

BL-systems

Boatman
Bollard
Bolster
BOM
Bona Fide
Bonded
Booking Reference Number
Bookmark

FEU or two TEU's).


Bank
Bokerage
A delivery condition which means that the buyer can require
delivery of a consignment at any time after the purchasing
agreement has been concluded. A blanket release can involve a
whole consignment or parts thereof.
A schedule that includes dates when different call offs will be
made and describes the goods and the quantities to be called off.
This can be divided into internal and external efficiency. Internal
BL-efficiency is efficiency in the control and handling of the
materials flow. External BL-efficiency is the contribution to the
company's results from the control and handling of the materials
flow measure as a percentage of the possible contribution.
All activities in a company, both operational and administrative,
aiming at fulfilling the company's BL administrative targets, such
as low costs for material control and material handling, good
customer service, high inventory turnover. A BL-function is not
necessarily the same as an organizational department.
Bulk
Objectives which are formulated from a BL-perspective. They can
be divided into four groups; 1. Reduction of BL-costs, 2. Ensuring
material supply for manufacturing, 3. Adapting customer services
to meet customer needs, 4. Increasing inventory turnover. Every
group of BL-objectives consists of a number of sub targets such
as low transportation costs, low inventory costs, short delivery
times, high service level, low shortage costs, low tied up capital
etc.
Frame of reference for the coordination of the following targets in
the company: to reduce transportation, storing and packing
costs, to increase readiness for deliveries to the market, to
guarantee the material supply to the manufacturing operation, to
improve inventory turnover.
A comprehensive term for all activities, resources, relations
between different activities, management and objectives in a
company which are connected with the material flow from a
supplier through the company and to the end customer. The
company's BL-systems can e.g. be divided into the three subsystems: the Material Supply System, the Production Control
System and the Distribution System. They are working to
support the overall BL-function to enable it to fulfill its purpose. A
BL-system is always unique for the situation. The person who is
going to use the system decides the definitions of the system.
He/she will then determine what the system will focus on from
the perspective of the targets to be achieved by the system.
Person who attends to the mooring and unmooring of vessels.
Post, fixed to a quay or a vessel, for securing mooring ropes.
See Container Bolster.
Bill Of Materials
In good faith; without dishonesty, fraud or deceit.
Booking
The number assigned to a certain booking by the carrier or his
agent.
Saved link to a resource, typically a Web page, that allow you to
quickly retrieve a particular resource in the future without the

need to retype the URL. Many browsers allow you to manage and
structure a collection of bookmarks according to individual
preferences. A bookmark is also referred to as a favorite.
Synonym: Favourites
Bottleneck
A stage in a process that limits performance. Note: Generally this
is interpreted as a facility, function, department etc. that
impedes performance, for example a warehouse or distribution
centre where goods arrive at a faster rate than they can be
transported or stored, thus causing stock-piling at improper
moments or in unwanted areas.
Bottom Fittings
Special conical shaped devices inserted between a container and
the permanent floor on the deck of a vessel in order to avoid
shifting of the container during the voyage of this vessel.
Bottom Lift
Handling of containers with equipment attached to the four
bottom corner fittings (castings).
Box Pallet
Pallet with at least three fixed, removable or collapsible vertical
sides.
BPO
Rail Tariff Balkans - Near East (Balkan Proche Orient)
BPR
Business Process Re-engineering
Branch Warehouse
A facility for holding a common stock for a smaller geographical
environment, which acts as a subsidiary to a central warehouse.
Break Bulk
To commence discharge.
Break Bulk Cargo
General cargo conventionally stowed as opposed to unitized,
containerized and Roll On-Roll Off cargo. Synonym: Conventional
Cargo.
Break Points
Break points where there is manufacturing, storing or re-loading.
Brl.
Barrel
Broken Stowage
The cargo space which is unavoidably lost when stowing cargo.
The percentage of wasted space depends upon e.g. the kind of
cargo, the packing and the used spaces.
Broker
Person who acts as an agent or intermediary in negotiating
contracts.
Browser
Application that provides a way to look at and interact with all
the information on the Web. It uses the Hypertext Transfer
Protocol (HTTP) to request resources from Web servers
throughout the Internet on behalf of the browser user. The
browser then receives that resource - typically an HTML
document - which is displayed by the browser. Popular browsers
are the Netscape Navigator and the Internet Explorer.
Brussels Tariff Nomenclature The old Customs Cooperation Council Nomenclature for the
(BTN)
classification of goods. Now replaced by the Harmonized System.
BSI Specification
British Standards Institution Specification for freight containers.
BTN
See Brussels Tariff Nomenclature.
Budget
The company's action plan for the future expressed in economic
terms, e.g. production budget or purchasing budget. General
description of inventory which releases the input and output
stages from direct dependence on one other. The term is used
both for cycle stock and safety stock when attention is directed
to the released function.
Buffer Stock
General description of inventory which releases the input and
output stages from direct dependence on one other. A quantity
of goods or articles kept in store to safeguard against unforeseen
shortages or demands. The term is used both for cycle stock and
safety stock when attention is directed to the released function.
Build Stock
See Anticipation Stock

Bulk Bags
Bulk Cargo
Bulk Carrier
Bulk Container

Bulkhead

Bull rings
Bunker
Bunker Adjustment Factor
(BAF)
BUP
Bureau Veritas
Business Concept

Business Intelligence

Business Logistics (BL)

Business Logistics Costs

Business Process
Improvement (BPI)

Business Process Reengineering (BPR)

A large polythene liner that can be fitted to a 20'GP as an


alternative to bulk containers.
Unpacked homogeneous cargo poured loose in a certain space of
a vessel or container e.g. oil and grain.
Single deck vessel designed to carry homogeneous unpacked dry
cargoes such as grain, iron ore and coal.
Shipping container designed for the carriage of free-flowing dry
cargoes, which are loaded through hatchways in the roof of the
container and discharged through hatchways at one end of the
container.
Upright partition dividing compartments on board a vessel. The
functions of bulkheads are: 1. To increase the safety of a vessel
by dividing it into watertight compartments. 2. To separate the
engine room from the cargo holds. 3. To increase the transverse
strength of a vessel. 4. A vertically mounted board to provide
front wall protection against shifting cargo and commonly seen
on platform trailers (road cargo). Synonym: Header Board.
Rings for lashing the cargo in containers.
(Tank) spaces on board a vessel to store fuel.
Adjustment applied by shipping lines or liner conferences to
offset the effect of fluctuations in the cost of bunkers.
Bulk Unit Programme
French classification society.
A clear statement of how the company is trying to create
profitability. The main components of the business concept are:
the niche in, the business area that the company specializes in,
the products or systems offered in that niche, and the resources
and internal relations in the company by whose help success is
achieved.
Usage of timely and accurate information to base decisions upon.
Typically, includes a broad category of applications and
technologies for gathering, storing, analyzing, and providing
access to data. Activities include decision support, query and
reporting, online analytical processing, statistical analysis,
forecasting, and data mining.
Strategic, tactical and operational approaches and principles
applied to increase the return on investment by developing the
cost efficiency of the material flow, the return on capital in the
material flow and the service to the customers. The BL-principles
are the basis for development, planning, coordination and control
of the material flow from raw material supplier to end customer.
All costs that can be related to the material flow in a company. In
the first instance it is the following costs that are usually
regarded as BL costs: transportation costs, inventory costs,
packing costs, administrative costs, order processing, inventory
control, transport administration, additional purchasing costs,
setup costs and shortage costs.
Business process improvement can be an effective strategy;
when conducted as an integrated process to redesign the nature
of the work, the information systems support that work and the
organisation around that work. BPI is a means of process
improvement.
The fundamental analysis and radical redesign of everything:
business processes and management systems, job definitions,
organizational structures and beliefs and behaviors to achieve
dramatic performance improvements to meet contemporary

Buyer's Market

BW
Bxs

requirements. Information technology (IT) is a key enabler in


this process.
A 'buyer's market' is considered to exist when goods can easily
be secured and when the economic forces of business tend to
cause goods to be priced at the purchaser's estimate of value. In
other words, a state of trade favourable to the buyer, with
relatively large supply and low prices.
Bonded warehouse
Boxes

C
C&D
C&F
C&F
C&I
C/D
C/N
C/N (2)
C/O
C/P
C/P blading
C/T
CAC
CAD
CAF
Call
Call Sign

CALS Test Network (CTN)

Capacity

Capacity Control
Capacity Management
Capital Costs

Capital Rationalization

Cargo

Cargo Handling
Cargo Restriction Code
Cargo Tracer

Collection and delivery


Cost and freight (CFR)
Cost and Freight
Cost and insurance
Customs declaration
Consignment note
Credit Note
Certificate of origin
Charter party
Charter party bill of lading
Container Terminal
Currency adjustment charge
See Cash Against Documents.
See Currency Adjustment Factor.
The visit of a vessel to a port.
A code published by the International Telecommunication Union
in its annual List of Ships' Stations to be used for the information
interchange between vessels, port authorities and other relevant
participants in international trade.
The CALS Test Network (CTN) is a confederation of hundreds of
industry and government organizations that have agreed to
evaluate and demonstrate the interchange and functional use of
digital technical information using CALS standards. This is
accomplished through a collaborative multi-service effort.
The ability, in a given time, of a resource measured in quality
and quantity. The quantity of goods which can be stored in or
loaded into a warehouse, store and/or loaded into a means of
transport at a particular time.
Process of registering and steering of capacity.
Planning of machines and personnel in order to achieve the most
efficient utilization of resources.
Costs of using capital as a production factor. Capital costs are
considered to include depreciation and interest. They are
normally expressed per year and are defined as the yearly cost
return on investment and depreciation of an investment cost for
e.g. a building, a machine or an increase in inventory.
Means of improving the rate of return mainly by a faster return
on capital. It is often used as a working title for a change in
production methods which releases capital without decreasing
production.
Goods transported or to be transported, all goods carried on a
ship covered by a B/L. Any goods, wares, merchandise, and
articles of every kind whatsoever carried on a ship, other than
mail, ship's stores, ship's spare parts, ship's equipment, stowage
material, crew's effects and passengers' accompanied baggage
(IMO). Any property carried on an aircraft, other than mail,
stores and accompanied or mishandled baggage Also referred to
as 'goods' (ICAO).
All procedures necessary to enable the physical handling of
goods.
A code indicating that the use of a certain container is restricted
to particular cargo.
A document sent by the agent to all relevant parties, stating that

Cargo Unit

Carriage
Carriage and Insurance Paid
To..

Carriage Paid To (...named


place of destination)

Carrier
Carrier Haulage

Carriers Bill of Lading Ports

Carriers' Lien

Carrying Cost
Carrying Temperature
Cartage
CAS
Cash Against Documents
(CAD)
Cash On Delivery (COD)
CASS
Catalog Aggregation

Catalog Aggregators

certain cargo is either missing or over landed.


A vehicle, container, pallet, flat, portable tank or any other entity
or any part thereof which belongs to the ship but is not
permanently attached to that ship.
The process of transporting (conveying) cargo, from one point to
another. Synonym: Transport.
Carriage and insurance paid to... means that the seller has the
same obligations as under CPT but with the addition that the
seller has to procure cargo insurance against the buyer's risk of
loss of or damage to the goods during the carriage. The seller
contracts for insurance and pays the insurance premium. The
buyer should note that under the CIP term the seller is only
required to obtain insurance on minimum coverage. The CIP
term requires the seller to clear the goods for export. This term
may be used for any mode of transport including multimodal
transport.
Carriage paid to... means that the seller pays the freight for the
carriage of the goods to the named destination. The risk of loss
of or damage to the goods, as well as any additional costs due to
events occurring after the time the goods have been delivered to
the carrier, is transferred from the seller to the buyer when the
goods have been delivered into the custody of the carrier.
The party undertaking transport of goods from one point to
another.
The inland transport service which is performed by the seacarrier under the terms and conditions of the tariff and of the
relevant transport document.
Terminal, Pre-terminal port or Post-terminal Port as per tariff,
indicated on the Bill of Lading and which is not the port physically
called at by Carriers' ocean vessels. Note: Under normal
circumstances in the B/L only ports should be mentioned which
are actually called at.
When the shipper ships goods 'collect', the carrier has a
possessory claim on these goods, which means that the carrier
can retain possession of the goods as security for the charges
due.
See stockroom cost.
Required cargo temperature during transport and storage. See
also Setting/Air Delivery Temperature.
See Haulage.
Currency adjustment surcharge
Terms of payment: if the buyer of goods pays for the goods
against transfer of the documents, entitling him to obtain
delivery of the goods from the carrier.
Terms of payment: if the carrier collects a payment from the
consignee and remits the amount to the shipper.
Cargo Accounts Setdement System (IATA)
Normalizing product data from multiple vendors so it can be
easily compared. Virtual distributors and content aggregators
often provide this service to buyers. Most valuable when
products are complex and have many attributes. Prices are set,
sometimes on contract.
Make sense of buying options by aggregating catalogs from
multiple vendors with relatively static prices. Act as a neutral
intermediary but help buyers make sense of multiple vendors.
Also normalize information coming from diverse sources to

Category Management

CB
Cbd
Cbm
CC
CCL
CCS
Cell
Cell Position

Cell-guide
Cellular Vessel
CEM
CENSA

Central Warehouse
Centre of Gravity

CEO
Certificate
Certificate of Analysis

Certificate of Classification
Certificate of Delivery
Certificate of Free Sale

enable comparisons of similar products and services. Typically


function as virtual distributors but don't take possession of goods
themselves. Collect transaction fees on purchases but can
generate additional revenue via credit checks, logistics,
fulfillment, insurance, or other parts of the transaction process.
Must satisfy suppliers' needs for differentiation while making
comparisons possible for buyers. Examples: Chemdex,
PlasticsNet, Sciquest (scientific equipment), Testmart (test
equipment). Synonym: Virtual distributor.
The management of groups of products that are interchangeable,
or substitutable, in meeting consumer needs as opposed to the
traditional concentration on individual products and brands.
Container base
Cash before delivery
Cubic meter
Charges collect
Customs clearance
Consolidated cargo (container) service
Location on board of a container vessel where one container can
be stowed.
The location of a cell on board of a container vessel identified by
a code for successively the bay, the row and the tier, indicating
the position of a container on that vessel.
Steel bars and rails used to steer containers during loading and
discharging whilst sliding in the ship.
A vessel, specially designed and equipped for the carriage of
containers.
European Conference on Goodstrain time-tables
Council of European and Japanese National Shipowner's
Associations. The main objectives of this organization are to
promote and protect sound shipping policies in all sectors of
shipping, to coordinate and present the views of its members and
to exchange views with other ship-owner groups.
A common inventory location for a large geographical area, often
used to supply smaller branch warehouses.
Point at which the entire weight of a body may be considered as
concentrated so that if supported at this point the body would
remain in equilibrium in any position.
Chief executive officer
A document by which a fact is formally or officially attested and
in which special requirements and conditions can be stated.
A document, often required by an importer or governmental
authorities, attesting to the quality or purity of commodities. The
origin of the certification may be a chemist or any other
authorized body such as an inspection firm retained by the
exporter or importer. In some cases the document may be drawn
up by the manufacturer certifying that the merchandise shipped
has been tested in his facility and found conform to the
specifications.
A certificate, issued by the classification society and stating the
class under which a vessel is registered.
A certificate indicating the condition of a vessel upon delivery for
a charter including ballast, available bunkers and fresh water.
A certificate, required by some countries as evidence that the
goods are normally sold on the open market and approved by

Certificate of Origin

Certificate of Redelivery

CET

the regulatory authorities in the country of origin.


A certificate, showing the country of original production of goods.
Frequently used by customs in ascertaining duties under
preferential tariff programs or in connection with regulating
imports from specific sources.
A certificate, indicating the condition of a vessel upon redelivery
from a charter including ballast, available bunkers and fresh
water.
Contraband Enforcement Team

Used to explain the type of customs hold a container may have


upon arrival into the USA.

CFD
CFR
CFS
CH
Ch.fwd.
Chain Conveyor
Channel Enablers

Channel Structure

Charge

Charge Type
Charter Contract
Charter Party

Charterer

Chassis

Example: Container has been placed on CET hold


Continuous Flow Distribution
See Cost and Freight (...named port of destination).
See Container Freight Station.
Carriers haulage
Charges forward
A conveyor consisting of two or more strands of chain running in
parallel tracks with the loads carried directly on the chains.
Marketplaces friendly to existing distribution channels rather than
trying to create a new channel. Maintain relationships for the
traders rather than in the Net market itself. Examples:
IMXchange.com (market for mortgage lenders and brokers),
Channelpoint (market between insurance brokers and carriers).
The method by which goods move from the producer to the
customer. This will range from direct selling with no
intermediaries to a structure involving agents, wholesales,
retailers, etc.
An amount to be paid for carriage of goods based on the
applicable rate of such carriage, or an amount to be paid for a
special or incidental service in connection with the carriage of
goods.
A separate, identifiable element of charges to be used in the
pricing/rating of common services rendered to customers.
See Charter Party.
A contract in which the ship owner agrees to place his vessel or a
part of it at the disposal of a third party, the charterer, for the
carriage of goods for which he receives a freight per ton cargo,
or to let his vessel for a definite period or trip for which a hire is
paid.
The legal person who has signed a charter party with the owner
of a vessel or an aircraft and thus hires or leases a vessel or an
aircraft or a part of the capacity thereof.
1. A wheeled carriage onto which an ocean container is mounted
for inland conveyance. 2. The part of a motor vehicle that

CHC
Churn

cia
CIF

CIF&E
CIF&I
CIFC
CIFC&E
CIFC&I
CIFI&E
CIFIC
CIFLT
CIFW
CIM
CIM (2)
CIP
CIV

CKD
Claim
Classification

Classification Society

Clean B/L
Clean Bill of Lading

includes the engine, the frame, suspension system, wheels,


steering mechanism etc., but not the body
Cargo handling charges
The relentless cycle of acquiring new customers and losing others
that characterizes consumer e-commerce and reduces lifetime
customer value because switching is so easy. (See switching
costs, lifetime value of the customer.)
Cash in advance
Cost, Insurance and Freight means that the seller has the same
obligations as under CFR but with the addition that he has to
procure marine insurance against the buyer's risk of loss of or
damage to the goods during the carriage. The seller contracts for
insurance and pays the insurance premium. The buyer should
note that under the CIF term the seller is only required to obtain
insurance on minimum coverage. The CIF term requires the
seller to clear the goods for export. This term can only be used
for sea and inland waterway transport. When the ship's rail
serves no practical purposes such as in the case of roll-on/ rolloff or container traffic, the CIP term is more appropriate to use.
Cost, insurance, freight and exchange
Cost, insurance, freight and interest
Cost, insurance, freight and commission
Cost, insurance, freight, commission and exchange
Cost, insurance, freight, commission and interest
Cost, insurance, freight, interest & exchange
Cost, insurance, freight, interest, commission
Cost, insurance and freight. London terms
Cost, insurance and freight/war
International Convention concerning the Carriage of Goods by
Railway
Computer Integrated Manufacturing, an ESPRIT project on the
use of information technology in industrial environments.
See Carriage and Insurance Paid To (...named place of
destination).
Cm

International Convention on the Carriage of Passengers and


Luggage by Railway
Completely knocked down/unassembled
The buyer's claim notification indicating wrong or defective parts
delivered, delay or other shortcomings in a delivery.
Arrangement according to a systematic division of a number of
objects into groups, based on some likenesses or some common
traits.
An organization, whose main function is to carry out surveys of
vessels, its purpose being to set and maintain standards of
construction and upkeep for vessels, their engines and their
safety equipment. A classification society also inspects and
approves the construction of shipping containers.
See: clean bill of lading
A Bill of Lading which does not contain any qualification about
the apparent order and condition of the goods to be transported
(it bears no stamped clauses on the front of the B/L). It bears no

superimposed clauses expressly declaring a defective condition of


the goods or packaging (resolution of the ICS 1951).
Clean on Board
When goods are loaded on board and the document issued in
respect to these goods is clean. Note: Through the usage of the
UCP 500 rules the term has now become superfluous.
Clearance Terminal
Terminal where Customs facilities for the clearance of goods are
available.
Cleared Without Examination Cleared by customs without inspection.
(CWE)
Client
A party with which a company has a commercial relationship
concerning the transport of e.g. cargo or concerning certain
services of the company concerned, either directly or through an
agent. Synonym: Customer.
Clip on Unit (COU)
Detachable aggregate for a temperature controlled container
(Conair).
Closed Ventilated Container
A container of a closed type, similar to a general purpose
container, but specially designed for carriage of cargo where
ventilation, either natural or mechanical (forced), is necessary.
CLP
Cargo Loss Prevention
CLP (2)
See Container Load Plan.
cm
Centimeter(s)
CMR
Convention on the Contract for the International Carriage of
Goods by Road
CNC
See Compagneurs Nationales des Conteneurs.
Cnee
Consignee
Cnmt
Consignment
Coalition
Coalitions are either buy-side or sell-side and are generally
groups of buyers or sellers who agree to channel procurement
through a single marketplace. They operate a marketplace
without having a third party, neutral Net market as the hub.
Many claim to be neutral--that anyone can join--but, by the
nature of their partnership their first audience is either buyers or
sellers. The advantage of coalitions, particularly buy-side
coalitions, is they can do a lot of transactions, which creates
marketplace liquidity. However, the problem with coalitions is
they have several challenges to overcome--political challenges,
both from regulators and relationships between powerful
companies, as well as technology challenges of integrating legacy
systems. Due to the complexity of these issues, none are
operational yet. If they do in fact successfully overcome these
obstacles and operationalize, we expect they will conduct a large
number of transactions because they can force their suppliers to
go through this marketplace t
COC
Carrier Owned Container
COD
See Cash On Delivery.
COFC
Container-on-Flat-Car (Rail flatcar)
Cofferdam
An empty space on board of a vessel between two bulkheads or
two decks separating oil tanks from each other and/or the engine
room or other compartments.
Collaboration
Interaction of two or more parties - people and companies related to a common topic. This includes sharing information and
doing business. Characteristic of collaboration, instead of
integration and cooperation, is the loose coupling of the parties
involved and the fast, flexible, ad hoc approach to successful
interaction.

Collapsible Container

Container which can be easily folded, disassembled and


reassembled.
Co-loading
The loading, on the way, of cargo from another shipper, having
the same final destination as the cargo loaded earlier.
Coltrainer
Collapsible container
Co-makership
The long-term relationship between e.g. a supplier or a carrier
and a customer, on the basis of mutual confidence. Synonym:
Co-shippership.
Co-Managed Inventory
A support arrangement similar to Vendor Managed Inventory but
where replacement orders for the vendor-owned stock are
agreed by the user prior to delivery.
Combination Charge
An amount which is obtained by combining two or more charges.
Combination Chassis
A chassis which can carry either one forty foot or thirty foot
container or a combination of shorter containers e.g. 2 x 20 feet.
Combined Transport
Intermodal transport where the major part of the journey is by
one mode such as rail, inland waterway or sea and any initial
and/or final leg carried out by another mode such as road.
Synonym: Multimodal Transport
Combined Transport
Negotiable or non-negotiable document evidencing a contract for
Document (CTD)
the performance and/or procurement of performance of
combined transport of goods. Synonym: Multi modal transport
document.
Combined Transport Operator A party who undertakes to carry goods with different modes of
(CTO)
transport. Synonym: Multimodal Transport Operator.
Combiterms
Delivery terms for intemarional groupage traffic (among
forwarders)
Commercial Invoice
A document showing commercial values of the transaction
between the buyer and seller.
Commodity
Indication of the type of goods. Commodities are coded
according to the harmonized system.
Commodity Box Rate
A rate classified by commodity and quoted per container.
Commodity Code
Code used in the Harmonized System for the classification of
goods which are most commonly produced and traded.
Common Access Reference
A key to relate all subsequent transfers of data to the same
business case or file.
Common Costs
Shared costs which are independent of individual activities,
whether they are carried out or not. A shared cost is thus
common for many activities in a company.
Compagneurs Nationales des Abbreviation: CNC affiliate of the French National Railways for
Conteneurs
Container traffic.
Competitive Devices
Comprehensive description of different sales promotional tools
used by a business to improve its competitiveness. A company's
competitive devices consist principally of the product, pricing,
product mix, distribution systems, advertising, PR and customer
service.
Complete Knock-Down (CKD) A form of manufacturing, involving the deconstruction of vehicles
into kit form for subsequent re-assembly at a chosen destination.
SKD (Semi Knock-Down) is a diluted version of CKD.
Complete Software Solutions These solutions are applied within an industrial environment,
providing manufacturers with real time information and a clear
overview of its operations. Various management tools are offered
through a common interface for all users and other systems
throughout the company, with functions, such as order
processing, accounting & billing, inventory and production
planning being typical solution inclusions.

Component

Component Manufacturer
(CM)
Component Part
Compradore

Computer Virus
Conair Container

Conditions

Cones

Congestion

Connecting Road Haulage


Consgt
Consignee
Consignment

Consignment Instructions

Consignment Note

Consignment Stock

Consignor
Consolidate
Consolidated Container

A uniquely identifiable product that is considered indivisible for a


particular planning or control purpose, and/or which cannot be
decomposed without destroying it. Note: A component for one
organizational group may be the final assembly of another group
(e.g. electric motor).
A manufacturer of automotive components and supplier to
vehicle assemblers (see Vehicle Manufacturers).
Raw material, ingredient, part, or subassembly that goes into a
higher level assembly, compound, or other part.
A local advisor or agent employed by a foreign party or company
who acts as an intermediary in transactions with local
inhabitants.
A program that can infect other programs by modifying them to
include a possibly evolved copy of itself.
Thermal container served by an external cooling system (e.g. a
vessel's or Clip On Unit), which regulates the temperature of
cargo. Note: Conair is a brand name.
Anything called for as requirements before the performance or
completion of something else. Contractual stipulations which are
printed on a document or provided separately.
Devices for facilitating the loading, positioning and lashing of
containers. The cones insert into the bottom castings of the
container. Synonym: Locating pin.
Accumulation of vessels at a port to the extent that vessels
arriving to load or discharge are obliged to wait for a vacant
berth.
See Drayage.
Consignment
The party such as mentioned in the transport document by whom
the goods, cargo or containers are to be received.
A separate identifiable number of goods (available to be)
transported from one consignor to one consignee via one or
more than one modes of transport and specified in one single
transport document. Synonym for the USA: Shipment.
Instructions from either the seller/consignor or the
buyer/consignee to a freight forwarder, carrier or his agent, or
other provider of a service, enabling the movement of goods and
associated activities. The following functions can be covered: 1.
Movement and handling of goods (shipping, forwarding and
stowage) 2. Customs formalities 3. Distribution of documents 4.
Allocation of documents (freight and charges for the connected
operations) 5. Special instructions (insurance, dangerous goods,
goods release, additional documents required)
A document prepared by the shipper and comprising a transport
contract. It contains details of the consignment to be carried to
the port of loading and it is signed by the inland carrier as proof
of receipt.
The stock of goods with an external party (customer) which is
still the property of the supplier. Payment for these goods is
made to the supplier at the moment when they are sold (used)
by this party.
See Shipper.
To group and stuff several shipments together in one container.
Container stuffed with several shipments (consignments) from
different shippers for delivery to one or more consignees.

Consolidation

Consolidation Point
Consolidator
Consortium
Consular Invoice

Consumable
Container

Container Bolster

Container Chassis

Container Check Digit


Container Depot
Container Freight Station
(CFS)

Container Lease

Container Load Plan


Container Logistics
Container Manifest

Container Moves
Container Number

Container Owner

The grouping together of smaller consignments of goods into a


large consignment for carriage as a larger unit in order to obtain
a reduced rate.
Location where consolidation of consignments takes place.
A firm or company which consolidates cargo.
Consortium is a form of cooperation between two or more
carriers to operate in a particular trade.
An invoice covering shipment of goods certified by a consular
official of the destination country, and used normally by customs
or officials concerned with foreign exchange availability to
ascertain the correctness of commercial invoice values.
A classification of stock used to describe items or products that
are totally consumed in use (eg paper, oil, grease etc).
An item of equipment as defined by the International
Organization for Standardization (ISO) for transport purposes. It
must be of: 1. a permanent character and accordingly strong
enough to be suitable for repeated use 2. specially designed to
facilitate the carriage of goods, by one or more modes of
transport without intermediate reloading 3. fitted with devices
permitting its ready handling, particularly from one mode of
transport to another 4. so designed as to be easy to fill and
empty 5. having an internal volume of 1 m3 or more. The term
container includes neither vehicles nor conventional packing.
Synonym: Freight Container.
A container floor without sides or end walls which does not have
the ISO corner fittings and is generally used for Ro/Ro
operations. Synonym: Bolster. Note: A bolster cannot be handled
either full or empty by a container spreader without special gear.
A vehicle specially built for the purpose of transporting a
container so that, when container and chassis are assembled, the
produced unit serves as a road trailer.
The 7th digit of the serial number of a container used to check
whether prefix and serial number are correct.
Storage area for empty containers.
A facility at which (export) LCL cargo is received from merchants
for loading (stuffing) into containers or at which (import) LCL
cargo is unloaded (stripped) from containers and delivered to
merchants.
The contract by which the owner of containers (lessor) gives the
use of containers to a lessee for a specified period of time and for
fixed payments.
A list of items loaded in a specific container and where
appropriate their sequence of loading.
The controlling and positioning of containers and other
equipment.
The document specifying the contents of particular freight
containers or other transport units, prepared by the party
responsible for their loading into the container or unit. Synonym:
Unit packing list, Container Load Plan.
The number of actions performed by one container crane during
a certain period.
Identification number of a container consisting of prefix and
serial number and check digit. (e.g. KNLU 123456-7, see also
container serial number and container prefix.)
A party who has a container at his disposal and who is entitled to
lease or sell the container.

Container Platform
Container Pool
Container Prefix

Container Safety Convention


(CSC)
Container Serial Number

A container floor without sides or end walls which can be loaded


by spreader directly and is generally used for Lo-Lo operations.
A certain stock of containers which is jointly used by several
container carriers and/or leasing companies.
A four letter code that forms the first part of a container
identification number indicating the owner of a container.
Synonym: Owner's Container Code.
International convention for safe containers.

A seven digit serial number (6 plus 1 Check Digit) that forms the
second part of a container identification number.
Container Service Charges
Charges to be paid by cargo interests as per tariff.
Container Size Code
An indication of 2 digits of the nominal length and nominal
height. See also Size/Type ISO6346.
Container Size/Type
Description of the size and type of a freight container or similar
unit load device as specified in ISO6346.
Container Stack
Two or more containers, one placed above the other forming a
vertical column. See also stack.
Container Sublease
Contract by which a carrier gives the use of containers to another
carrier for a specified period of time and for fixed payments.
Container Terminal
Place where loaded and/or empty containers are loaded or
discharged into or from a means of transport.
Container Type Code
Two digits, the first of which indicates the category and the
second of which indicates certain physical characteristics or other
attributes. See also container Size/Type ISO6346.
Container Yard (CY)
A facility at which FCL traffic and empty containers are received
from or delivered to the Merchant by or on behalf of the Carrier.
Note: Often this yard is used to receive goods on behalf of the
merchant and pack these in containers for FCL traffic. Synonym:
Marshalling Yard.
Containerized
Indication that goods have been stowed in a container.
Contingency Stock
Stock held to cover potential system failure situations which can
be mathematically modeled.
Continuous Improvement (CI) A term that describes the many management practices and
techniques used to find and eliminate waste and to general
improvements in business processes, quality or costs.
Continuous Replenishment
CRP is based on the supplier delivering replenishment shipments
(CRP)
triggered by the demand communicated by the retailer either
based directly on EPOS data from stores, or based on shipments
out of the distribution centers (which should correlate closely
with sales). Key rules for the process must be agreed i.e.
frequency, minimum quantities etc.
Contraband
Goods forbidden by national law to be imported or exported.
Contract
An agreement enforceable by law between two or more parties
stipulating their rights and obligations which are required by one
or both parties to acts or forbearance by the other or both.
Contract Carrier
A third party carrier contracted to manage relationships with
suppliers.
Contract Logistics
The contracting out of all the warehousing, transport and
distribution activities or a part thereof by manufacturing
companies.
Contract of Affreightment
An agreement whereby the ship owner agrees to carry goods by
water, or furnishes a vessel for the purpose of carrying goods by
water, in return for a sum of money called freight. There are two
forms: the charter party and the contract contained in the Bill of

Lading.
A technical information service based on the integration of
databases (contractor , subcontractor, and government )
contractually established and managed by the defense contractor
to receive, maintain, and provide access to technical and support
information on a defense system.
Contractual Port of Loading
A port at which an ocean vessel does not call, but which is
equalized with the actual port of call and upon which inland
haulage services and inland tariffs are based. Synonym:
Commercial POL/POD. Note: Generally speaking it is seen as the
port to be mentioned on the B/L from which cargo is accepted
(e.g. delivered by the consignee for sea transport).
Contribution
The difference between additional revenue and additional cost. It
can relate to a product group, a single product, a customer or a
group of customers.
Contribution Degree
Economic key data defined as the contribution as a percentage of
the total revenues.
Control
The registration and check on data and activities as well as
determining supervising procedures and changes related to
procedures.
Control Group Cycle Counting The repeated physical inventory taking of a small "control group"
of parts, in the same locations, within a very short time frame to
verify the design of a new inventory process. It is the only form
of cycle counting not truly used to measure inventory record
accuracy.
Conventional Cargo
See Break Bulk Cargo.
Convertor Dolly
An auxiliary undercarriage assembly consisting of a chassis, fifth
wheel and towbar used to convert a semitrailer or a container
chassis to a full trailer.
Conveyance
Transport of goods from one place to another.
Conveyor
A mechanical device in the form of a continuous belt for
transporting cargo.
COP
Customs of port
COQ
Cost of Quality
Core Competence
The combination of individual skills and use of technologies that
underlay the various products and or services of a business.
Corner Fittings
Fittings located at the corners of containers providing means of
supporting, stacking, handling and securing the container.
Synonym: corner casting.
Corner Post
Vertical structural member at either side of an 'end frame' of a
container joining a top and a bottom corner fitting (and thereby
forming a 'corner structure').
Correction Message
A substitution for what has been wrong in a prior data
interchange between computers in accordance with interchange
agreements.
COS
Cash on shipment
Co-shippership
See Co-makership.
Cost and Freight...
Cost and Freight means that the seller must pay the costs and
freight necessary to bring the goods to the named port of
destination but the risk of loss of or damage to the goods, as well
as any additional costs due to events occurring after the time the
goods have been delivered on board the vessel, is transferred
from the seller to the buyer when the goods pass the ship's rail
in the port of shipment. The CFR term requires the seller to clear
the goods for export. This term can only be used for sea and
Contractor Integrated Tech
Info Service

Cost Interest

COT

COTIF
COU
Country of Departure
Country of Despatch
Country of Origin

Country of Provenance
CP
CP (2)
CPLTC
CPT
Crane

Crew Member

Critical mass

Critical Path Method

CRM
Cross Trades

Cross-Docking

CRP

inland waterway transport. When the ship's rail serves no


practical purpose, such as in the case of roll-on/roll-off or
container traffic, the CPT term is more appropriate to use.
Is an interest rate decided by the management to be used
internally in calculations of rate of return, calculations of costs for
work-in-progress, storage and inventory costs etc. The
calculation expresses the desired return on investment, i.e. the
alternative value of the capital. Different calculation interest
rates can be used for different uses of capital.
The customer arranges his own transport of the container to and
from the terminal or depot but agrees to restitute the container
back to the terminal or depot.
Convention Concerning International Carrriage by Rail (CIM-CIV)
See Clip On Unit.
Country from which a certain means of transport is scheduled to
depart or has departed.
Country from which the goods are shipped.
Country in which the goods have been produced or
manufactured, according to criteria laid down for the purpose of
application of the customs tariff, of quantitative restrictions, or of
any other measure related to trade.
The country from which goods or cargo are sent to the importing
country.
Customs of Port
Carriage paid
Conference Port Liner Term Charges
See Carriage Paid To (...named place of destination).
A machine designed for moving and lifting weight by means of a
movable projecting arm or a horizontal beam which is able to
travel over a certain distance.
Any person actually employed for duties on board during a
voyage in the working or service of a ship and included in the
crew list (IMO).
When enough buyers and sellers participate in a Net market so
goods or services change hands efficiently. Also, the time when a
market gains momentum, achieves liquidity, and becomes a
more efficient way to buy or sell than the traditional physical
market or channel. (See network effect, liquidity.)
A network planning technique used for planning and controlling
the activities in a project. By showing each of these activities and
their associated times, the 'critical path' can be determined. The
critical path is the series of successive activities which takes up
most time and is therefore decisive for the total lead time of the
project.
See: Customer Relationship Management
Term used in shipping for the services of a vessel between
nations other than the nation in which the vessel is registered
(UNCTAD).
Transhipment of goods at various points along the supply chain .
It relates to the physical receipt of goods and their immediate
transfer to the next onward phase without being brought into
inventory - e.g. from the supplier to a customer's central
warehouse, configured in the correct way to allow onward
movement to regional warehouses.
Continuous Replenishment Programme

Cruise Ship

CS
CSC
CSR
CST
CT
CT (2)
CTD
CTO
CTPC
Cu.ft
Cu.in
Currency

Currency Adjustment Factor


(CAF)
Customer
Customer Order Point (COP)

Customer Order Production


Customer Pick Up
Customer Relationship
Management (CRM)

Customer Response Centers


(CRC)

Customer Service

Customer Service Level

A ship on an international voyage carrying passengers


participating in a group programme and accommodated on
board, for the purpose of making scheduled temporary tourist
visits at one or more different ports, and which during the
voyage does not normally: (a) embark or disembark any other
passengers; (b) load or discharge any cargo.
Customer Service
See Container Safety Convention.
Corporate social responsibility
Container Service Tariff
Conference terms
Combined transport
See Combined Transport Document.
See Combined Transport Operator.
Cargo Traffic Procedures Committee (IATA)
Cubic foot (feet)
Cubic inch(es)
A medium of exchange of value, defined by reference to the
geographical location of the authorities responsible for it
ISO4217. In general, the monetary unit, involved in a
transaction and represented by a name or a symbol.
Adjustment applied by shipping lines or liner conferences on
freight rates to offset losses or gains for carriers resulting from
fluctuations in exchange rates of tariff currencies.
See Client.
The point in the manufacturing process when the product
becomes customer order oriented. The COP marks the
changeover in the process from forecast and inventory control to
customer order control.
Production for a specific customer order as opposed to inventory
production.
Cargo picked up by a customer at a warehouse.
Set of methodologies, software, and usually Internet capabilities
that help an enterprise manage customer relationships in an
organized way. It includes all business processes in sales,
marketing, and service that touch the customer. For example, an
enterprise might build a database about its customers that
describes relationships in sufficient detail so that management,
salespeople, people providing service, and even the customer
can access information, match customer needs with product
plans and offerings, remind customers of service requirements,
know what other products a customer has purchased, and so on.
In contrast to customer care, Customer Relationship
Management tends to be used to deal more specifically with the
integration of all business functions with each other.
CRCs are local centers where products may be picked-up or
delivered locally to customers. CRCs can be owned/managed by
third parties, or co-owned by several companies (often
manufacturers) serving the same customer base in a local
market area.
An element in the combination of the company's competitive
means which includes service factors before, during and after
purchasing. Product availability is one of the most important
customer service elements.
A performance measure of customer service. Note: generally this

Customer Service Mix

Customer Structure

Customs

Customs Broker
Customs Invoice

Customs Management
Customs Value

CWE
CVGK
CVGP
CWO
cwt
CY
Cy (2)
Cybernetics
CYC
Cycle Counting

Cycle Stock

is seen as the degree with which customer orders can be


executed, in accordance with the terms which are generally
accepted in the market.
Those service elements which are included in customer mix
service primarily influenced by the unique circumstances of each
case. They can therefore vary between business, line of business
and situation etc.
Information about a company's customers which includes e.g.
the number of customers, the customer's size in relation to sales
or given contribution, the geographical structure relating to
location and distance, etc.
The department of the Civil Service that deals with the levying of
duties and taxes on imported goods from foreign countries and
the control over the export and import of goods e.g. allowed
quota, prohibited goods.
An authorized agent specialized in customs clearance procedures
on account of importers/exporters. Customs Clearance Agent
Document required by the customs in an importing country in
which an exporter states the invoice or other price (e.g. selling
price, price of identical goods), and specifies costs for freight,
insurance and packing etc., terms of delivery and payment, for
the purpose of determining the customs value in the importing
country of goods consigned to that country.
The import and export management of materials throughout the
world
The worth of an item or group of items expressed in a monetary
amount, within a consignment declared to Customs for duty and
statistical reasons.
See Cleared Without Examination.
Customs value per gross kilogram
Customs value per gross pound
Cash with order
Hundredweight
See Container Yard.
Currency
The study of control processes in mechanical, biological,
electrical and information systems.
Container Yard Charges - Charges at destination
Cycle counting is the physical counting of stock on a perpetual
basis, rather than counting stock periodically. A cycle is the time
required to count all items in the inventory at least once. The
frequency of cycle counting can be varied to focus management
attention on the more valuable or important items or to match
work processes. Some of the systems used are: ABC system with
the highest count frequency for items with the highest annual
usage value. Reorder system when stocks are counted at the
time of order. Receiver system with counting when goods are
received. Zero balance system to count items when a backorder
situation is reached to confirm that no stock is held. Transaction
system where stocks are counted after a specified number of
transactions.
One of the two main components of any item of inventory, the
cycle stock is the most active part ; i.e. that which depletes
gradually and is replenished cyclically when orders are received.
Another part of the item inventory is the safety stock which is a

Cycle Stock/Lot Size


Inventory

Cycle Time
Cyclic Planning

Cyclic Production

cushion of protection against uncertainty in the demand or in the


replenishment lead time.
Occurs when the input into stock is different from the output. A
certain minimum material quantity must be taken into stock and
used gradually or one has to take out a certain quantity from the
stock and the stock will gradually consist of smaller lots. The
goods that in the meantime are in stock are called cycle stock.
Available working time divided by the number of units needed.
Planning data which can be used several times for a production
operation which is to be repeated in exactly the same way from
time to time.
Describes a production series which is repeated according to a
fixed timetable.

D
D/A
D/O
D/P
D2D
DAF
Damaged Cargo Report

Documents against acceptance


Delivery order
Documents against payment
Design to Distribution
Delivered at frontier (lncoterms)
Written statement concerning established damages to cargo
and/or equipment.
Dangerous Goods
Goods are to be considered dangerous if the transport of such
goods might cause harm, risk, peril, or other evil to people,
environment, equipment or any property whatsoever.
Dangerous Goods Declaration Document issued by a consignor in accordance with applicable
conventions or regulations, describing hazardous goods or
materials for transport purposes, and stating that the latter have
been packed and labeled in accordance with the provisions of the
relevant conventions or regulations.
Dangerous Goods Packing
A document as part of the dangerous goods declaration in which
Certificate
the responsible party declares that the cargo has been stowed in
accordance with the rules in a clean container in compliance with
the IMDG regulations and properly secured.
DAS
Delivery / delivered alongside ship
Data Plate
A metal identification plate affixed to a container which displays
among others the gross and tare weights and external
dimensions.
Dbk
Drawback
DCAS
Distribution Cost Analysis System
DCP
Freight Carriage paid to (Incoterms)
DDP
See: Delivered duty paid
DDU
Delivered Duty Unpaid (...named place of destination).
Deadload
The difference between the actual and calculated ship's draft.
Deadweight (DWT)
The total weight of cargo, cargo equipment, bunkers, provisions,
water, stores and spare parts which a vessel can lift when loaded
to her maximum draught as applicable under the circumstances.
The deadweight is expressed in tons.
Decision Support System
An interactive computer-based system which generates a
(DSS)
number of alternatives to solve an unstructured problem. These
alternatives are being interpreted by the manager (decisionmaker), whereafter he decides which alternative is to be used to
solve the problem.
Deck
Any extended horizontal structure in a vessel or an aircraft,
serving as a floor and structural support, covering, partially or
fully, a portion of the vessel or aircraft.
Declaration of Origin
Appropriate statement as to the origin of the goods, made in
connection with their exportation by the manufacturer, producer,
supplier, exporter or other competent person on the commercial
invoice or any document relating to goods.
Declared Value for Carriage
The value of the goods declared to the carrier by the shipper for
the purpose of determining charges or of establishing the limit of
the carrier's liability for loss, damage or delay. It is also the basis
for possible applicable valuation charges.
Decoupling Inventory
A stock retained to make the independent control of two
successive operations possible.
Decoupling Point
The point in the supply chain which provides a buffer between
differing input and output rates.

Decoupling Point Position

De-Coupling Stock

Dedicated Contract Carriage


Dedicated Logistics Centers
Deduct Point

Deep Tank

Default Charge

Degree of Centralization

Degroupage
Delivered At Frontier ..
Delivered Duty Paid ...

Delivered Duty Unpaid ...


Delivered Ex Quay ...
Delivered Ex Ship ...
Delivering Carrier
Delivery

The position of the decoupling point determines the way in which


the business is managed and controlled and how various partners
communicate along the supply chain. DP position for a particular
product/market combination is determined in a trade off between
market requirements and stock investment requirements, within
the constraints of business characteristics such as lead time and
flexibility of the supply organisation. Five different DP positions
representing five basic logistic structures cover all possible
product/market situations : Make and ship to stock Make to stock
Assemble to order Make to order Purchase and make to order
Inventory accumulated between dependent activities in the
goods flow to reduce the need for completely synchronised
operations.
Specialized transportation services customized to meet
customers' carriage needs.
The management of warehouses and processing centers
dedicated to the flow-through distribution of parts and products.
The point in the production process up to which all the parts
assumed to have been used (as defined in the bill of material)
are "backflushed", (automatically deducted) from the inventory
records. Also see Backflushing.
Tank fitted and equipped for the carriage of vegetable oil (e.g.
palm oil and coconut oil) and other liquids in bulk. By means of
oil-tight bulkheads and/or decks it is possible to carry different
kinds of liquid in adjacent tanks. Deep tanks may be equipped
with heating facilities in order to carry and discharge oil at the
required temperature (shipping).
A (standard) charge applicable for a trade, stretch or location. In
the absence of specifics (not otherwise specified/enumerated) a
general amount has been set.
The BL-system contains a number of "keypoints" where
manufacturing, storing or reloading take place. The structure of
the BL-system is dependent on the geographical location of these
points. The degree of centralization will increase if the number of
"keypoints" on one or several levels decreases, and vice versa.
The BL-system can also be physically centralized while at the
same time administration and decision-making can be
decentralized.
Splitting up shipments into small consignments.
Abbreviation: DAF
The seller fulfils his obligation to deliver when the goods have
been made available at the named place in the country of
importation. The seller has to bear the risks and costs, including
duties, taxes and other charges of delivering the goods thereto,
cleared for importation. If the parties wish to exclude from the
seller's obligations some of the costs payable upon importation of
the goods (such as value added tax (VAT)), this should be made
clear by adding words to this effect: "Delivered duty paid, VAT
unpaid (...named place of destination)". This term may be used
irrespective of the mode of transport. Abbreviation: DDP
Abbreviation: DDU
Abbreviation: DEQ
Abbreviation: DES
The carrier who delivers the consignment to the consignee or his
agent (air cargo).
The process of delivering the consignment to the consignee at

Delivery Accuracy
Delivery Clauses
Delivery Flexibility

Delivery Instruction
Delivery Note
Delivery Order

Delivery Party
Delivery Reliability

Delivery Schedule
Delivery Service

Delivery Status

Delivery Time

Delivery Time Setting


Demand
Demand Forecast
Demand Satisfaction Rate
Demise Charter

Denomination of Quantity
Density of Commodity
Dependent Demand

Depot

the agreed place.


The number of complete orders that are delivered on time.
Please see "terms of delivery".
The degree to which you can meet customers' special
requirements regarding e.g. packing, mode of transport, order
quantity, etc.
Document issued by a buyer giving instructions regarding the
details of the delivery of goods ordered.
A document recording the delivery of products to a consignee
(customer).
A document issued by or on behalf of the carrier authorizing the
release of import cargo identified thereon and manifested under
a single Bill of Lading (shipping).
The party to which goods are to be delivered.
Indicates the extent to which specified order quantities have
been delivered in accordance with the agreed delivery time,
compared to the total number of orders delivered. For example
85% of the total number of orders has e.g. been delivered
according to the agreed delivery time.
The required and/or agreed time of delivery of goods or services,
purchased for a future period.
Activities during the purchasing process aimed at the maximum
use of time and space. Delivery service includes a great number
of elements of which the most important ones are: delivery time,
delivery reliability, order fulfillment rate and delivery flexibility.
Information on how far a delivery has progressed, i.e. where it is
situated in the chain from manufacturing, via loading and
transportation to the customer's goods received department.
Promised delivery time is the time within which the vendor,
according to the contract of sale (or practice), should deliver the
goods to the customer. The time which passes from order to
delivery is real delivery time. Please compare with lead time and
order cycle time.
This means that the delivery time for an order in set with regard
to total order situation, available capacity etc.
The quantity of goods required by the market to be delivered in a
particular period or at a specific date.
See Forecast Demand.
See Fill Rate.
A contract whereby the ship owner leases his vessel to the
charterer for a period of time during which the whole use and
management of the vessel passes to the charterer, which
involves that the charterer is to pay all expenses for the
operation and maintenance of the vessel. Officers and crew will
become servants of the charterer. A demise charter whereby the
charterer has the right to place his own master and crew on
board of the vessel is also called 'bareboat charter'.
See Unit of Measure.
The mass of a commodity to its volume.
A demand directly related to or derived from the demand for
other items or end products. Dependent demands are therefore
calculated, and need not and should not be forecast.
The place designated by the carrier where empty containers are
kept in stock and received from or delivered to the container
operators or merchants.

DEQ
Derrick

DES
Despatch
Despatch Advice

Despatch Days
Destination
DET
Det Norske Veritas
Detention
Detention Charge
Deterioration
Deterministic Inventory
Control Models

Devanning
Deviation from a Route
DGSA
Dia
Dimensions
Dir
Direct Delivery

Direct Interchange
Direct Route
Disbursement
Discharge
DISCOUNTING

Discrepancy
Discrete Code

Delivered Ex Quay (...named port of destination).


Lifting equipment on board a conventional vessel for loading and
discharging cargo, consisting of a post attached to the deck and
an inclined spar.
Delivered Ex Ship (...named port of destination).
The process of sending goods. Synonym: Dispatch.
Information send by shippers to the recipient of goods informing
that specified goods are sent or ready to be sent advising the
detailed contents of the consignment. Synonym: Dispatch note.
The days gained if the free time included in the rate and allowed
for the use of certain equipment is not fully used.
Place for which goods or a vehicle is bound. The ultimate
stopping place according to the contract of carriage
Department of the Environment, Transport and Regions
Norwegian classification society.
Keeping equipment beyond the time allowed. See demurrage.
Charges levied on usage of equipment exceeding free time period
as stipulated in the pertinent inland rules and conditions.
The downgrading of a product due to long storage, damage to
packing or other external influences.
An inventory control system where all the variables and
parameters used are known, or can be calculated with certainty.
The rate of demand for items, and the associated inventory
costs, is assumed to be known with assurance and the
replenishment lead time is assumed to be constant and
independent of demand.
See: Stripping, Unpacking.
A divergence from the agreed or customary route.
Dangerous Goods Safety Advisor
Diameter
Measurements in length, width and height, regarding cargo.
Direct
The conveyance of goods directly from the vendor to the buyer.
Frequently used if a third party acts as intermediary agent
between vendor and buyer. Direct discharge from vessel onto
railroad car, road vehicle or barge with the purpose of immediate
transport from the port area (usually occurs when ports lack
adequate storage space or when ports are not equipped to
handle a specific cargo).
Transfer of leased equipment from one lessee to another
(container).
The shortest operated route between two points.
Sums paid out by a ship's agent at a port and recovered from the
carrier.
The unloading of a vehicle, a vessel or an aircraft. The landing of
cargo.
Recalculation of one or more payment's value to another point in
time than the agreed-on date of payment, usually with regard to
the certain interest rate.
Difference between the particulars given and the particulars
found.
A bar code in which the spaces between characters
(intercharacter gaps) are not part of the code as each character
begins and ends with a bar. The spaces can therefore vary in
width, specified tolerances. An example is Code 39.

Disintermediation

When a Net market bypasses a traditional channel, more directly


linking buyers with suppliers
Dispatch
See Despatch.
Displacement
The weight of the quantity of water displaced by the vessel. The
displacement of the vessel on her light draft represents the
weight of the vessel ready for use including stores etc.
Disposable Pallet
Pallet intended to be discarded after a single cycle of use.
Synonym: One-way pallet, Expendable pallet.
Disposal Chain
A sequence of events in a goods-flow which gets rid of a specific
good. This may include removal, recycling, waste dumping etc.
Disposal of Goods
The act of getting rid of goods.
Dispositioning
All activities relating to the inland movement of empty and or full
containers.
Distribution
All activities, both physical and administrative, which contribute
to making the company's products available on the market. The
concept also includes e.g. marketing, selection of distribution
concepts and physical distribution. See also "physical
distribution".
Distribution by Value
Please see "ABC-analysis".
Distribution Centre
A warehouse for the receipt, the storage and the dispersal of
goods among customers. Synonym: Branch Warehouse.
Distribution Channel
The route by which a company distributes goods.
Distribution Requirement
The function of determining the need to replenish inventory at
Planning DRP-1
branch warehouses over a forward time period. A time-phased
order point approach is used where planned orders at branch
warehouse level are exploded via MRP logic to become gross
requirements on the supplying source enabling the translation of
inventory plans into material flows. In the case of multi-level
distribution networks, this explosion process can continue down
through the various levels of regional warehouses, master
warehouse, factory warehouse, etc., and become input to the
master production schedule.
Distribution Requirements
Abbreviation: DRP-I. The function of determining the need to
Planning
replenish stock at branch warehouses.
Distribution Resource Planning The set of concepts, procedures and techniques, being an
extension of DRP-I, for the effective planning and control of the
physical distribution.
Distribution Resource Planning The extension of MRP into the planning of the key resources
DRP1.1
contained in a distribution system.
Distribution Systems
Comprehensive term for all activities, relations between the
different activities, resources, management and objectives in a
company which aim to make the company's products available
on the market. An important objective for the distribution system
is to create maximum availability for the company's products on
the market at the lowest possible cost. Maximum availability is
achieved by, among other things, choosing the right distribution
concept, the right marketing concept and an efficient physical
distribution system.
Divider
A vertically mounted partition in a compartment on board.
Synonym: Partition.
Divisionalization
Division of a group or a company into several more or less
independent units/divisions. These can be legally separate
subsidiaries which are not necessarily 100 percent owned by the
parent company.
Dock Receipt
Document issued by a shipping line acknowledging that goods

Document
Document Holder
Document of Title

Documentary Credit
Door Lock Bars
Double Banking
Double-deck Pallet
Down Time
Draft

Draught
Drawback

Drayage

Drilling Rig
Drive

Drop off Charge

DRP
DRP II
DRP-I
Dry Bulk Container

Dry Cargo Container


DSS
DTI
Dunnage
Du-pont chart

Du-pont formula

are received for shipment.


Anything printed, written, relied upon to record or prove
something.
Usually fastened to the door on the front of a container. May
contain e.g. a certificate of approval of the container.
A term to mean that possession of the specified document
entitles the holder to control of the goods listed in that
document.
The basis of international trade by means of which payment is
made against surrender of the specified documents.
See Bars.
Two vessels moored alongside each other on a certain berth.
Flat pallet with a top and bottom deck.
The period of time when a machine is not available for production
due to a functional failure or maintenance.
The draft of a vessel is the vertical distance between the
waterline and the underside of the keel of the vessel. During the
construction of a vessel the marks showing the draft are welded
on each side of the vessel near the stem, the stern and
amidships. Synonym: Draught.
See Draft.
Repayment of any part of customs or excise duties previously
collected on imported goods, when those goods are exported
again.
The hauling of a load by a cart with detachable sides. (dray).
Road transportation between the nearest railway terminal and
the stuffing place. Synonym: Connecting Road Haulage
A structure, which drills wells in the bottom in order to search for
oil.
Dedicated Road Infrastructure for Vehicle Safety in Europe, a
major initiative begun in 1988 to apply information technology to
the improvement of road safety and the reduction of
environmental pollution by road traffic. Acronym: DRIVE
Charge made by container owner and/or terminal operators for
delivery of a leased, or pool container into depot stock. The
dropoff charge may be a combination of actual handling and
storage charges with surcharges.
Distribution Requirement Planning
Distribution Resource Planning
See Distribution Requirements Planning.
Container consisting of a cargo-carrying structure, firmly secured
within a framework, for the carriage of dry solids in bulk without
packaging. Containers of this type have type codes 80 and 81.
Shipping container which is designed for the carriage of goods
other than liquids.
See Decision Support System.
Department of Trade and Industry
Stowage material, mainly timber or board, used to prevent
damage to cargo during carriage.
Graphical chart for relating different cost/revenue concepts to
each other. Originates from the multinational enterprise DuPont's organization of a budget and calculation system. It can
simply be expressed as a graphical basis for the Du-Pont
formula.
The formula presents a way of calculating a company's rate of

Duty Free Zone

DWCC
DWT

return for a certain period. Rate of Return = Surplus degree x


Return on Capital. Surplus degree = Surplus / Turnover.
Turnover = sales / invested capital
An area where goods or cargo can be stored without paying
import customs duties awaiting further transport or
manufacturing.
Dead weight cargo capacity
See Deadweight

E
E&OE
e.g.
EAN
EBCS
E-business
ECE Convention

Errors and ommissions excepted


For example
See: European Article Numbering Association
European barge carrier system
Exchange of business information on the Web.
International Convention for the Harmonization of Frontiers.
Controls of goods
E-Commerce
The end-to-end digital exchange of all information needed to
conduct business. Examples include EDI transactions, electronic
mail, archives, audit trails, and all forms of records, including
graphical images.
Econometric Models
A system of simultaneous equations for forecasting, based on
mutual dependency among the variables used.
Economic Order Interval (EOI) In fixed order interval systems, the interval between orders that
will minimise the total inventory cost, under a given set of
circumstances, obtained by trade off analysis between the cost of
placing an order and the cost of holding stock.
Economic Order Quantity
Is the optimum order quantity which ensures that the total of
purchasing, order and additional shortage costs is kept to a
minimum. Please also see "square root formula".
Economic Order Quantity
In fixed order quantity systems, the size of an order that
(EOQ)
minimises the total inventory cost, under a given set of
circumstances, obtained by trade off analysis between cost of
placing an order and cost of holding stock.
Economic Speed
That speed of a means of transport which produces the best
possible financial result for the owner. Such speed should not be
in excess of the maximum or minimum output allowed for the
engine(s).
Economic Stock
The sum of the physical stock and the goods ordered but not yet
received, minus the goods sold but not yet delivered for which a
company carries risk in respect of a drop in price and
unmarketability.
Economy of Scale
A phenomenon which encourages the production of larger
volumes of a commodity to reduce its unit cost by distributing
fixed costs over a greater quantity.
ECR
See: Efficient Consumer Response
ECR Scorecard
The ECR scorecard is a tool to enable organisations to assess the
ECR performance of both itself and its trading partners. It can be
applied by manufacturers, wholesalers and retailers. The
scorecard covers 14 improvement concepts adopted by the
European ECR Board and provides the basis for companies to
drive ECR improvement programmes. These improvement
concepts fall across Demand Management, Supply Management
and Enabling Technologies to optimise performance.
ECSI
Export Cargo Shipping Instruction/Preadvice. Instructions from
shipper with details of all parties involved and description of
goods.
EDC
European Distribution Centre
EDI
See Electronic Data Interchange.
EDIFACT
See Electronic Data Interchange For Administration, Commerce
and Transport.
EDP
See Electronic Data Processing.
EDR
See Equipment Damage Report.
Effective Stock
The sum of the physical stock of a particular product and the

quantity of that product ordered for a particular period, but not


yet received.
Effectiveness
Doing the right things - understanding what, at a strategic,
tactical and operational level, should be done to optimise
resource use.
Efficiency
Doing things right - doing those things which are deemed to be
effective as well as possible.
Efficient Consumer Response An initiative whereby elements of the supply chain work together
(ECR)
to fulfill consumer wishes better, faster and at less cost.
EFR
Efficient Foodservice Response
EFTA - European Free Trade Comprising Iceland, Norway and Switzerland.
Association
EHA (Equipment Handover
An agreement acknowledging the condition of the carrier's
Agreement), Interchange (Fr) equipment when handed over and returned, which includes the
terms of contract under which the equipment was taken over.
E-invoicing
An administrative service that involves creating, sending and
handling customers commercial invoices electronically.
EIR
See Equipment Interchange Receipt.
Elasticity of service
The connection between service level and demand. The greater
effect service level has on demand the higher the value of
service elasticity.
Electronic Data Interchange The transfer of structured data, by agreed standards from
(EDI)
applications on the computer of one party to the applications on
the computer of another party by electronic means.
Electronic Data Interchange Abbreviation: EDIFACT. The ISO application level syntax rules for
For Administration, Commerce the structuring of user data and of the associated service data in
and Transport
the interchange of messages in an open environment. United
Nations rules for EDIFACT. They comprise a set of internationally
agreed upon standards, directories and guidelines for the
electronic interchange of structured data related to trade in
goods and services between independent computerized
information systems.
Electronic Data Processing
The computerized handling of information (e.g. business data).
(EDP)
Electronic Point of Sale
EPOS equipment can collect and store data related to sales
(EPOS)
information at the point of sale. The introduction of EPOS
systems linked to bar coding and article numbering laser
scanners can provide the information that is required to operate
ECR.
Elevator
Equipment used to discharge some bulk cargoes such as grain
which is removed from the hold by a continuous line of buckets
or by suction and carried on a conveyor belt to store.
Embargo
A government order prohibiting the entry or departure of
commercial vessels or goods at its ports. The refusal by a
carrier, for a limited period, to accept for transport over any
route or segment thereof, and to or from any area or point, of a
connecting carrier, any commodity, type of class of cargo duly
tendered.
EMEA
Europe, Middle East & Africa
Emergency Medical Service
Medical procedures in case of emergencies on board of vessels.
(EMS)
EMS
See Emergency Medical Service.
Endorsement
The transfer of the right to obtain delivery of the goods of the
carrier by means of the consignee's signature on the reverse side
of a bill of lading. If the name of the new consignee (transferee)

is not stated, the endorsement is an open one which means that


every holder of the document is entitled to obtain delivery of the
goods.
Enquiry
Document issued by a party interested in the purchase of goods
specified therein and indicating particular, desirable conditions
regarding delivery terms, etc., addressed to a prospective
supplier with a view to obtaining an offer.
Enterprise
An organization created to provide products and/or services to
customers.
Enterprise Resource Planning Complex applications used by large enterprises to manage
(ERP)
inventory and integrate business processes across multiple
divisions and organizational boundaries, often the application
backbone in many large enterprises.
EOQ
Economic Order Quantity
Equipment
Material resources necessary to facilitate the transport and
handling of cargo. Transport equipment does under the given
circumstances not have the ability to move by its own propulsion
(e.g. sea container, trailer, unit load device, pallet).
Equipment Damage Report
Written statement concerning damage to equipment, based on a
(EDR)
physical inspection.
Equipment Interchange
Physical inspection and transfer receipt.
Receipt (EIR)
ERP
Enterprise Resource Planning. A business software system.
Computerised information support for a companys business
processes.
E-services
Web-based service offerings - via a website or by Internet access
to systems and applications.
Estimated Delivery Date
The date and time a package or shipment is expected to be
(EDD)
delivered to a given destination.
Estimated Time of Arrival
The expected date and time of arrival in a certain port.
(ETA)
Synonym: Expected time of arrival.
Estimated Time of Departure The expected date and time when a certain port is left.
(ETD)
Synonym: Expected time of departure.
ETA
See: Estimated Time of Arrival
ETD
See: Estimated Time of Departure
ETS
Expected time of sailing
Europallet(s)
The Europallet is the supposedly standard pallet for the European
Union countries. It covers an area of 1 metre x 1 metre and is
therefore smaller than the pallets currently in use in most other
parts of the world (e.g. Australia where the standard pallet is
1.17 x 1.17 meters). The ability/inability of some destinations to
handle one or other of the types of pallets can cause needless
added expense (unless we're doing the re-palletisation, then it's
good for the profit margin!).
European Article Numbering An international body responsible for administering the European
Association (EAN)
Article Numbering system. It has affiliates in many countries
such as: CCG in West Germany, DCC in Japan, ANA in the United
Kingdom. Note: The North American body responsible for the
Uniform Product Code (UPC) coding is the Uniform Code Council.
(UPC is a subset of EAN).
European Pallet Pool
Pool for the exchange of standard size pallets (Europallets) in
European cargo traffic, formed in 1961 by a number of European
rail administrators.
European Zone Charge (EZC) A charge for inland haulage transport in case of carrier haulage
in Europe.

EVA
Even Keel

Event
Ex Works ...

Excess

Excess Stock
Exchange Rate
Exchanges

Excl.
Execution
Exempt Carrier
Exemption Clause
Expected
Expediting
Expendable Pallet
Expenses
Expiration
Exponential market

Economic Value Added


Said of a vessel which is balanced in such a way that the draft
forward and aft is the same as the draft in the midship of the
vessel on both sides.
An occurrence.
Ex works means that the seller fulfils his obligation to deliver
when he has made the goods available at his premises (i.e.
works, factory, warehouse, etc.) to the buyer. In particular, he is
not responsible for loading the goods on the vehicle provided by
the buyer or for clearing the goods for export, unless otherwise
agreed. The buyer bears all costs and risks involved in taking the
goods from the seller's premises to the desired destination. This
term thus represents the minimum obligation for the seller. This
term should not be used when the buyer cannot carry out
directly or indirectly the export formalities. In such cases, the
FCA term should be used.
Going over the prescribed amount or degree e.g. excess luggage
is luggage of which the weight is over the weight for free
carriage.
That portion of stock on hand which is over and above desired
stock level.
The rate at which one currency can be exchanged for another,
usually expressed as the value of the one in terms of the other.
Two-sided marketplaces where buyers and suppliers negotiate
prices, usually with a bid and ask system, and where prices move
both up and down. Work best with easily definable products
without complicated attributes--commodities, perishable items
such as food, or intangibles such as electric power. Produce
fluctuating, sometimes volatile prices. Particularly appropriate if
a true market price is difficult to discover. Also work where
brokers make high margins by buying low and selling high to
purchasers who don't know the original sellers. Examples: Altra
(energy), Paper Exchange (paper products), GoFish.com (frozen
fish), Arbinet (telecommunications bandwidth). Synonyms:
digital exchange, online exchange, dynamic exchange, dynamic
trading exchange.
Excluding
The actual act of carrying out a task.
Company which transports commodities exempted from
Interstate Commerce Commission (ICC) economic regulation.
A clause in a contract, which relieves the carrier's responsibility
for certain events. Synonym: Exceptions Clause.
Likely to occur or appear.
The 'rushing' or 'chasing' of production or purchase orders which
are needed in less than the normal lead time.
See disposable pallet. Synonym: One Way Pallet.
Costs paid out in connection with booking of cargo and arranging
transport (e.g. commission).
Termination of a certain period.
Where one party can be both a buyer and seller. Both buyers and
sellers benefit when a new participant joins because fewer
participants are needed to create higher volumes. Grow faster
than linear markets. Require well-defined or commoditized
products to make purchase and sale easy. Transaction costs
must be low to keep the market liquid. Examples: Altra (energy),
e-Steel, MetalSite. Synonym: circular market. Antonym: linear

Export

Export Declaration

Export Licence
Export Packer
Export Parts Consolidation
Exporter
EXQ
EXS
External Storage
External Transportation

Extract
EXW
EZC

market.
The process of carrying or sending goods to another country or
countries, especially for purposes of use or sale in the country of
destination. The sale of products to clients abroad.
A document required by the U.S. Treasury Department and
completed by a shipper indicating the contents, value, and
destination of an export shipment.
Document granting permission to export as detailed within a
specified time.
Company, packing goods for export.
The unification process of shipments being exported and
transported to locations throughout the world.
The party responsible for the export of goods.
Ex quai -costs and risks to be accepted ex (from) wharf at
named port (port of destination discharge port) (Incoterms)
Ex ship (Incoterms)
Buying of a storage service which includes renting cost and
input/output of material.
Transportation between different companies, facilities etc. Often
a description of transportation outside the gates of the company.
Please compare with "internal transportation".
Summary or copy of something written, e.g. used in connection
with the log book.
See Ex Works (...named place).
See European Zone Charge

F
F&D
F.A.C
F.I
FAA
FAB
Fabrication

Freight and demurrage


Fast as can (loading or discharge)
Free in
Free of all average
Forwarder Air Bill
A term used to distinguish manufacturing operations for
components as opposed to assembly operations.
FAC
Forwarding agents commission
Factory Delivery
The delivery of goods by a factory whereby the goods are put at
the disposal of another (internal) party such as a commercial
department.
FAF
Fuel Adjustment Factor
Fairway
A navigable channel for vessels, often the regular or prescribed
track a vessel will follow in order to avoid dangerous
circumstances.
FAK
See Freight All Kinds.
FAL
Facilitation Committee of the IMO.
FALPRO
Special Programme on Trade Facilitation (UNCTAD)
Family Group
A group of related products for which demand can be aggregated
in order to assess overall demand for the material or parts which
make up the family group products.
Fantainer
Identical to a GP but is fitted with an electric extraction fan for
carriage of cargoes prone to condensation. 20' only
FAQ (1)
Frequently Asked Questions
FAQ (2)
Free along side quay or free at quay
FAQ (3)
Free average quality
FAS
See Free Alongside Ship (...named port of shipment).
Fashion Transport
Transport of clothing and/or garments including shoes, belts and
handbags in dedicated means of transport. FCA See Free Carrier
(...named place).
Fast Moving Consumer Goods FMCG are a product group of retail goods, such as food and
(FMCG)
drinks.
FBH
Free on board harbour
FBL
FlATA Negotiable Combined Transpon Bill of Lading
FCC
See Fully Cellular Containership.
FCL
See full container load.
Fco
Franco free
FCR
Forwarders Certificate of Receipt (FIATA Document)
FCSR & CC
Free of capture. seizure, riots and civil commotions
FCT
Forwarders Certificate of Transport (FIATA Document)
Feed Back
The flow of information back into the control system so that
actual performance can be compared with planned performance.
Feeder
A vessel normally used for local or coastal transport (for carriage
of cargo and/or containers) to and from ports not scheduled to
be called by the main (ocean) vessel, directly connecting these
ports to the main (ocean) vessel.
Fender
An appliance made of rubber, timber and/or rope or other
materials normally attached to a dock or quay used to prevent
damage to the hull of a vessel especially during mooring and unmooring operations.
FEU
See Forty Foot Equivalent Unit.
FGA
Free of general average

FHEX
FIAS
FIB
FIC
FIFO
Fifth Wheel

FIH
FILL RATE
FILO
Finished Goods
Finished Goods Stock

FIO
FIRAVV
First In First Out (FIFO)

First Pick Ratio

FIS
FIW
Fixed Assets
Fixed Cost
Fixed Crane
Fixed Height Load-carrying
Truck
Fixed Order Interval

Fixed Order Quantity (Fixed


Order Size)

Fixed Platform Truck


Fixed-T-System

Flag
Flammable

Friday and Holidays excepted


Free in and stowed
Free into barge
Freight, insurance, carriage
See First In First Out.
Circular or wheel-shaped bearing mechanism, secured on the
rear of the chassis of a truck-tractorm that engages the semitrailer king pin with a spring lock device and supports the weight
of the front end of the semi-trailer.
Free in harbour
Describes the relationship between the volume of goods and
available storage or transport space.
See Free In Liner Out.
Inventory to which the final increments of value have been
added through manufacturing.
Stock that is available for supply to an external consumer,
including items that have been supplied but not invoiced to an
external consumer.
See Free In and Out.
First available vessel
The method whereby the goods which have been longest in stock
(first in) are used, delivered (sold) and/or consumed first (first
out).
During order picking, the percentage of orders or lines for which
100% completion was achieved from the primary location or
picking face.
Freight, insurance and shipping charges
Free into waggon
Resources for long-term ownership, e.g. machines, premises,
subsidiaries.
A cost which will be unchanged even if the operation volume is
changed.
A crane of which the principal structure is mounted on
permanent or semi permanent foundations.
Truck carrying its load on a non-elevating platform. Synonym:
Fixed platform truck.
An inventory control system for which a maximum stock level
has been calculated based on usage during the lead time and
order interval. Stock is reviewed at specified time periods and
subsequent order size equates to the difference between the
maximum stock level and the current inventory position. Thus,
the order size will vary according to usage between reviews.
An inventory control system where stock is reviewed
continuously and, whenever the inventory falls to a
predetermined point, an order for a fixed quantity of stock is
generated.
See Fixed Height Load-carrying Truck.
This is an inventory control system which means that inventory
volume is checked at regular dates and orders are placed
systematically. The order quantity is equal to the capacity level,
minus the volume of goods already in stock.
An indication of the country in which a means of transport is
registered through a reference to the ensign of this country.
Capable to be set on fire under given circumstances.
(Amendment 25 IMO DGS).

Flash Point

The lowest temperature at which a good produces enough


vapour to form a flammable mixture with air.
Flat
See Flat Rack.
Flat Bed Trailer
A wheeled trailer or a semi-trailer with a flat cargo carrying
surface or deck and without any superstructure.
Flat Pack
Garments packed in cardboard boxes.
Flat Rack
A flat bed with fixed ends suitable for the carriage of cargo of
excessive width and plated for carriage of heavy loads. 20' and
40'
Fleet
Any group of means of transport acting together or under one
control.
Flexibility
The extent to which and the rate at which adjustments to
changed circumstances are possible.
Flexible Computer Integrated FCIM is the integration of equipment, software, communication,
Manufacturing (FCIM)
human resources, and business practices within an enterprise to
rapidly manufacture, repair, and deliver items on demand with
continuous improvements in the processes. The FCIM initiative is
a Joint Service and Agency effort to establish and implement the
procedures and processes needed.
Flexitanks
A large polythene liner which can be fitted inside a 20'GP for the
transportation of non-hazardous liquids
Flight Member
A licensed crew member charged with duties essential to the
operation of an aircraft during flight time.
Flight Number
A combination of two letters, indicating the airline, and three or
four digits indicating the number of the voyage. Synonym: Line
Number.
FLM
First Line Management
Floating
Freely suspending in water of an object.
Floating Crane
A crane mounted on a barge or pontoon, which can be towed or
is self propelled.
Floating Dock
A floating structure that can be partially submerged to enable
vessels to enter and to leave and which can be raised for use as
a dry dock.
Floating Stock
See Pipeline Inventory.
Floor Ready Merchandise
FRM; are goods prepared ready to go directly to the sales floor in
(FRM)
a retail operation. Goods can be made floor-ready at any stage in
the supply chain, because the process is not complex adding
product labels, price labels, and security tags, and pre-assorting
and packaging.
Flow Change Costs
Costs which occur when there is a change in the manufacturing
rate, e.g. with seasonal fluctuations.
Flow Chart
A diagram, using symbols and depicting the sequence of events
that should take place in a complex set of tasks.
Flow control
A term often used to describe a specific production control
system.
Flow Cycle Time
Gives information about the time that is needed for production
and distribution of products. Please also see "throughput time".
Flow Line
The direction of flow in which e.g. pallets have been positioned
and stowed.
Flow of materials
The flow of materials and components which goes to and through
the factory for the production process.
Flow Oriented Layout
Production equipment is placed in flow lines, so called
manufacturing cells. A manufacturing cell consists of a primary
machine operating at full capacity and a number of secondary
machines.

Flow-Through Distribution

FLT
FMC
FMC (2)
FMCG
FOB
FOC
Fo'c's'le
FOD
FOQ
FOR
Force Majeure

Fore and Aft Stowage


Forecast

Forecast Demand
Forecastle
Fork Lift Pockets
Fork Lift Truck
Fork Pockets
Formula of Camp
Forty Foot Equivalent Unit
Forward
Forwarder

Forwarding Instruction
FOS
FOT
Four Way Pallet
FOW
FOW (2)
FPA
FPAD
FR
Fragile
Fragmentation

An inventory reduction strategy in which parts are received from


multiple locations at one facility, consolidated by destination, and
delivered within the same day.
Forklift truck
Federal Maritime Commission (Control of shipping acts USA)
Fully Mission Capable
Fast Moving Consumer Goods
See Free On Board (...named port of shipment).
Flags of convenience
See Forecastle.
Free of damage
Free on quay
Free on rail (lncoterms)
Circumstance which is beyond the control of one of the parties to
a contract and which may, according to the terms and conditions,
relieve that party of liability for failing to execute the contract.
Synonym: Act of God.
Stowage from the bow to the stern (lengthwise), as opposed to
stowage athwartships.
An estimation or calculation in advance; a prediction. The
amount of cargo expected to be booked for a certain sailing of a
vessel. The number of containers expected to be used in a
certain area, for steering purposes.
The prediction, projection or estimation of expected demand over
a specified future time period.
Abbreviation: Fo'c's'le. Forward part of a vessel where stores,
ropes and anchor chains are located.
See Fork Pockets.
A three or four wheeled mechanical truck with forks at the front
designed for lifting, carrying and stowing cargo.
Openings or recesses in a side of a container for the entry of the
forks of a fork lift truck. Synonym: Fork Lift Pockets.
A mathematical formula on behalf of inventory management for
calculating the optimum order quantity.
Abbreviation: FEU. Unit of measurement equivalent to one forty
feet shipping container.
At, near or towards the bow or front of a vessel or an aircraft.
The party arranging the carriage of goods including connected
services and/or associated formalities on behalf of a shipper or
consignee. Synonym: Freight Forwarder.
Document issued to a freight forwarder, giving instructions to the
forwarder for the forwarding of goods described therein.
Free on steamer or ship
Free on truck (rail) (lncoterms)
A pallet of which the frame permits the entry of forks of e.g. a
fork lift truck at all four sides.
Free on wharf
First open water
Free of particular average
Freight payable at destination
Flat rack (container)
Easily breakable. Term denoting that goods should be handled
with care.
Market condition when there is no dominant group of buyers or

Franchise
FRC
Free Airport
Free Alongside Ship ...
Free Carrier ...

Free Circulation, Libre


Circulation
Free House Unclear
Free In and Out (FIO)

Free In Liner Out (FILO)

Free Lift
Free On Board ...

Free Port

Free Pratique

Free Stock
Free Trade Zone

suppliers, but where many buyers are chasing many suppliers,


often inefficiently.
Amount which in case of damage will have to be borne by the
assured.
Free Carrier (named point) (lncoterms)
See Free Trade Zone.
Abbreviation: FAS
Free Carrier" means that the seller fulfils his obligation to deliver
when he has handed over the goods, cleared for export, into the
charge of the carrier named by the buyer at the named place or
point. If no precise point is indicated by the buyer, the seller may
choose within the place or range stipulated where the carrier
shall take the goods into his charge. When, according to
commercial practice, the seller's assistance is required in making
the contract with the carrier (such as in rail or air transport) the
seller may act at the buyer's risk and expense. This term may
be used for any mode of transport, including multimodal
transport. "Carrier" means any person who, in a contract of
carriage, undertakes to perform or to procure the performance of
carriage by rail, road, sea, air, inland waterway or by a
combination of such modes. If the buyer instructs the seller to
deliver the cargo to a person, e.g. a freight forwarder who is not
a "carrier", the seller is deemed to have fulfilled his obligation to
The movement of goods within the European Community without
the need to pay any duty.
Delivered at a certain destination without payment of certain
duties or incurred costs.
Transport condition denoting that the freight rate excludes the
costs of loading and discharging and, if appropriate, stowage and
lashing.
Transport condition denoting that the freight rate is inclusive of
the sea carriage and the cost of discharging, the latter as per the
custom of the port. It excludes the cost of loading and, if
appropriate, stowage and lashing.
The maximum elevation of the forks of a fork lift truck.
Free on Board means that the seller fulfils his obligation to
deliver when the goods have passed over the ship's rail at the
named port of shipment. This means that the buyer has to bear
all costs and risks of loss of or damage to the goods from that
point. The FOB term requires the seller to clear the goods for
export. This term can only be used for sea or inland waterway
transport. When the ship's rail serves no practical purpose, such
as in the case of roll-on/roll-off transport, the FCA term is more
appropriate to use
An international port or an area within an international port at
which, crew, passengers, baggage, cargo, mail and stores may
be disembarked or unloaded, may remain and may be
transhipped, without being subjected to any customs charges or
duties. (Examination is possible for instance to meet security or
narcotics control requirements.) Source: IMO.
Permission granted by local medical authorities, denoting that
the vessel has a clean Bill of Health so that people may embark
and disembark.
See Available Stock.
(FTZ) A part of the territory of a state where any goods
introduced are generally regarded, in so far as import duties and

Freeboard of a Vessel
Freight
Freight
Freight
Freight
Freight

All Kinds (FAK)


Collect
Container
Costs

Freight Forwarder
Freight Invoice
Freight Manifest
Freight Prepaid
Freight Ton
Freighter
Frequency Storage Location

Frt. ton
Frt.fwd.
FSC
Ft
Ft.ppd.
FTA
FTL
FTP
FTZ
Full Container Load (FCL)

Full Trailer

Fully Cellular Containership


(FCC)
Fumigation
Functional Layout
FWC
Fwdr.
FWR

taxes are concerned, as being exempted (Kyoto Convention).


Synonym: Free Port, Free Airport.
Vertical distance from the main deck to the surface of the water
measured at the middle of the vessel's length.
The amount of money due for the carriage of goods and payable
either in advance or upon delivery.
Single freight which is charged irrespective of the commodity.
Freight and charges be paid by the consignee.
See Container.
Costs incurred by the merchant in moving goods, by whatever
means, from one place to another under the terms of the
contract of carriage. In addition to transport costs this may
include such elements as packing, documentation, loading,
unloading and transport insurance.
Forwarders provide shipping, documentation, customs clearance
and brokerage, consolidation, storage and insurance.
An itemized list of goods shipped and services rendered stating
fees and charges.
A (cargo) manifest including all freight particulars.
Freight and charges to be paid by the consignor.
A unit for freighting cargo according to weight and/or cubic
measurement. Synonyms: Revenue ton, Bill of Lading ton.
A vessel or an aircraft used for the carriage of cargo.
In an inventory part numbers with high input/output frequency
are located in such a way that the work cycle time in collecting
and delivering these parts is kept to a minimum.
freight ton
Freight forward
Fuel Surcharge
Foot (feet)
Freight prepaid
Freight Transport Association
Full Truck Load, an indication for a truck transporting cargo
directly from supplier to receiver.
File Transfer Protocol
See Free Trade Zone.
A container stuffed or stripped under risk and for account of the
shipper and/or the consignee. A general reference for identifying
container loads of cargo loaded and/or discharged at merchants'
premises.
A truck trailer constructed in such way that its own weight and
that of the cargo rest upon its own wheels, instead of being
supported by e.g. a tractor.
A vessel specially designed to carry containers, with cell-guides
under deck and necessary fittings and equipment on deck.
Treating of cargoes with gases to exterminate unwanted life
forms.
Machines of the same type are grouped together, e.g. lathes with
lathes and milling machines with milling machines.
Full loaded weight & capacity (container)
Forwarder
FIATA Warehouse Receipt

G
GA
GAA
GAC
GAM
Gantry Crane

General average
General Average Agreement (bond)
General average contribution
Global Account Manager
A crane or hoisting machine mounted on a frame or structure
spanning an intervening space, which often travels on rails.
GANTT-Chart
A planning chart which describes the sequence and time frame
for the different stages in a project.
Gateway
A point at which cargo is interchanged between carriers or modes
of transport. A means of access, an entry.
GATT
See General Agreement On Tariffs and Trade.
GBL
Government Bill of Lading
GC
General cargo
GCR
See General Cargo Rate and General Commodity Rate.
GDP
Gross domestic product
General Agreement
An agreement between buyer and vendor includes, besides the
agreement text, a delivery schedule which specifies the buyer's
needs in relation to every detail included per unit of time (e.g.
week) during a longer time period, normally 1-2 years ahead. In
addition, a detailed specification is included which describes all
parts included, the price per unit and the annual quantity from
which the price is calculated. Finally, there is a "fixed time"
notice given in weeks, which means that every blanket release in
the delivery schedule within this time should be regarded as a
fixed order.
General Agreement on Tariffs Abbreviation: GATT. Major international agreement on trade and
and Trade
tariffs between many nations all over the world.
General Agreement with
In an agreement, besides the agreement text itself, there is also
Schedule
a part description included which contains price and the
approximate quantity for which the price has been calculated, for
all products included. The buyer's need for call off is specified in
separate delivery schedules that are distributed to the supplier at
regular intervals or when a major shift in demand occurs. The
delivery schedules show the due dates and the quantity per part
number during the period of the agreement. The forthcoming
blanket order is a fixed order, the others are a forecast for the
supplier's capacity reservation. The first and last validity dates
should also be included in the agreement text.
General Average (G/A)
Intentional act or sacrifice that is carried out to safeguard vessel
and cargo. When a vessel is in danger, the master has the right
to sacrifice property and/or to incur reasonable expenditure.
Measures taken for the sole benefit of any particular interest are
not considered general average.
General Average Act
(York-Antwerp Rules) There is a general average act when, and
only when any extraordinary sacrifice or expenditure is
intentionally and reasonably made or incurred for the common
safety for the purpose of preserving from peril the property
involved in a common maritime adventure.
General Average Statement This shows in detail all general average costs and expenses and
the contribution of each interest in the general average in
proportion to its value.
General Cargo
Cargo, cosisting of goods, unpacked or packed, for example in
cartons, crates, bags or bales, often palletized. General cargo
can be shipped either in breakbulk or containerized. Any

consignment other than a consignment containing valuable cargo


and charged for transport at general cargo rates (air cargo).
General Cargo Rate
Abbreviation: GCR.Synonym: General Commodity Rate. The rate
for the carriage of cargo other than a class rate or specific
commodity rate.
General Commodity Rate
See General Cargo Rate.
General Purpose Container
A container used for the carriage of general cargo without any
special requirements for the transport and or the conditioning of
the goods.
Gen-set
Motor generator set as power source for e.g. thermal containers.
Germanischer Lloyd
German classification society.
GFA
General freight agent
Global Supply Chain
The management and integration of customized logistics
Management Services
solutions that enable customers to distribute products in global
markets.
GM
General Maintenance
GMT
Greenwich Meantime
GNP
Gross national product
GNVQ
General National Vocational Qualification
Godown
A warehouse or cargo shed. This term is often used in the Far
East.
Goods
Common term indicating movable property, merchandise or
wares. All materials which can be used to satisfy demands.
Whole or part of the cargo received from the shipper, including
any equipment supplied by the shipper.
Goods Control Certificate
Document issued by a competent body evidencing the quality of
goods described therein, in accordance with national or
international standards, or conforming to legislation in the
importing country, or as specified in the contract.
Goods Flow
The direction and path of the movement of goods and sequence
of placement of those goods in a supply chain.
Goods in Transit
The goods which have departed from the initial loading point and
not yet arrived at the final unloading point. Synonyms: Stock in
Transit, In Transit Inventory, Transportation Inventory.
Goods Item
A separate identifiable quantity of products or articles of a single
type.
Goods Receipt
Document issued by a port, warehouse, shed, or terminal
operator acknowledging receipt of goods specified therein on
conditions stated or referred to in the document.
Gooseneck
Gooseneck shaped front end of a trailer or chassis. Recess front
bottom of a container to reduce the total height of the chassis
plus container.
Graphical User Interface (GUI)Graphical rather than text-based user interface to an application
on a computer. The term came into existence because the first
interactive user interfaces to computers were not graphical; they
were text-and-keyboard oriented and usually consisted of
commands you had to remember and computer responses that
were very brief. Elements of a GUI include windows, pull-down
menus, pushbuttons, scroll bars, icons, wizards and more.
Grid Number
An indication of the position of a container in a bay plan by
means of a combination of page number, column and line. The
page number often represents the bay number.
Gross Manifest
A manifest containing freight details without any appropriate
disbursements.
Gross Tonnage
Abbreviation: GRT. The measure of the overall size of a vessel

Gross Weight

Gross Weight of Container


Groupage
Groupage Agent, Groupeur
(Fr)
Groupage Centre
GRT
GSA
GST
GUI
GUS Classification

GW

determined in accordance with the provisions of the international


convention on measurement of vessels usually expressed in
register ton.
Weight (mass) of goods including packing, but excluding the
carrier's equipment expressed in whole kilograms. The weight of
a shipment including materials necessary for blocking etc.
Total weight of container including cargo (in kilograms).
The collection of several small consignments and the formation of
one large shipment thereof (road cargo).
One who consolidates LCL consignments to offer to a carrier as
an FCL
A location where groupage takes place (roadcargo).
Gross registered tonnage
General Sales Agent
General Systems Theory
See: Graphical User Interface
A classification of products into three categories for the benefit of
goods flow control and stock control, based on a products area of
application within a product division. G = General products that
may be required in several main article groups or operations
centers and are administered centrally in the division U = Unique
products that are used uniquely in one main article group or
operations centre but in several of its products, and administered
locally in the division. S = Specific products that are used
exclusively in one higher level product, and whose procurement
is effected per individual order.
Gross weight

H
H/C-High Cube
H/lift
Hague Rules

Hague-Visby Rules
Half Height

Hamburg Rules
Handling Instructions
Handling Service
Harbour
Harmonized System

Hatch Cover
Hatch Way

Haulage
Haulier
HAWB
Hdlg
Heated Container
Heavy Lift

Heavy Lift Vessel


Hedging

HERMES
Heuristic

Hgt
Hinterland
Hitchment Cargo

Identical to the GP, but with 9'6" sides and not the standard 8'6".
40' only
Heavy lift
International convention for the unification of certain rules,
relating to Bills of Lading (1924). These Rules include the
description of responsibilities of ocean carriers.
Set of rules, published in 1968, amending the Hague Rules.
Identical to the open top, but with 4'3" ends and not the
standard 8'6". Suitable for the carriage of heavy cargo as the box
weight is considerably less. 20' only
United Nations Convention on the carriage of goods by sea of
1978 adopted in 1992.
Indication how cargo is to be handled.
Service concerning the physical handling of cargo.
Place of shelter for vessels. Most of the time used as an
indication for the geographical location.
Abbreviation: HS. A numeric multi purpose system, developed by
the Customs Cooperation Council, for the classification of goods
with its six digits it covers about 5000 descriptions of the
products or groups of products most commonly produced and
traded. It is designed for customs services, but can also be used
for statistics, transport purposes, export, import and
manufacturing.
Watertight means of closing the hatchway of a vessel.
Opening in the deck of a vessel through which cargo is loaded
into, or discharged from the hold and which is closed by means
of a hatch cover.
The inland carriage of cargo or containers between named
locations/points. Synonym: Cartage.
Road carrier.
House Air Waybill
Handling
Thermal container served by a heat producing appliance.
Single commodity exceeding the capacity of normal loading
equipment and requiring special equipment and rigging methods
for handling.
A vessel specially designed and equipped for the carriage of
heavy cargo.
Buying or selling earlier and more than really needed in order to
protect the company against price increases or shortages of
commodities or components to realize profits when prices
fluctuate.
Handling European Railway Message Exchange System
The process of solving problems by evaluating each step in the
progress, searching for satisfactory solutions rather than optimal
solutions. It comprises a form of problem solving where the
results are determined by experience or intuition instead of by
optimization.
Height
The inland area served by a certain port.
An amount of goods which is added to an original consignment
as the owner and the destination are the same as those of the
original consignment.

HMCE
Hogged
Hold
Holding Cost
Home Port
Homepage

Horizontal market

House Address
HP
HQ
HR
HS
HTML

Hub

Hull
Husbanding
Hyperlink

Her Majesty's Customs & Excise


Loading condition of a vessel in such a way that the centre of the
vessel is slightly raised (arch-wise in the centre).
The space below the deck of a vessel, used to carry cargo.
The port of registration of a vessel.
First Web page a user sees in its Web browser when surfing the
Web. Browsers allow users to select their homepage according to
their individual needs. Typically, a homepage contains a
collection of links to other resources and serves as a structured
first entry point to the Web. Because the homepage is visible to
users each time they start browsing the Web, many companies
and communities battle for this popular bookmark with their
portal.
Sell materials or services that any company needs, not those
used for manufacturing or production. Services include MRO,
benefits management, and procurement process management.
Examples: Ariba Network, CommerceOne's MarketSite.net,
EmployEase. Synonyms: functional market, hub. (See MRO.)
Place of receipt respectively delivery (name and address) in case
of carrier haulage.
Horse power
Headquarters
Human Resources
See Harmonized System.
HyperText Markup Language. The universal Internet language for
browser use, enabling links and including code instructions for
the browser to display text and images correctly on a Web page.
The central transhipment point in a transport structure, serving a
number of consignees and/or consignors by means of spokes.
The stretches between hubs mutually are referred to as trunks.
Huckepack Carriage See Piggyback.
Outer shell of a vessel, made of steel plates or other suitable
material to keep water outside the vessel.
Taking care of a vessel's non cargo related operations as
instructed the by the master or owner of such vessel.
Selectable connection from one word, picture, or information
object that is typically embedded in a hypertext to other
resources on the Web. The most common form of a hyperlink is
an underlined word or highlighted picture that can be selected by
the user - typically clicked with a mouse - resulting in the
immediate request for another resource such as a another
hypertext document, graphics or an application

I
I.E.
I.O.U
IACS
IATA
IATA Cargo Agent

IFTMCS

That is
I owe you
See International Association of Classification Societies.
See International Air Transport Association.
An agent approved by IATA and registered in the IATA Cargo
Agency List. This enables the agent, upon authorization of the
IATA carrier, to receive shipments, to execute Air Waybills and to
collect charges (air cargo).
An airline which is a member of IATA (air cargo).
In accordance with
See International Civil Aviation Organization.
Institute Cargo Clauses
See Inland Clearance Depot.
International Cargo Handling Coordinating Association.
See International Chamber of Shipping.
Information & Communication Services
Information Communication Technology
The unique data, e.g. name, number or code, determining a
certain object or person.
The amount of ineffective time whereby the available resources
are not used e.g. a container in a yard.
Instruction contract status message.

IFTMIN

A message from the party providing the transport/forwarding


services to the party that issued the instructions for those
services stating the actual details, terms and conditions (charges
when applicable) of the service and of the consignment involved.
In addition it can be used for the exchange of contract
information between carriers mutually.
Instruction message.

IATA Member
IAW
ICAO
ICC
ICD
ICHCA
ICS
ICS (2)
ICT
Identification
Idle Time

Instruction message (IFTMIN) used in Electronic Data


Interchange (EDI) between trading partners involved in
administration, commerce and transport.

IFTSTA

Ignition

A message from the party issuing an instruction regarding


forwarding/transport services for a consignment under conditions
agreed, to the party arranging the forwarding and/or transport
services.
International multimodal status report message.

A message to report the transport status and/or a change in the


transport status (i.e. event) between agreed parties.
Setting on fire or catching fire. The point at which a market gains
momentum, liquidity is achieved, and the Net market becomes a

ILO
IM
IMDG Code
IMGS
IMI
IMO
Importer

Imports Parts Management


In Process Goods

In Transit
In.
Inactive Inventory
Incl.
Incoterms

Indemnification
Independent Demand

Indirect Route
Infomediary (business)

Infomediary (consumer)

Information portal

Information Systems

Infrastructure

more efficient means of buying and selling than the traditional


physical market or channel. (Related term: Critical mass,
liquidity, network effect.)
See International Labour Organization.
Intermediate Maintenance
See International Maritime Dangerous Goods Code.
See International Medical Guide for Ships.
Innovative Manufacturing Initiative
See International Maritime Organization.
The party responsible for the import of goods. For customs
purposes it is the party who makes, or on whose behalf an agent
makes, an import declaration. This party may be the party who
has possession of the goods or to whom the goods are
consigned.
The management of parts and products imported from various
countries.
Partially completed final products that are still in the production
process either as an accumulation of partially completed work or
the queue of material awaiting further processing.
The status of goods or persons between the outwards customs
clearance and inwards customs clearance.
Inch (es)
Stock of items that have not been used for a defined period.
Including
Trade terms in coded form as established by the International
Chamber of Commerce in 1953, whereafter they have been
regularly updated. (Last update 1990). The terms represent a set
of international rules for the interpretation of the principal terms
of delivery used in trade contracts.
Compensation for a loss and/or the expenses incurred.
A demand which is unrelated to demand for other products.
Demand for finished goods, parts required for destructive testing
and service parts requirements are examples of independent
demand.
Any route other than the direct route.
Third party that provides research, competitive information, and
advice on products or services to help buyers make informed
buying decisions. TestMart, for example, tells engineers whether
a test and measurement device is Y2K compliant, whether
manuals are in stock, warranties available on secondary
equipment, etc. Synonyms: lead generator, vertical portal.
Trusted third parties that act as custodian, agent, or broker of
customer information, marketing it to businesses on the
consumer's behalf while protecting consumer privacy
Create, install. and host personalized Yahoo-like information
portals for enterprises and their employees. Suppliers: Aeneid,
Moreover. Synonym: vertical portal.
A comprehensive term for all activities, relationships between
different activities, resources, management and objectives in a
system for the collection, coordination and dissemination of
information. Some common overall information systems are
forecasting systems, resource coordination systems, operational
systems and follow up systems.
System of roads, waterways, airfields, ports and/or
telecommunication networks in a certain area.

Inland Clearance Depot (ICD) Inland location where cargo, particularly containerized, may be
cleared by customs.
Inland Waterways Bill of
Transport document made out to a named person, to order or to
Lading
bearer, signed by the carrier and handed to the sender after
receipt of the goods.
INMARSAT
International Conventionon the International Maritime Satellite
Organization
Insulated Container
Thermal container without the use of devices for cooling and/or
heating.
Insulated Tank Container
Container frame holding one or more thermal insulated tanks for
liquids.
Insurance
A system of protection against loss under which a party agrees to
pay a certain sum (premiums) for a guarantee that they will be
compensated under certain conditions for loss or damage.
Insurance Certificate
Proof of an insurance contract.
Insurance Company
The party covering the risks of the issued goods and/or services
that are insured.
Integrated Logistics
The management and integration of the complete logistics
channel, creating a seamless flow of processes rather than the
administration of individual components.
Integrated Logistics Support The systematic approach applied to simultaneous management
and acquisition of equipment and related logistics support, in
order to provide the customer with a desired level of availability.
Resulting in an optimum life cycle cost and to maintain this level
through the entire life cycle.
Interchange
Reciprocal exchange of e.g. information between two or more
parties.
Intercoastal
As opposite to coastal water operations, intercoastal refers to
water transport carried out between coasts (e.g. between pacific
and atlantic coasts).
Intercontainer
A co-operative formed by 19 European Railways, for the
management of international rail container traffic in Europe.
Interline
Two or more road transport companies joining operations to
bring cargo to a certain destination.
Intermediary
Aggregates data and facilitates transactions by bringing buyers
and sellers together. Internet-based intermediaries create
multivendor, multiproduct marketplaces.
Intermediate Product
A product for which independent demand can exist and for which
there is also demand as part of another higher level product (eg
a single can and a multi-can pack or a sub-assembly spare and
the major assembly of which it forms part).
Intermediate Stock
See Decoupling Stock
Intermediate Warehouse
Intermediate warehouses are predominantly in place to facilitate
the physical movement of goods through the supply chain.
Sometimes referred to as Transhipment Points, they are usually
stockless and contribute to effective transport operations.
Intermodal Transport
The movement of goods (containers) in one and the same
loading unit or vehicle which uses successively several modes of
transport without handling of the goods themselves in changing
modes.
Internal Interestrate
The interestrate at which the calculated present value of all
payments that an investment is causing will be equal to zero.
The internal interest rate provides a measure of the profitability
of an investment.
Internal Transportaion
Transportation within a company, facility etc. Often relates to

International Air Transport


Association

International Association of
Classification Societies

International Carriage
International Chamber of
Shipping

International Civil Aviation


Organization

International Labour
Organization
International Maritime
Dangerous Goods Code

International Maritime
Organization

International Medical Guide


for Ships
International Organization for
Standardization
International Safety
Management code

International Transport and


Information System

INTIS
Intranet
INTRM
inv.
Inward Processing Relief /
Drawback (IPR/D)

transportation and handling within the company's gates. Please


compare with "external transportation".
Abbreviation: IATA. An international organization of airlines,
founded in 1945, with the aim of promoting the commercial air
traffic. This should be achieved by cooperation between parties
concerned and by performance of certain rules, procedures and
tariffs, regarding both cargo and passengers, by those parties.
Abbreviation: IACS. An organization in which the major
classification societies, among others American Bureau of
Shipping, Lloyd's Register of Shipping and Germanischer Lloyd,
are joined, whose principal aim is the improvement of standards
concerning safety at sea.
Carriage whereby the place of departure and any place of landing
are situated in more than one country (air cargo).
Abbreviation: ICS. A voluntary organization of national
shipowner' associations with the objective to promote interests of
its members, primarily in the technical and legal fields of
shipping operations.
Abbreviation: ICAO. An international organization of
governments, dealing with search and rescue in distress,
weather information, telecommunications and navigational
requirements.
Abbreviation: ILO. A United Nations agency, dealing with
employment rights and working conditions, covering work at sea
and in ports.
Abbreviation: IMDG Code. A code, representing the classification
of dangerous goods as defined by the International Maritime
Organization (IMO) in compliance with international legal
requirements.
Abbreviation: IMO. A United Nations agency concerned with
safety at sea. Its work includes codes and rules relating to
tonnage measurement of vessels, load lines, pollution and the
carriage of dangerous goods. Its previous name was the InterGovernmental Maritime Consultative Organization (IMCO).
Abbreviation: IMGS. 'The doctor at sea'.
Abbreviation: ISO. A worldwide federation of national standards
institutes (ISO member bodies).
This international standard for the safe management and
operation of ships prescribes rules for the organization of a
shipping company management in the context of safety and
pollution prevention and requires the development and
implementation of a safety management system.
Abbreviation: INTIS. An organization with the aim to improve the
position of the port of Rotterdam by the development, realization
and exploitation of a communication- and information network
for computers.
See International Transport and Information System.
The main purpose of an intranet is to share company information
and computing resources among employees.
Intermediate point
Invoice
Customs dues are paid upon import with the proviso that they
will be reclaimed (drawnback) when the goods are re-exported
from the community.

Inward Processing Relief /


Suspension (IPR/S)
Inventory

Inventory Control

Inventory Costs
Inventory Interest
Inventory Management
Inventory Modelling

Inventory Policy
Inventory Process

Inventory Procurement
Inventory Records

Inventory Shrinkage
Inventory Structure

Inventory Turnover

Inventory Usage
Inventory Value

Invitation to Tender (ITT)

Invoice

Customs dues are NOT paid at time of import as the goods are
due to be re-exported from the community. This can be done
with a specific authority or as a simplified procedure.
A detailed list of goods located in a certain space or belonging to
a specified object. Goods available for satisfying certain
demands. Inventories may consist of finished goods ready for
sale, they may be parts or intermediate items, they may be work
in process, or they may be raw materials. Synonym: Stock.
Tactical and operational activities undertaken within the
management, ordering and control of inventory in order to
increase inventory efficiency. Tactical and operational activities
dealing with material control (stock and other material flow
resources, transportation etc).
Costs which are related to storing material. They are divided into
stockroom costs and stock-keeping costs.
Yearly inventory cost as a percentage of the average inventory
value.
The administration and distribution of parts and products,
according to availability and production specifications.
The evaluation of alternative inventory design characteristics or
inventory parameters using analytical or simulation processes to
assist management decisions.
A statement of a companys goals and approach to inventory
management.
Any business process that involves inventory. Includes the
receiving of parts, putting them away, and their storage,
withdrawal, issue, and movement through work-in process, while
simultaneously tracking their movement and maintaining records
of those events and their effects.
A logistics service in which the purchasing and procurement of
inventory is managed.
Records that reflect how much and what kind of inventories a
company has on hand, committed (allocated) to work in process,
and on order.
Losses resulting from scrap, deterioration, pilferage, etc.
Organization of a company's inventory. This concerns, among
other things, the number of parts kept in stock, different parts'
average stock levels, turnover, quantity, volume value etc.
Is a measure of how fast goods are replaced in stock and is
measured as the output per unit of time divided by the average
inventory. The company's total material turnover normally
means the annual turnover divided by the balance stock of goods
in store, in the workshop and in stock. It can be measured in two
ways: physically and financially.
The value of the number of units, or quantity, of an inventory
item (stock usage) consumed over a period of time.
The value of inventory at either cost or market value. The value
of the inventory is usually computed on a First In First Out
(FIFO), Last In First Out (LIFO) or average cost basis.
A document received from potential client or consultant, which
invites the service provider to tender for the detailed business. A
response in the form of a proposal document is required from the
service provider. The proposal can be considered as a binding
agreement.
An account from the supplier, for goods and/or services supplied
by him.

IPA
IPI
IPR/D
IPR/S
IS
ISDN
ISO
Issue List
Issue Tickets

Issuing Documents

IT
Item
ITI
Itinerary

I-TV
IUV

Including particular average


Integrated Product Intelligence
See: Inward Processing Relief / Drawback
See: Inward Processing Relief / Suspension
Information System
Integrated Services Digital Network
See International Organization for Standardization.
A document that states all the parts to be issued.
An authorisation to withdraw allocated stock items from the
stockroom. When presented to the stockroom, they can be
exchanged for the parts designated.
The physical documents that communicate specifically how much
of what needs to be issued to where. Issue lists, issue tickets,
and issue decks are all forms of issuing documents.
Information Technology
Separate article or unit.
Customs Conventionon the International Transit of Goods (CCC)
The route of a means of transport, indicated by the names of the
ports of call or other locations, often including estimated arrival
and departure dates.
In-transit Visibility
Unit of value (IATA)

J
Jettison

Jetty
Jib
JIG
JIT
Job

Job Production

Job Status

Joint Venture
Jurisprudence
Just In Time

Just-in-Case (JIC)
Just-in-Sequence (JIS)

Just-In-Time (JIT)

The act of intentionally throwing cargo overboard e.g. with the


objective of lightening a vessel, which has run aground, such for
the common good of all interests: vessel, crew and remaining
cargo (see GA).
A mole or breakwater, running out into the sea to protect
harbour or coast. It is sometimes used as a landing-pier.
Projecting arm of a crane. Attachment connected to the top of a
crane boom.
An outline to confirm an aircraft interior contour when building
up pallet loads.
See Just In Time.
That work which is undertaken to meet a customer or production
order and, for production control purposes, has a unique
identification.
Planning in production based upon customer order production.
Job production is often used in conjunction with customer order
control.
Is a means of describing how far an order has progressed from
order reception through the production process and shipment, up
to and including receipt by the customer.
A joint activity of two or more companies, usually performed
under a common name.
Juridical decisions used for explanation and meaning of law.
Abbreviation: JIT. The movement of material/goods at the
necessary place at the necessary time. The implication is that
each operation is closely synchronized with the subsequent ones
to make that possible. A method of inventory control that brings
stock into the production process, warehouse or to the customer
just in time to be used, thus reducing stock piling.
Stocks held in quantities to guarantee continuous production. As
opposed to JIT production technique.
A derivative of JIT, with components picked and packed in the
appropriate order in which they are to be assembled, thus saving
time and improving on-line efficiency.
Scheduled, sequenced delivery of parts and products designed to
create a smooth flow of in-bound materials received at assembly
and manufacturing plants.

K
KAM
Kanban

Keel
Key Data

Kg(s)
Kind of Packing
King pin

Kit
Kitting
Km
Km.p.h.
Kn
Knot
Knowledge Management

KPI
KW
kWh
Kyoto Convention

Key Account Manager


An order system whereby an order is put into effect by means of
a card which is attached to an empty box or pallet returned from
the buyer to the stock warehouse. From there, the filled box or
pallet is returned to the buyer. The Kanban system is often used
together with JIT-transportation. "Kanban" is a Japanese word
which means "visible proof".
Longitudinal girder at the lowest point of a vessel from which the
framework is built.
Economic key data are comparative figures which provide a
measure of the economic situation in a company, indicating the
company's efficiency, financial status, liquidity, solidity and rate
of return.
Kilogram(s)
Description of the packaging material used for goods to be
transported.
The coupling pin, welded or bolted in the centre of the front
underside of a semi-trailer chassis, which couples to the fifth
wheel of the towing tractor or dolly convertor.
A number of separate Stock Keeping Units that are supplied or
used as one item under its own Part Number.
The selecting, packaging and delivery of unassembled parts, with
the goal of minimizing production/installation time.
Kilometer
Kilometers per hour
Knot(s)
Unit of measurement for the speed (of a vessel) equal to a
nautical mile (= 1852 meters) per hour.
Enterprises consciously and comprehensively gathers, organizes,
shares, and analyze their knowledge with Knowledge
Management tools to further its aims.
Key Performance Indicators
Kilowatt
Kilowatt-hour
The convention for the International Customs Cooperation
Council held in Kyoto in 1973 for the simplification and
harmonization of national customs procedures.

L
L&D
L&U
L/C
L/T
Label

Loss and damage


Loading and unloading
See Letter of Credit.
Liner terms
A slip of e.g. paper or metal attached to an object to indicate the
nature, ownership, destination, contents and/or other particulars
of the object.
Labour Costs
The costs associated with having employees.
Laden Vessel
See Loaden Vessel.
Land Bridge
Overland transport between following and/or preceding sea
transport of goods and/or containers.
Lash
See Lighter Aboard Ship.
Lashing Point
Point on a means of transport to which wires, chains, ropes or
straps, which are used to hold goods in position, are attached.
Last In First Out
Abbreviation: LIFO. A method of which the assumption is that
the most recently received (last in) is the first to be used or sold
(first out).
Lateral and Front Stacking
High-lift stacking truck capable of stacking and retrieving loads
Truck
ahead and on either or both sides of the driving direction.
Latitude
The angular distance of a position on its meridian north or south
from the equator, measured in degrees ('a vessel at 25 degrees
north latitude').
Lattice vortex network
Term coined by Mohanbir Sawhney and Steven Kaplan to
describe how vertical and functional markets intersect and
partner.
Lay Days
The number of days allowed in a charter party for the loading
and discharging of cargo. Lay days may be indicated in different
ways e.g. consecutive days, working days, weather working
days.
Lay Up a Vessel
Temporary cessation of trading of a vessel by the shipowner.
Layout Key
See United Nations Layout Key.
Lb(s)
Pound(s)
LCL
See Less than Container Load.
LDG
leading
Lead generation
Typically seller-driven, they derive revenue from ads,
commissions on sales, or fees for delivering qualified leads to
suppliers. Also may generate RFPs (requests for proposals) and
RFQs (requests for quotes) for buyers. Provide value by
understanding information needs of their users and integrating
and aggregating content, information and transactions for buyers
and sellers. Most lead generation markets seek to migrate to
transaction-oriented catalog aggregation model. Examples:
PhotonicsOnline.com (lasers), SolidwasteOnline.com (sewage
treatment systems), PlasticsNet.com, Questlink.com (electronic
components).
Lead Logistics Provider
A logistics service provider that provides a wide range of logistics
services often, though not exclusively, through the use of
subcontracted logistics providers.
Lead Logistics Provider (LLP) The LLP concept is based upon the principle of the total
management of the logistics supply chain utilised in the
movement of products from source of supply to the customer.
The LLP manages the whole process, using a mixture of service
providers.

Lead Time

The length of time between the placing of an order and the


completion of the delivery in full. Please also compare with
delivery time and order cycle time.
Lead Time Variation
Variation between real and estimated lead time. It can be
measured statistically.
Leakage
See Shrinkage
Lease
A contract by which one party gives to another party the use of
property or equipment, e.g. containers, for a specified time
against fixed payments.
Leasing Company
The company from which property or equipment is taken on
lease.
Leasing Contract
A contract for the leasing of property or equipment.
LEL
Lower explosive limit
Less than Container Load
Abbreviation: LCL. A general reference for identifying cargo in
any quantity intended for carriage in a container, where the
Carrier is responsible for packing and/or unpacking the container.
For operational purposes a LCL (Less than full container load)
container is considered a container in which multiple
consignments or parts thereof are shipped.
Less than Truck Load
Abbreviation: LTL. A term used if the quantity or volume of one
or more consignment(s) does not fill a standard truck.
Lessee
The party to whom the possession of specified property has been
conveyed for a period of time in return for rental payments.
Lessor
The party who conveys specified property to another for a period
of time in return for the receipt of rent.
Less-Than-Truckload (LTL)
Transportation providers that use a network of terminals to
Carriers
process and transport small shipments.
Letter of Credit
Abbreviation: L/C. A written undertaking by a bank (issuing
bank) given to the seller (beneficiary) at the request, and on the
instructions of the buyer (applicant) to pay at sight or at a
determinable future date up to a stated sum of money, within a
prescribed time limit and against stipulated documents.
LFL
Lower flammable limit
LGT
Long ton(s)
Lien
A legal claim upon real or personal property to pay a debt or
duty.
Life Cycle Cost
Encompasses all costs associated with the product's life cycle.
These include all costs involved in acquisition (research &
development, design, production & construction, and phase-in),
operation, support and disposal of the product.
Lifed Item
A consumable or repairable product for which the manufacturer
has specified a finite life in either some form of time period or in
a number of cycles or activities.
Lifetime value of the customer The amount a customer spends over time with a supplier minus
the cost of acquiring the customer. Both vertical and horizontal
Net markets have promised investors they will "own" the b2b
customer, become the default buying option, and thus have
customers with a higher lifetime value than consumer ecommerce businesses. That promise has slowed development of
partnerships between vertical and horizontal markets.
LIFO
See Last In First Out. See Liner In Free Out.
Lift-On Lift-Off Vessel
Abbreviation: LOLO. Vessel of which the loading and discharging
operations are carried out by cranes and derricks.
Lighter
See Barge.
Lighter Aboard Ship
To hold goods in position by the use of e.g. wires, ropes, chains

Lighterage
Lightweight

Line Item
Line Number
Linear market

Linear Programming

Linehaul
Liner Conference

Liner In Free Out

Liner Service
Liner Shipping Company
Liner Terms

Lineside Warehouse
Liquidity

Live Stock
Lkg/Bkg
LL/LL2
LNG
LOA
Load
Load Factor Management
Loaden Vessel
Loading

and straps. Abbreviation: Lash. A vessel which carries barges.


The carriage of goods within a port area by a barge, e.g. from a
vessel to a quay.
Weight of an empty vessel including equipment and outfit, spare
parts required by the regulatory bodies, machinery in working
condition and liquids in the systems, but excluding liquids in the
storage tanks, stores and crew.
See order line.
See Flight Number.
When products move from one end of the supply chain to the
other, typical of traditional markets and manufactured goods.
Adding a seller primarily benefits buyers, and adding a buyer
mainly benefits sellers. Antonym: exponential market.
A mathematical optimization method whereby target function as
well as restrictions are expressed as linear mathematical
connections. The method is appropriate when risk-free decisions
must be made leading towards clear-cut solutions. Problems with
product selection, investment, raw materials and product mix are
examples of those which can be solved by this method.
See Trunking.
A group of two or more vessel-operating carriers, which provides
international liner services for the carriage of cargo on a
particular trade route and which has an agreement or
arrangement to operate under uniform or common freight rates
and any other agreed conditions (e.g. FEFC = Far Eastern Freight
Conference).
Abbreviation: LIFO. Transport condition denoting that the freight
rate is inclusive of the sea carriage and the cost of loading, the
latter as per the custom of the port. It excludes the cost of
discharging.
The connection through vessels between ports within a trade.
A company transporting goods over sea in a regular service.
Condition of carriage denoting that costs for loading and
unloading are borne by the carrier subject the custom of the port
concerned.
A supplier warehouse positioned as close as possible to the
production location to facilitate Just In Time manufacture.
Volume of transactions. With enough buyers and sellers, a
market has continuous bidding, offers, and consummated
transactions, and market liquidity is achieved. (See critical mass,
network effect.)
Cargo consisting of live animals, such as horses, cows, sheep
and chickens.
Leakage & breakage
Lean Logistics
liquified natural gas
Length over all
Quantity or nature of what is being carried. This term normally
refers to transport by truck.
The process of maximising the utilization of the (slot) capacity of
vessels and or other means of transport.
Vessel where cargo has been put on board. Synonym: Laden
Vessel.
The process of bringing cargo into a means of transport or
equipment.

Loading Platform
Loadmaster
Locating Pin
Location

Location Checking
Location Evaluation

Lock

Locker

Log Book
Logistics

Logistics chain
Logistics Channel
Logistics Consulting

LOLO
Longitude
Lorry

Lost Sales

Lost Sales

Lot Number
LPG

A flat surface to facilitate loading usually alongside a warehouse.


A loadcalculator designed for a vessel approved by a
classification bureau for the calculation of the vessels stability.
See Cones.
Any named geographical place, recognized by a competent
national body, with permanent facilities used for goods
movements associated with international trade, and used
frequently for these purposes. Geographical place such as a
port, an airport, an inland freight terminal, a container freight
station, a container yard, a container depot, a terminal or any
other place where customs clearance and/or regular receipt or
delivery of goods can take place. An area (e.g.in a warehouse)
marked off or designated for a specific purpose.
The systematic physical checking of warehouse stock against
location records to ensure location accuracy.
Evaluation in order to locate breakpoints for production, storing
and reloading. In these evaluations input, inventory and output
costs are considered.
For marine purposes: A space, enclosed at the sides by walls and
at each end by gates, by which a vessel can be floated up or
down to a different level.
A compartment, in a shed or on board of a vessel, used as a
safekeeping place to stow valuable goods, which can be secured
by means of a lock.
The daily report of all events and other relevant particulars of a
vessel and attested by the proper authorities as a true record.
Is often regarded as a concept synonymous with materials
management but is just as often regarded as a description for
analytical techniques and methods connected with materials
management. The planning, execution and control: 1. of the
movement and placement of people and/or goods. 2. and of the
supporting activities related to such movement and placement
within a system organized to achieve specific objectives
All successive links involved in the logistic process.
A system-wide network of the supply chain with components that
create a seamless flow of materials.
An extensive review and partnership with customers focused on
the development of innovative solutions aimed at customers'
targeted logistics requirements.
See Lift-On Lift-Off Vessel.
The angular distance of a position on the equator east or west of
the standard Greenwich meridian up to 180o east or west.
Motor truck used for transport of goods. Note: Motor truck is an
American term. British synonym for motor truck is Heavy Goods
Vehicle. This British term means any vehicle exceeding 7.5
metric tons maximum laden weight.
A customer demand for which no stock is available and where
the customer is not prepared to wait for the item to arrive in
stock but goes to another supplier.
A customer demand for which no stock is available and where
the customer is not prepared to wait for the item to arrive in
stock but goes to another supplier.
The allocation of a unique number, to one or more of a product
during manufacture or assembly, to provide traceability
Liquified petrochemical gas

LSD
LT
LT (2)
LTA
Ltge
LTL
Luffing Crane
Luggage
Lump-sum
Lump-sum Charter

Landing. storage and delivery charges


Letter telegram
Local time
Lighter than air system (airships)
Lighterage
See Less than truck load.
A crane with which the load can be moved to or from the crane
horizontally.
Travellers' baggage, suitcases, boxes etc., normally accompanied
by a passenger.
An agreed sum of money, which is paid in full settlement at one
time. This term is often used in connection with charter parties.
A voyage charter whereby the shipowner agrees to place the
whole or a part of the vessel's capacity at the charterer's disposal
for which a lump-sum freight is being paid.

M
M
M/R
M/S
M/V
M+R
MACH
MAD
Mafi Trailer
Maiden Trip
Main-line Operator (MLO)
Maintenance Chain
Make or Buy

Make to Order
Manifest

Manufacturers Plate
Manufacturing Process
Manufacturing Resource
Planning

Marine Insurance Policy


Market Analysis
Market Maker

Marketing

Meter(s)
Mate's receipt
Motor Ship
Motor Merchant Vessel
Maintenance and repair (center)
Modular automated container handling
Mean absolute deviation - a scatter chart which demonstrates
how well the forecasting line corresponds to real outcomes.
German brand name of a roll trailer used for RoRo purposes.
First voyage of a vessel or aircraft after delivery from newbuilding to her owner(s).
A carrier employing vessel(s) in the main or principal routes in a
trade but not participating within a consortium.
A sequence of events in a goods flow which preserves and/or
restores the value of a specific good. This may include: Repair.
Defining core business, organisations are driven to determine
their key objectives. This will then determine the extent to which
non-core services are bought in.
A manufacturing or assembly process established to satisfy
customer demand only after an order has been placed.
Document which lists the specifications of goods loaded in a
means of transport or equipment for transportation purposes. As
a rule cargo manifests are drawn up by the agents in the place of
loading. Note: For shipping a manifest represents a cumulation of
Bills of Lading for official and administrative purposes.
A plate indicating the name and address of the container
manufacturer and particulars of the container.
The producing of goods or wares by manual labour or machinery,
often on a large scale and with division of labour.
MRP 2 - A method for the effective planning of all the resources
of a manufacturing company. Ideally it addresses operational
planning in units, financial planning in money and has a
simulation capability to answer 'what if' questions. It is made up
of a variety of functions, each linked together : business
planning, master (or production) planning, master production
scheduling, material requirements planning, capacity
requirements planning and the execution systems for capacity
and priority. Outputs from these systems would be integrated
with financial reports such as the business plan, purchase
commitment report, shipping budget, stock projections in money,
etc. Manufacturing resource planning is a direct out-growth and
extension of material requirements planning (MRP 1).
An insurance policy protecting the insured against loss or
damage to his goods occurred during ocean transport.
Systematic investigation of the growth and the composition of a
market.
In a stock exchange, market makers take ownership of shares,
allowing people to buy and sell those goods from them. They also
can make or lose money from price movements. Outside the
financial community, market makers help match buyers and
sellers, regardless of whether or not they take possession or own
goods. (See Net market maker.)
The process of organizing and directing all the company activities
which relate to determining the market demand and converting

the customers buying power into an effective demand for a


service and bringing that service to the customer.
Marketing Strategy
Description of that part of the company's strategy which is
directed towards the market. It consists e.g. of product range,
target group, marketing, sales and distribution.
Marks
See Shipping Marks.
Master Production Schedule Involves all tasks which in different ways have an influence on
(MPS)
the company's production flow: from arranging for construction
drawings through the purchasing, manufacturing and tool
procurement functions etc. to the delivery of finished products.
Master Production Scheduling Is a means of defining whether the company has the scope to
accept new orders. Consists of the calculation of total capacity,
load, (i.e. the capacity which is used), predicting when new
orders can be accepted and finalized, and ensuring that the plans
are followed.
Material Requirements
Abbreviation: MRP-I. An inventory and purchasing planning
Planning
system that integrates product components, lead times and
deadlines.
Material Supply
A comprehensive description of all activities in the company
designed to take care of its material supply from the suppliers,
including purchasing, transportation, inventory, inventory assets,
materials handling equipment, etc.
Material Supply Systems
A comprehensive description of all activities, relations between
different activities, resources, management and objectives in a
company which are connected with material supply from the
suppliers. An important objective for the company's material
supply system is to secure the necessary raw materials and
assembly parts at the lowest possible overall cost.
Materials Handling
The activities of loading, unloading, placing and manipulating
material and of in-process movement.
Materials Management
The planning and control of the activities related to the materials
flow from the suppliers up to the end of the
conversion/production process.
Mate's Receipt
A document signed by the chief officer of a vessel acknowledging
the receipt of a certain consignment on board of that vessel. On
this document, remarks can be made as to the order and
condition of the consignment.
MAWB
Master Air WaYbill
Maximum Order Quantity
An order quantity which, in principle, must not be exceeded.
Maximum Stock
The upper limit, expressed in quantitative, financial or timebased terms, to which the stock of an item should normally be
allowed to rise.
MCO
See Miscellaneous Charge Order.
Mdse
Merchandise
Means of Transport
Type of vehicle used for the transport of goods (e.g. aircraft,
barge, truck, vessel or train).
Measurement Ton
A ton of one cubic meter water.
Mechanics Lien
The legal enforceable claim which a person who has performed
work or provided materials is permitted to make against title to
the property or as a preferential person in the event the estate
or business is liquidated.
Medical First Aid Guide
Abbreviation: MFAG. Instructions to be consulted in case of
accidents involving dangerous goods.
Memo Bill
See Service Bill of Lading.
Merchant
For cargo carried under the terms and conditions of the Carrier's

Merchant Haulage

Merchant Inspired Carrier


Haulage
Meta-centric Height

Metamediary

MFAG
MFN
MH
MIC
Minimum Charge

Minimum Inventory
Minimum Order
Minimum Stock

Minor Unit

Miscellaneous Charge Order

Mixed Consignment

Mixed System

Bill of Lading and of a tariff, it means any trader or persons (e.g.


Shipper, Consignee) and including anyone acting on their behalf,
owning or entitled to possession of the goods.
Inland transport of cargo in shipping containers arranged by the
Merchant. It includes empty container-moves to and from handover points in respect of containers released by the Carrier to
Merchants. Note: Carrier's responsibility under the Bill of Lading
does not include the inland transport stretch under Merchant
Haulage.
Carrier haulage by a carrier, which is nominated by the shipper
or receiver of the goods, but paid by the carrier.
The distance between the centre of gravity of a vessel and a
fictitious point. If the metra-centric height is zero or negative,
the vessel will heel or capsize.
Besides providing a multi-vendor, multi-product marketplace, the
metamediary provides additional services for market
participants. These services can be offered directly by the
metamediary, or the metamediary can invite third party service
providers into its marketplace. Services provided could include
quality assurance, procurement management, fulfillment, or
payment settlement.
See Medical First Aid Guide.
Most Favoured Nation
Merchants Haulage
Mature industrialized country
The lowest amount which applies to the transport of a
consignment, irrespective of weight or volume (air cargo,
shipping).
The planned minimum allowable inventory for an independent
demand item.
The smallest order quantity which, in principle, is allowed.
A control limit within a stock control system which could indicate
the point at which an order should be placed, or indicate if stocks
are too low, for a specific item.
Unit of recorded value (i.e. as recorded by banks) which is a
division of the respective unit of currency. Examples are the cent
being a one hundredth part of the US Dollar. Note: Some
countries have minor units that are used in low-value coinage
within a country or locality, but which are not used by the
international banking system in making formal records of value.
Examples: Belgium, Greece and Spain.
Abbreviation: MCO. A document issued by a carrier or his agent
requesting the issue of an appropriate passenger ticket and
baggage cheque or revision of services to the person named in
such document.
A consignment of different commodities, articles or goods,
packed or tied together or contained in separate packages (air
cargo).
A system for placing goods in stock whereby a number of goods
are stored at fixed picking places. A buffer stock is kept in a
random stock system. The system demands more handling work
than the system for floating placement. This means that the
inventory volume in the buffer stock is used well but not as well
in the picking stock, which requires simple administration and lot
wise FIFO. Please see also "permanent storage location" and
"random storage location".

MNC
Mode
Mode of Transport
Model

Module
Movement
Movement Inventory
MPC
MPS
MRO

MRP-I
MRP-II
MSBL
MSCA
MT
MTD
MTO/Carrier
Multi Purpose Carrier
Multi Purpose Vessel

Multimodal Transport
Multimodal Transport
Document
Multimodal Transport
Operator/Carrier

Multiple Sourcing

Mulit National Corporation


The method by which goods and materials are moved through
the supply chain, e.g. road, rail, air, sea, etc.
Method of transport used for the conveyance of goods, (e.g. by
rail, by road, by sea).
A representation of a process or system that attempts to relate
the most important variables in the system in such a way that
analysis of the model leads to insights into the system.
A separate and distinct unit of hardware or software that may be
used as a component in a system.
The act or process of changing the position of an object and or
people.
The inventory during a production process caused by the time
required to move goods from one place to another.
See Multi Purpose Carrier.
Master Production Schedule
(Maintenance, repair, and operating equipment) Routine
purchases such as office supplies, travel services, or computers
needed to run a business but not central to the business's
output. Ariba and CommerceOne sell buy-side procurement
software for MRO. (See horizontal market.)
See Material Requirements Planning.
See Manufacturing Resource Planning.
Missing bill of lading
Missing cargo
Motor tanker
Multimodal transport document
See Multimodal Transport Operator/Carrier.
See Multi Purpose Vessel.
Vessel designed for the carriage of different types of cargo:
general, bulk, heavy and/or containerized cargo. Synonym: Multi
Purpose Carrier (MPC).
The carriage of goods (containers) by at least two different
modes of transport.
See Combined Transport Document.
Abbreviation: MTO/Carrier. The person on whose behalf the
transport document or any document evidencing a contract of
multimodal carriage of goods is issued and who is responsible for
the carriage of goods pursuant to the contract of carriage.
Selecting of and working with more than two equivalent suppliers
for a certain product.

N
n.e.s.
n.l.t.
n.o.e.
n.o.p.
n.o.r.
n.o.s
n.v.d.
n/n
n/o
n/r
NAABSA
NAOCC
National Distribution Centre
(NDC)
Navigation
ncv
Negative Inventory

Negligence
Negotiable

Net Manifest
Net Market

Net Market Maker


Net Tonnage

Net Weight
Network

Network Effect

Not elsewhere specified


Not later than
Not otherwise enumerated
Not otherwise provided
Not otherwise rated
Not otherwise specified
No value declared
Non-negotiable
No orders
Note of readiness
Not always afloat but safely aground
Non Aircraft Operating Common Carrier
Term usually applied to a Supplier's sole warehouse which is
strategically placed to deliver product to customers. (Often these
will be RDC's).
The act of determining position, location and course to the
destination of an aircraft or a vessel.
Non customs/commercial value
Order queue, i.e. back ordering. In some cases one does not
want negative inventories, but in other cases they are used
deliberately in order to reduce the inventory cost.
Imprudent action or omission which may cause injury, damage
or loss.
In terms of documents, 'negotiable' means that e.g. a Bill of
Lading is handed over/transferred in the right manner (viz.
proper endorsement) to another person either endorsed in blank
or endorsed to a person and that person acquires, by this
transfer certain rights vis-a-vis the goods e.g. is entitled to take
possession of the goods.
A manifest containing all freight details including negotiated
disbursements.
An online intermediary that connects fragmented buyers and
sellers. Net markets eliminate inefficiencies by aggregating
offerings from many sellers or by matching buyers and sellers in
an exchange or auction. For buyers, they lower purchasing costs
while reaching new suppliers. For suppliers, they lower sales cost
and reach new customers. A central hub where a trusted
intermediary integrates both procedures and technology can save
costs. Synonyms: infomediary, metamediary, electronic markets,
e-markets, Internet markets, I-markets, vertical hubs, e-hubs,
butterfly markets, vortex businesses, digital exchanges, online
exchanges, fat butterfly.
A company creating an Internet market to match buyers and
sellers. Doesn't necessarily own goods. (See market maker.)
The measure of the useful capacity of a vessel determined in
accordance with the provisions of the international convention on
tonnage measurement of vessels.
The weight of the goods, excluding all packing.
The structure of the total of the distribution channels between
factories and distribution centers along which the goods flow
takes place.
Describes how all buyers and sellers benefit when a new market
participant is added. The network effect produces a cycle with

Network Planning System


NFO
NGO
NMC
No Show
Non Vessel Operating
Common Carrier
Non-sked
Normal Charge
Normal Distribution

Normal General Cargo Rate


Normal Inventory
Normalise

Notice of Readiness

Notify Address
Notify Party
Nouvelles Frontires
Nr (N)
NRT
NSM
Nt.
NVOCC
NVQ

more buyers attracting more sellers and more sellers attracting


more buyers. Robert Metcalfe created the notion that the value
of a network grows by the square of the number of participants.
Synonym: Metcalfe's Law. (See liquidity, critical mass.)
A technique for making a time schedule for the implementation
of a project.
Not free out
Non governmental organization
Not Mission Capable
A person who reserves space on an aircraft but neither uses or
cancels the reservation
Abbreviation: NVOCC. A party who undertakes to carry goods
and issues in his own name a Bill of Lading for such carriage,
without having the availability of any own means of transport.
Non-scheduled airline or flight
The specified general cargo rate without any quantity discount
(air cargo).
Symmetrical division of measuring values around an average
value. The number of measuring values is at a maximum around
the average value and decreases away from the average value.
The division can be presented in a so-called normal distribution
curve.
The under 45 kgs rate or, if no under 45 kgs rate exists, the
under 100 kgs rate (air cargo). Synonym: Normal Rate.
The inventory level which is needed in order to meet the
customers' normal demands.
To create a consistent set of terms and product descriptions,
often using industry-specific translation software. Primarily used
by catalog aggregators, normalization technology requires
translating schema or structures in product databases. (See
ontology.)
Written document or telex issued by the master of a vessel to
the charterers advising them the moment when a vessel is ready
to load or discharge. Document advising a consignee or his
agent that cargo has arrived and is ready for delivery.
Address of the party other than the consignee to be advised of
the arrival of the goods.
The party to be notified of arrival of goods.
A 1986 ruling by the Court of Justice which ruled that air
transport was not exempt from EC competition policy.
Number
Net registered ton
National Sales Manager
Net weight
See Non Vessel Operating Common Carrier.
National Vocational Qualifications

O
O/P
Objective Fulfilment
OBO
OBS
Obsolescence
Obsolete Inventory
Obsolete Stock

Oc. B/L
OCR
ODETTE
ODS
OECD
OEM
OFA
Off the Shelf Satisfaction
Offshore
OFTP
Oil Bulk Ore Vessel
OM
On Time In Full (OTIF)
On-Board Computer

Oncarriage

One Way Pallet

On-hand Balance
Ontology

Open Order
Open Sided Container

Open Top Container

Opening Stock
Operating Efficiency

On deck
A productivity measure which assesses the real result of an
activity in relation to the defined objectives for that activity.
Ore Bulk Oil Carriers
Oil Bunker Surcharge
A situation in which a product has for various reasons, become
unsalable or unusable for its original purpose.
Parts stored which are no longer in demand.
The products or materials that cannot be or is unlikely to be used
in future processes and which is to be sold or disposed of
through the usual outlets.
Ocean Bill of Lading
Optical Character Recognition
Organization for Data Exchange by Tele Transmission in Europe.
Operating differential subsidy
Organisation for Economic Co-operation and Development
Original Equipment Manufacturer
Ocean freight agreement
See Fill Rate
Contracting work carried out at sea (e.g. drilling for oil).
Odette File Transfer Protocol
Abbreviation: OBO-Vessel. A vessel, designed for the carriage of
either dry or liquid bulk cargo.
Organisational Maintenance
A criterion by which customers measure suppliers performance
with reference to the delivery of goods.
Cab-mounted device which electronically or mechanically records
data such as truck speed, engine rpm, idle time and other
information useful to trucking management.
The carriage of goods (containers) by any mode of transport to
the place of delivery after discharge from the ocean vessel (main
means of transport) at the port (place) of discharge.
See disposable pallet. Note: The addition 'One Way' has nothing
to do with the number of pallet sides in which the forks of e.g. a
fork lift can enter, as opposed to the two and four way pallets.
The quantity of an item shown in the inventory records as being
physically in stock.
A Yahoo-like hierarchy of relationships and a glossary used as a
standardization device to describe goods and services and to
facilitate commerce in a Net market. (See normalize.)
See Backlog.
Shipping container with frames with wire-mesh at the sides
covered by means of a tarpaulin which can be dropped down to
give unrestricted access to the sides of the container for loading
or discharging.
A freight container similar in all respects to a general purpose
container except that it has no rigid roof but may have a flexible
and movable or removable cover, for example one made of
canvas or plastic or reinforced plastic material normally
supported on movable or removable roof bows.
The stock of an item at the beginning of an inventory accounting
period of time.
A ratio of the actual output of a piece of equipment, department,

Operations Research

Operator

Opportunity Cost
Optimal Trim
Optimisation
Option

Option Agreement

Optional Cargo
Optional Port
OR
ORB
ORD
Order
Order Accumulation

Order Cycle
Order Cycle Time

Order Line

Order Monitoring

Order Picking

or plant as compared to the planned or standard output.


The development and application of quantitative techniques to
the solution of problems. More specifically, theory and
methodology in mathematics, statistics, and computing are
adapted and applied to the identification, formulation, solution,
validation, implementation, and control of decision making
problems.
The party responsible for the day to day operational
management of certain premises such as ware-houses, terminals
and vessels.
Measures the potential revenues lost when using a resource for
one particular purpose instead of another.
The best calculated TRIM related to speed engine capacity, fuel
consumption for a specific sailing condition.
Achieving the best possible solution to a problem in terms of a
specified objective function.
One of a limited range of choices or features that is offered to a
customer when purchasing an otherwise basic standard product
and that has to be an integral part of the product (used in
commercial trading).
This means that the buyer has the right to increase the quantity
of an order at a previously determined price for a quantity that is
agreed upon in the option.
Cargo of which the final destination is not known at the moment
of booking but will be indicated during the transport.
A port of which it is not known whether or not it will be called by
a vessel during a voyage.
Owner's risk
Owner's risk of breakage
Owner's risk of damage
A request to deliver specified quantities of goods or to render
specific services.
A process of adding orders to each other for the purpose of
achieving a certain shipping quantity, joint cargo system,
quantity discount etc.
The time which passes between two orders. The concept appears
in connection with cyclic planning.
The time which passes from identification of the order need until
the delivery has been fully received. It consists of the time for
requirement identification, order accumulation, order placing and
order transfer, order reception and order processing, further
ordering (or back ordering), loading, transportation to customer
and arrival in the customer's goods received department.
Each line on a customer's purchase order. An order line always
contains one Stock Keeping Unit (SKU) only, but the number
may vary.
A means of ensuring that orders given are effected in accordance
with the agreement. Order monitoring consists of following up to
ensure that the delivery agreements have been effected,
providing information to the functions involved about delays in
deliveries which cannot be avoided, ensuring co-operation within
the company and with the suppliers in order to keep delays as
short as possible and to mitigate the related consequences.
Collecting items from storage location to satisfy a shop or
customer order.

Order Point

Critical level in storage and stock-keeping. A replenishment order


should be placed when this level is reached.
Order Point Inventory System An inventory control system for independent demand items
where a reorder requirement is generated and sent to a supplier
when the on-hand inventory balance reaches a specified level.
Order Point System
This is a type of inventory control system which ensures that
every time inventory has fallen to a specified level (the order
point), a new order will be placed for a fixed quantity.
Order Queue
Please see "negative inventory".
Order Sequencing
The process whereby the different order positions within an order
are arranged in such a way that the picker can collect the goods
within the shortest possible walling distance. He will then have to
pick the order positions in the same sequence as they are
presented in the picking list which has been produced.
Order Structure
Describes the relative position of a company's customer orders.
This takes account of e.g. order quantity, the number of order
lines per order, division of the order size regarding number of
parts or value, division of number of orders in time or per
customer or per customer category.
ORF
Owner's risk of fire
Organisation
An identifiable social unit with a particular responsibility which
endeavour to achieve multiple goals by coordinated activities and
relationships between members and objects.
OT
Open top (container)
OTOR
On truck or railway
Out of Gauge Cargo
Cargo which dimensions are exceeding the normal dimensions of
a 20 or 40 feet container, e.g. overlength, overwidth, overheight,
or combinations thereof.
Outsider
A carrier, which operates on a route served by a liner conference
but which is not a member of that conference.
Outsourcing
An arrangement where a service provider offers services for
another company that may have been provided in-house.
Outward Handling
The operations to be performed on outgoing goods from a
production unit, both administrative and physical, starting at the
moment forwarding orders can be executed to the moment of
actual departure of the goods.
Overcarrier
A carrier within a consortium who carries cargo beyond the
allotment distributed to him.
Overhaul
To extensively inspect and repair a system or component.
Overheight Cargo
Cargo, exceeding the standard height.
Overpack
A unit used by a single shipper to contain one or more packages
and to form one handling unit for convenience of handling and
stowage. Dangerous goods packages contained in the overpack
must be properly packed, marked, labelled and in proper
condition as required by the Regulations regarding dangerous
goods (air cargo).
Oversold
Either origin or destination agent revenue amount included in the
sell rate for sea/air cargo.

Overtime
Overwidth Cargo
Owner
Owner-Operator

Origin Oversold or Destination Oversold


Work beyond normal established working hours that usually
requires a premium to be paid to the employees concerned.
Cargo, exceeding the standard width.
The legal owner of cargo, equipment or means of transport.
Trucker who owns and operates his own truck(s).

Owner's Container Code

See Container Prefix

P
P&D
P&I
P&I clause
P&I Club
P&L
P.A.
P.D.
P.O.B.
P.T.
P.T.W.
P/C
P/N
P+L
PA
Package

Packaging

Packaging and Design

Packing
Packing Instruction
Packing List
Packing Unit

Pallet
Pallet Convertor
Pallet Rack
Pallet Truck
Panamax Size
Para
Parcel
Parent Part

Pareto Principle

Pick up and delivery


Protection and Indemnity Association
Protection and Indemnity clause
Protection and Indemnity Club
Profit and loss
Per annum - per year
Partial delivery
Post-office-box
Per ton
Per ton weight
Paramount Clause
Promissory note
Profit and Loss
Particular average
Any physical piece of cargo in relation to transport consisting of
the contents and its packing for the purpose of ease of handling
by manual or mechanical means. The final product of the packing
operation consisting of the packing and its contents to facilitate
manual or mechanical handling. Synonym: Parcel.
Materials used for the containment, protection, handling, delivery
and presentation of goods and the activities of placing and
securing goods in those materials.
Managing the process of designing and manufacturing packaging
and containers which help improve the method of transporting
parts and products to final destinations.
Any container or other covering in which goods are packed.
Document issued within an enterprise giving instructions on how
goods are to be packed.
Document specifying the contents of each individual package.
A type of package where a standard quantity of products of a
specific product type can be packed and that requires no
additional packaging for storage and shipment.
A platform on which goods can be stacked in order to facilitate
the movement by a fork lift or sling.
Superstructure which can be applied to a pallet to convert it into
either a box or post pallet.
A skeleton framework, of fixed or adjustable design, to support a
number of individual pallet loads.
Pedestrian- or rider-controlled non-stacking lift truck fitted with
forks.
The maximum measurements and dimensions of a vessel capable
to pass the Panama Canal.
Paragraph
See Package.
Any finished goods, end item, or part that is mixed, fabricated,
assembled, stirred, or blended from one or more other
components.
The heuristic rule which states that where there is a large
number of contributors to a result, the majority of the result is
due to a minority of the contributors.. Sometimes known as the
80/20 rule) which states that, in many cases, approximately
80% of the turnover (stock etc.) can be ascribed to
approximately 20% of the customers, articles or orders. The

actual ratio in a particular case can be determined by ranking the


customers and products etc. in order of magnitude and then
calculating what percentage of the turnover (stock etc.)
corresponds to 10%, 20% 30% etc. of the customer and
products etc. The basis of ABC analysis.
Part Number
A unique identification number allocated to a specific part either
by the manufacturer or user of the part.
Particular Average
A fortuitous partial loss to the subject matter insured,
proximately caused by an insured peril but which is not a general
average loss. Particular average only relates to damage and/or
expenses which are exclusively borne by the owners of a vessel
which has sustained damage as a result of e.g. heavy weather or
by the owners of the cargo, which has been damaged in transit.
Partition
See Divider.
Partnership
A joint approach by organisations to identifying and addressing
mutual supply chain issues to bring long term business benefit to
all involved.
Payee
A party to whom a payment is made or owed.
Payer
A party who pays or is to pay.
Payload
The revenue-producing load carried by a means of transport.
Payment
That which discharges a debt.
Payment Against Documents Instructions given by a seller to a bank to the effect that the
buyer may collect the documents necessary to obtain delivery of
the goods only upon actual payment of the invoice.
Payt.
Payment
PBA
Paid by agent
Pd.
Paid
PDP
Product Delivery Process
Percentage of Order FulfilmentIndicates the probability that the requested product is in stock. It
can e.g. be defined as the number of orders or order lines (parts)
which can be delivered from stock as a percentage of the total
number of orders or order lines (parts). It can also be the time
taken to deliver from stock as a percentage of the total time.
Performance Indicator
A variable indicating the effectiveness and/or efficiency of a
process.
Performance Measurement
The comparison of the results of business processes with each
other or with standards in order to know the effectiveness of
these processes and/or the supportive actions.
Periodic Inventory
An inventory control system classification for independent
demand items where the number of items held is reviewed at a
fixed time interval and the size of any resultant order depends on
the stock on hand at the time of the review.
Permanent Storage Location Means that every part number has a fixed place reserved in
stock. This place must be big enough to store the maximum
quantity of goods of all the actual part numbers simultaneously.
What typifies the system is that it needs minimum
administration, large volume, and that it cannot operate FIFO.
Please also see "Random Storage Location".
Perpetual Inventory System An inventory control system where a running record is kept of
the amount of stock held for each item. Whenever an issue is
made, the withdrawal is logged and the result compared with the
re-order point for any necessary re-order action.
Phd
Per hatch / per day
Physical Distribution
All activities, both physical and administrative, which are
connected with the transportation of products from the producer

to the end customer. The concept includes word processing,


transportation, packing, handling, storing and related
administrative activities.
Physical Distribution
The planning execution and control of those activities which are
Management
related to the flow of goods from the end of conversion to the
customer.
Physical Distribution System A composite term for all activities, relations between different
activities, resources, management and objectives of a company
which are connected with transferring products from the
company to the end customer. An important objective for the
physical distribution system is to secure a customer service level
that satisfies the customers.
Physical Transportation
Physical movement of goods from point A to point B.
Pick and Pack
Taking goods out of a stock and packing them according to
customer conditions.
Pick by Branch
Assembly of customer orders (usually for Retailer RDC's) by
branch outlet. This reduces the work required at RDC's to
prepare and deliver branch orders and will also reduce lead
times.
Pick by Line
Assembly of Retailer RDC orders in individual product format by
a supplier. This operation will facilitate Retailer Warehousing
activity and on-shipment to branch outlets.
Pick Face
The primary location in a warehouse at which order picking, of
less than pallet loads, is undertaken.
Pick Order
An order to pick certain quantities of goods out of a stock.
Pick Up and Delivery
A service concerning the collection of cargo from the premises of
the consignor and the delivery to the premises of the consignee.
Picking
Taking products or components out of a stock.
Picking List
A list used to collect items from stores needed to fulfill an order.
Synonym: Material issue list, Kitting list.
Pier
See quay.
Piggyback
The carriage of road vehicles and trailers on railway wagons.
Synonym: Huckepack Carriage.
Pilferage
Petty stealing of goods from a ship's hold, cargo shed or
warehouse.
PIM
International prescription for handling of rail consignments (CIT)
PIP
Product Introduction Process
Pipeline
A line of pipes for conveying liquids and gasses. The physical
goods flow from a supplying organization to a receiving
organization.
Pipeline Inventory
The amount of goods in a pipeline: the sum of loading stock,
goods in transit and receiving stock. Synonym: Floating Stock.
Pipeline Management System The integration of supply chain management involves tightening
(PLMS)
the linkages, among production and logistics functions and
include purchasing, finance and other elements. To accomplish
integration in the order cycle, tightly linked pipelines of
information flows. The pipeline for managing the materials flows
is supported by an information systems pipeline, or pipeline
management system (PLMS). The PLMS utilises electronic data
interchange and other forms of computer-to-computer
interconnections.
Pipeline Stocks
The products which are currently being moved from one location
to another.
Pkge
Package
PL
Partial loss

Place of Acceptance
Place of Delivery

Place of Receipt

Planning
Planning Horizon
Platform

Platform (2)

Platform Body
Plimsoll Mark

PLP
PLTC
Pmt
POD (1)
POD (2)
POD (3)
POE
Point Value

Pontoon
Pool

Poop
POR
Port

Port of Call
Port of Discharge
Port of Loading

See place of receipt.


The location where a consignment (shipment) is delivered to the
consignee viz. the place where the carrier's liability ends for the
transport venture.
The location where a consignment (shipment) is received by the
carrier from the shipper viz. the place where the carrier's liability
for transport venture commences. Synonym: Place of
Acceptance.
The setting of goals over a certain time and the determination of
how to achieve these goals and with what resource.
The period of time to which a certain particular plan relates.
The bare floor of a container, suitable for the carriage of
uncontainerable cargo, as several platforms can be placed
together to provide a larger base. Plated for the carriage of
heavy goods. 20' and 40'.
The area on an airport where aircrafts are parked for
embarkation and/or loading and discharging purposes (air
cargo). Synonym: Apron, Ramp.
A truck or trailer without ends, sides or top but with only a floor.
A mark, welded on both sides of the vessel, which gives the limit
to which a vessel may be loaded, depending on the specific
gravity of the water in which the vessel is situated.
Parcel post
Port liners term charges
Prompt
Payment on delivery; paid on delivery
Port of debarkation (or disembarkation)
Proof of delivery
Port of embarkation
The point value can be seen as the relative value of an empty
container of a certain size type in a depot location. The system
serves to quantify the imbalance costs resulting from a full
container move and are the result of empty optimization
calculations. Point values are created on forecasted container
flows between depot locations. They are calculated taking into
account a.o. the forecasted imbalances plus repositioning,
storage and container costs for empty moves and expressed in
USD. Note: In the various computer systems point values are
used to calculate the imbalance charge or credit for a particular
container flow. This charge or credit is the difference in point
values between start and end depot location.
A vessel with flat deck and a shallow draft.
The shared use of e.g. equipment by a number of companies,
which make together the investments in the equipment
mentioned.
Aft part of a vessel where the steering engine is located.
Port of refuge
Harbour having facilities for vessels to moor and load or
discharge. Left side of a vessel when facing towards the front or
forward end.
Place where a vessel actually drops anchor or moors during a
certain voyage.
The port where the cargo is actually discharged (unloaded) from
the sea (ocean) going vessel.
The port where the cargo is actually loaded on board the sea

Portal Crane

Portlog

Positioning

Positive Inventory
Postal Code

Ppd.
Practice
Prealert
Precarriage

Precarrier
Pre-Merchandising

Present Value
Preshipment Inspection

Pre-slinging
Pre-trip Inspection
Price transparency

Primary Supplier

Principal
Principal Carrier
Principal Corporate Body

(ocean) going vessel.


A type of gantry crane with vertical legs of sufficient height and
width to permit vehicles or railroad equipment to pass between
the legs.
A statement concerning a vessel containing the actual arrival and
departure time used tugs, draft, deadweight, quantity of
discharged and loaded goods/containers and any other important
particulars.
The transport of empty equipment from a depot to shipper's
premises or from consignee's premises back to a depot as the
empty leg of a carrier haulage transport
Existing in a positive sense, e.g. finished products inventory. The
opposite of negative inventory.
A national code maintained by the Postal Authorities designed to
indicate areas and accumulated addresses to facilitate sorting
and the delivery of mail and other goods. Note: The coding
system is different in the various countries throughout the world.
In the Netherlands the code consists of 4 figures and 2
characters.
Prepaid
That what has become customary as a result of repeated acts.
Message advising complete shipping information
The carriage of goods (containers) by any mode of transport
from the place of receipt to the port (place) of loading into the
ocean vessel (main means of transport).
The carrier by which the goods are moved prior to the main
transport.
An example of an added value service. Suppliers prepare
products for retailer outlets, for example by price- tagging or onshelf tray preparation.
The discounted value of future surplus payment for an
investment.
Abbreviation: PSI. The checking of goods before shipment for the
purpose of determining the quantity and/or quality of said goods
by an independent surveyor (inspection company) for
phytosanitary, sanitary and veterinary controls. Presently there
is a tendency by developing countries to use the inspection also
for the purpose of determining whether the price charged for
certain goods is correct.
The act of placing goods in slings which are left in position and
used for loading into and discharging from a conventional vessel.
Abbreviation: PTI. A technical inspection of Reefer containers
prior to positioning for stuffing.
When both buyer and seller know pricing. Net markets can
eliminate arbitrage situations when only a broker knows the
price. Net markets can result in sellers making more money and
buyers paying a lower price, since broker margins are reduced.
Indicates that a company is the major supplier of one or more
products which are used in another company's production.
Companies which are primary suppliers often develop strong ties
through a high degree of integration with a small number of
important customers.
Person for whom another acts as agent.
See Responsible Carrier.
The company that owns the various subsidiary companies or

Priority Order

Private Carrier

Private Warehouse
Privatization
PRN
Pro Forma Invoice

Probabilistic (or Stochastic)


Inventory Control Models

Process Re-engineering
Procurement

Procurement hub

Procurement Logistics
Product
Product Chain
Product Group
Product Life Cycle

Product Structure

Production

branches acting as customers on their own and is registered as


the corporate customer for statistical purposes.
An order which is identified as taking precedence over other
orders to ensure its completion in the minimum time. Synonym:
Urgent order, Rush order.
Business which operates trucks primarily for the purpose of
transporting its own products and raw materials. The principle
business activity of a private carrier is not transportation.
A warehouse operated by the owner of the goods stored there.
The private management of public services developed to assist in
the cost and service efficiencies of the public sector.
Packaging Recovery Notes
Draft invoice sent to an importer by the exporter prior to order
confirmation and shipment to assist in matters relating to
obtaining import licences or foreign exchange allocations, or
simply to advise the value of a consignment so that letters of
credit can be opened.
An inventory control system where all the variables and
parameters used are treated as random variables. It is assumed
that the average demand for items is approximately constant
over time and that it is possible to state the probability
distribution of the demand, particularly during the lead time for
replenishment.
A management improvement of processes and operations
developed from an analysis of existing procedures.
The activities which ensure the availability of the material and or
services in the desired quantity, quality, place and time from the
supplier.
An MRO procurement marketplace for routine purchases such as
office supplies, travel services, or computers needed to run a
business but not central to the business's output. A type of
horizontal or functional market. Examples: Ariba, Commerce
One. (Related terms: MRO, horizontal market)
Control of the flow of materials up to the manufacturing process.
A result, end item or output from a certain process.
All phases in the transformation- or production process of one
product.
See Family Group
The period of time between the introduction date and end date of
a product in the market. Note: Phases are introduction, growth,
maturity, saturation, decline & end.
The inter-relationship of a company's products. The product
structure can be described partly from a design and engineering
viewpoint and partly from a manufacturing viewpoint. The
description from a design and engineering viewpoint relates to
the product's functional construction and design. The description
from a manufacturing viewpoint demonstrates the physical
construction of the product and thus helps to provide information
for those on the shop floor about the most suitable
manufacturing method. This is called the manufacturing oriented
viewpoint.
The conversion of materials and or assembly of components to
manufacture goods, products or services. The total quantity of
goods manufactured or to be manufactured in a particular period
of time expressed in quantitative or financial terms. (The term
manufacturing is often used specifically for physical operations

Production Avalability

Production Control

Production Engineering

Production Planning

Production with Reduced


Number of Operators
Productivity
Profit Centre

resulting in a product).
Indicates the probability that the required product can be
produced in such a way that the agreed delivery time can be
fulfilled. It can e.g. be defined as the number of orders or order
lines completed on time as a percentage of the total number of
orders or order lines.
Tactical and operational control activities undertaken in order to
use production resources more efficiently (machines, personnel,
work-in-progress etc.).
Preparation of the technical documents such as work operation
description, tool requirements, operation times etc. which are
needed in the production process.
The function within a company that controls the production
process and at the same time collects basic data for making
evaluations of long-term production prospects.
Production achieved using a smaller labour force.

Relative measure of output of labour hour or machine hour.


An organizational unit which will be held responsible for its own
profits and losses.
Project Cargo
Quantity of goods connected to the same project and often
carried on different moments and from various places.
Proof of Delivery
The receipt signed by the consignee upon delivery.
Proper Shipping Name
A name to be used to describe particular goods on all shipping
documents and notifications and, if appropriate, on the goods.
Propriety Standard
A standard which has been endorsed by industry or government
as the accepted international standard, but not officially
approved by an accredited standards body such as ISO.
Protection and Indemnity Club Abbreviation: P & I club. A mutual association of shipowners who
provide protection against liabilities by means of contributions.
Protocol
A statement drawn up to attest certain events.
PSTN
Public Switched Telephone Network
Pt/dest
Port of destination
Pt/disch
Port of discharge
PTL
Partial total loss
Ptly pld
Partly plaid
Public Authorities
The agencies or officials in a state responsible for the application
and enforcement of the laws and regulations of that state.
Source: IMO.
Public Warehouse
A warehouse which is available to all companies and persons who
wish to make use of the services offered.
Pull Distribution System
A system to provide warehouses with new stock on request of
the warehouse management.
Pull System
A system where orders for an end item are pulled through the
facility to satisfy demand for the end item. An example of pull
system is the JIT Kanban process.
Purchase Order
A definite order for one or more deliveries by the supplier to the
customer of a specific quantity of goods, materials, services or
products under agreed terms of delivery and prices.
Purchase Requisition
A form which is used internally by a department to request the
purchasing department to supply goods or services.
Purchasing Hub
Buyer-centric mediators that aggregate demand from small
buyers to negotiate better terms with large sellers. Can be
horizontal (operating supplies) or vertical manufacturing. Used
for spot purchasing (using exchange or auction) or systematic

Purchasing Lead Time (PLT)


Push Distribution System
Push System

Put Away Rules

purchasing (catalog mechanism). The horizontal purchasing hubs


use horizontal logistics (UPS, for example), while the vertical
purchasing hubs generally need vertical logistics (for hazardous
chemicals, for example) work with existing distributors.
The length of time between the decision to purchase an item and
its actual addition to stock.
A system to provide warehouses with new stock upon decision of
the supplier of the goods.
A system where orders are issued for completion by specified
due dates, based on estimated lead times, or where the flow of
material in a product structure is controlled and determined by
the lower levels.
The internal rules and procedures for positioning stock in a
warehouse or store after goods inward processing.

Q
Q
Q.V.
Q/E
Qco.
Qn
QR
Qualifier

Quantity (rate classification)


Quod vide (which see)
Quality and Environment
Quantiy at captain's option
Quotation
Quick Response
A data element whose value shall be expressed as a code that
gives specific meaning to the function of another data element or
a segment.
Quality (ISO8402)
The totality of features and characteristics of a product or service
that bear on its ability to satisfy stated or implied needs. Note:
The ISO9000 standards on quality management and quality
assurance consists of 4 standards: 9000 guidelines for selection
and use, 9001 model for quality assurance in
design/development 9002 model for quality assurance in
production and installation, 9003 model for quality assurance in
final inspection and test, and 9004 guidelines for quality
management and quality system elements, part 2 are guidelines
for services.
Quality Assurance (ISO8402) All those planned and systematic actions necessary to provide
adequate confidence that a product or service will satisfy given
requirements for quality.
Quality Circles
A description of a concept designed to improve companies'
quality and quality control. The concept has been developed in
Japan and includes: product quality, product development, cost
management, intercompany communication, delivery reliability
and safety. The basic idea is that those who are close to a certain
task have an important skill within this area and are best suited
to identify and solve the problems within it. Quality circles
normally consist of 5-6 persons and there are some fundamental
criteria which have to be fulfilled if they are to work, such as
emphasis on self-development, a willingness to be involved, total
commitment, application of techniques for problem identification
and problem solving.
Quality Control (ISO8402)
The operational techniques and activities that are used to fulfill
requirements for quality.
Quantity Charge
The unit rate which is lower than the normal rate and applies to
shipments meeting specific weight requirements (air cargo).
Quantity Discount
A proportional reduction of a rate based on quantity (air cargo).
Quarantine
The period during which an arriving vessel, including its
equipment, cargo, crew or passengers, suspected to carry or
carrying a contagious disease is detained in strict isolation to
prevent the spread of such a disease.
Quarantine Stock
On-hand stock which has been segregated and is not available to
meet customer requirements.
Quay
That part of a wharf which is intended for the mooring of vessels.
Synonym: pier.
Queue
A stored arrangement of computer data, programs or messages,
waiting to be processed in the order in which they were
submitted.
Quick Response
A concept aimed at enabling producers to meet customer
(primarily retailers) needs quickly. It relies on fast and accurate
information at the point of sale to 'trigger' quick response
replenishment from manufacturers.

Quick Response (QR) Delivery An information technology system that generates rapid response
for customer's immediate delivery demands.
Quoin
Timber wedge used to secure drums against movement.
Quota Agreements
Under quota agreements, the buyer reserves capacity with a
supplier without specifying which products he/she will buy. The
capacity may be given in tons, machine hours, man hours etc.
Quota Restrictions
Restraints upon trade which limit the volume of exports into a
country, abolished within the EC by 1968, and removed in many
of the international agreements to which the EC is party.
Quotas
A system of controlling imports, exports or production by
specifying a certain limitation.
Quotation
Amount stated as the price according to tariff for certain services
to be provided or issued to a customer with specification on
conditions for carriage.
Quotation expiration date
The date as from which a quotation price is no longer valid

R
R
R
R/C
R/O
Rail Car
Rail Consignment Note
Rail Support Service
Ramp

Random Sample Cycle


Counting

Random Storage Location

Rapid Acquisition of
Manufactured Parts (RAMP)

Rate
Rate of Calculation
Rate of Return

Rate of Turn
Rating
Raw Material

Rcd.
RCU
RDC
RDT
Real-Time

Rebate

Reduced class rate (rate classification)


Return cargo
Routing order
A wheeled wagon used for the carriage of cargo by rail.
A document evidencing a contract for the transport of goods by
rail.
The logistics support of operational and manufacturing
requirements for the rail industry.
An artificial inclined path, road or track along which wheeled
vehicles, cargo and trailers may pass for the purpose of changing
their elevation and facilitating the loading and unloading
operation (e.g. an entrance way into a Roll-on Roll-off vessel).
For air cargo see Platform.
A method in which the particular parts to be counted is selected
from the population of part numbers in a manner that has no
inherent bias. In this selection process, each part number has
equal chance of being selected.
This means that goods delivered will be unloaded at the first
available place for delivery. The location is described together
with the part number in the administrative system. The system
requires sophisticated administration. The advantages of the
system are that inventory volume is better utilized and there is
minimum inventory maintenance. It automatically gives a zerophysical inventory, a safer frequency placing and FIFO on lots.
Please also see "permanent storage location".
A make to order process to reduce the purchasing lead time for
long lead time manufactured parts whereby Product Data is held
in STEP (the international standard for exchange of
manufacturing product data) by the customer and exchanged, in
electronic format, when an order is placed.
Price of a transport service. Quantity/amount/degree measured
or applied.
A factor for the calculation of an amount.
A key ratio which shows the relationship between returns
(surplus, profit) and total capital. It is given as a percentage and
is calculated by dividing surplus by own or total capital. Please
also see "return on investment".
The figure indicating the speed of a change of course of a means
of transport expressed in degrees per minute.
A class to which an article is assigned.
Stock/items purchased from suppliers, to be input to a
production process, and which will subsequently modified or
transformed into finished goods.
Received
Rate construction unit
Regional Distribution Centre
Radio Data Terminal
The description for an operating system that responds to an
external event within a short and predictable time frame. Unlike
a batch or time-sharing operating system, a real-time operating
system provides services or control to independent ongoing
physical processes
That part of a transport charge which the carrier agrees to

Receipt
Receiving Carrier
Receiving Inspection
Receiving Report

Receiving Stock

Reconditioning

Reconditioning of Garments
Redelivery
Reduction of Variety

Reefer
Reefer Cargo
Reefer Container

Reforwarding Charge

Refund
Region
Regional Distribution Centre
(RDC)

Register Ton

Regroupage

Re-invoicing

Rejection
Relay

return.
A written acknowledgement, that something has been received.
The carrier receiving a consignment on behalf of a carrier, agent
or shipper for onward transport (air cargo).
The inspection process relating to received materials, dealing
with quality, colour, quantity etc.
Written report containing information about consignments
received which often is printed out from the supplier's packing
slip.
The stock comprising all the goods that have arrived at the door
of the receiving organization and which is not yet available in the
stock of that organization.
All activities connected with restoring and or adjusting the
packaging of a product. In such manner that it can be presented
to the customer in the requested form.
The act of bringing garments after transport in shop's condition.
Return of a shipment to the party who originally delivered it to
the carrier (air cargo). Return of a charter vessel to the owners.
Reduction of the number of parts, part versions and sizes in a
range of purchases designed to reduce tied-up capital and
administrative costs.
Refrigerated trailer with insulated walls and a self-powered
refrigeration unit. Most commonly used for transporting food.
Cargo requiring temperature control.
A thermal container with refrigerating appliances (mechanical
compressor unit, absorption unit etc.) to control the temperature
of cargo.
Charges paid or to be paid for subsequent surface or air
transport from the airport of destination by a forwarder, but not
by a carrier under the Air Waybill (air cargo).
The repayment to the purchaser of the total charge or a portion
of that charge for unused carriage.
Specified geographical area for operational purposes.
Term usually applied to Retailer Warehouses which are
strategically placed around the UK. Their purpose is to facilitate
delivery of product to branch outlets within their catchment
areas.
The unit of measurement for the internal capacity of a vessel
whereby one register ton equals 100 cubic feet (2.83 cubic
meter). The gross (bruto) tonnage comprises all spaces below
the main (tonnage) deck and the enclosed spaces above the
main (tonnage) deck less exempted spaces. The net tonnage
consists of the gross tonnage less exemptions like ballast tanks,
engine room, living quarters etc. The register tonnages are
mentioned on the tonnage certificate.
The process of splitting up shipments into various consignments
(degroupage) and combining these small consignments into
other shipments (groupage).
The procedure whereby goods shipped directly from a supplier to
the customer are invoiced in two stages: at first by the supplier
to an intermediary and subsequently by the intermediary to the
customer.
Non-acceptance of e.g. cargo.
Common practice in the less-than-truckload industry, in which
one driver takes a truck for 8 to 10 hours, then turns the truck

over to another driver, pony express style.


The reliability of a supplier concerning the agreed terms of
delivery with regard to the quality, quantity, delivery time,
conditions and price.
REMCE
Remittance
Rentcon
Rent-a-Container
Reorder Costs
The total cost of placing a repeat order for an item either
externally on a supplier or for internal manufacture. The costs
may include elements to cover: order preparation,
administration, IT overheads, correspondence, telephone,
transportation, goods inward processing, inspection and for
manufacture, batch et up costs and other production overheads.
Re-Order Level (ROL) (or Re- The calculated level of stock within an inventory control system
Order Point - ROP)
to which the quantity of a specific item is allowed to fall before
replenishment order action is generated.
Re-Order Quantity,
The calculated order quantity necessary to replenish stocks at a
Replenishment Order Quantity given point in time. The method of calculation, and the timing of
the order, will vary depending on the type of inventory control
system in use. Quantity based systems are checked continually
to determine if an order should be placed; time based systems
only have a count of stock at predetermined intervals and orders
placed as required; a distribution system plans orders to meet
distribution needs; and production based systems only order
stock to meet manufacturing requirements.
Repairable Item
An inventory item that is not normally consumed in use but one
which will be repaired and re-used as part of the normal stock
policy for that item. Such items have a repair lead time as well
as a procurement lead time.
Replacement
Indicating that a subject is interchangeable with another subject,
but which differs physically from the original subject in that the
installation of the replacement subject requires extra machining
or provisions in addition to the normal application and methods
of attachment.
Replenish to Demand
See Make to Order.
Replenishment
Completion of stock.
Replenishment Order
An order placed with the manufacturing department for renewing
or increasing the inventory.
Request for Information (RFI) A document received from a potential client or consultant, which
requests the service provider to provide detailed information
regarding the services provided and a Company profile. This
information is then used to make a short list selection of service
providers.
Request for Proposals (RFP) Invitation to suppliers to bid on supplying products or services
that are difficult to describe for a company or public agency.
Request for Quotation (RFQ) Invitation to suppliers to bid on supplying easily described
products or services needed by a company or public agency.
Reservation
Allotment in advance of space or weight capacity. Also referred
to as 'booking'.
Reserve Inventory
See Safety Stock.
Responsible Carrier
The carrier liable under the terms of a consortium Bill of Lading.
Carrier responsible for the transport of goods as indicated in the
transport document (air cargo). Synonym: Principal Carrier.
Rest.
Restricted
Retd.
Returned or retired
Return on Investment
A measure of the profitability of the company. The calculation
Reliability of Delivery

Returnable Container
Management
Returns
Revenue
Reverse auctions

Reverse Distribution
Reverse Logistics
Review Interval
RF
RFDC
RFID
RFP
RFQ
RHA
RI
RID
Rinacertificate
RMD
RNR
Road Carrier
Road Vehicle
RoadRailer
ROG
ROI
Roll Trailer
Rolling Resistance
Roll-on Roll-off
RoRo (RO/RO)
ROT
Rotable
Rotation
Round C/P

formula is profit divided by capital invested. See also "rate of


return".
The management of packaging materials moved from suppliers
to facilities and returned to original locations.
Goods returned to their place of acceptance.
Amounts of income stemming from the provision of transport
services.
Buyers post their need for a product or service, then suppliers
bid to fulfill that need. Unlike an auction, prices only move down.
FreeMarkets (industrial parts, raw materials) uses reverse
auctions as its primary market mechanism, serving large buyers.
Since buyer power is key to reverse auctions, they work either
for large enterprises or when practiced by intermediaries like
KillerBiz and BizBuyer, which aggregate demand of many small
buyers. Reverse auctions also are becoming common features of
many Net markets.
The collection of used, damaged, or outdated products and/or
packaging from end-users.
The recycling, and disposal of finished products, with the goal of
conserving raw materials.
The time between assessing order requirements in a fixed order
interval system.
Radio Frequency
Radio Frequency Data Communication
Radio Frequency Identification
See: Request for Proposals
Se: Request for Quotation
Road Haulage Association
Reinsurance
International regulations concerning the international carriage of
dangerous goods by rail
Certificate issued by the Italian Government for carrying
dangerous goods in Italian Waters.
Rhine-Main-Danube Navigation System
Rate not reported
Party undertaking transport by road of goods from one point to
another such as indicated in the contract. Synonym: Haulier.
A means of transport capable and allowed to move over public
roads and other landways.
Semitrailer specially designed to travel both on highway and on
rails. Manufactured by Wabash Corp.
Receipt of goods
See: RETURN ON INVESTMENT
Special trailer for terminal haulage and stowage on board of Rollon Roll-off vessels. Also referred to as Mafi Trailer.
The total frictional force that a tyre, a set of tyres or all the tyres
on a vehicle is developing with the road.
Abbreviation: RoRo. System of loading and discharging a vessel
whereby the cargo is driven on and off by means of a ramp.
See Roll-on Roll-off.
Reference our telex
See Repairable Item
Sequence in which a vessel calls at the ports on her itinerary.
round charter party

Round Trip
Rounding Order Quantity

Route
Routing

Row

RP
RTBA
RTFM
Rush Order
Ry.

A voyage, a journey etc. to a certain place, port or country and


back again.
That element of an order that has been added to the basic order
quantity to meet a constraint imposed by the manufacturer or to
optimise overall supply chain costs.
The track along which goods are (to be) transported.
The determination of the most efficient route(s) that people,
goods, materials and or means of transport have to follow. The
process of determining how a shipment will be moved between
consignor and consignee or between place of acceptance by the
carrier and place of delivery to the consignee. The process of
aiding a vessel's navigation by supplying long range weather
forecasts and indicating the most economic and save sailing
route.
A vertical division of a vessel from starboard to portside, used as
a part of the indication of a stowage place for containers. The
numbers run from midships to both sides.
Reply paid
Rate to be arranged
Acronym for "Read The Fine Manual".
An order which is handled and forwarded more quickly than
normal.
Railway

S
S
S&C
S&FA
S.D.
S/C
S/D
S/d
S/S
SAD
Safe Working Load
Safety Stock

Said to Contain

Sales Forecast
Salvage
Sample Stability

Sample, Random
Scale Ton
Schedule

SCM

SCOMA
SCP Simplified Clearance
Procedure

SCR

Surcharge (rate classification)


Shipper and carrier
Shipping and forwarding agent
Small damage
Surcharge
Sailing date
Sight draft
Steamship
See Single Administrative Document.
Abbreviation: SWL The maximum load any lifting appliance may
handle.
In general, a quantity of stock planned to be in inventory to
protect against fluctuations in demand and/or supply. In the
context of master production scheduling, safety stock can refer
to additional inventory and/or capacity planned as protection
against forecast errors and/or short terms changes in the
backlog. Also referred to as 'overplanning' or a 'market hedge'.
Synonym: Reserve Inventory.
Abbreviation: STC. Term in a Bill of Lading signifying that the
master and the carrier are unaware of the nature or quantity of
the contents of e.g. a carton, crate, container or bundle and are
relying on the description furnished by the shipper.
The prediction, projection or estimation of expected sales over a
specified future time period.
The saving or rescue of a vessel and/or the cargo from loss
and/or damage at sea.
If a sample produces a particular result, and by increasing the
sample size it continues to produce the same result, the sample
has stability and can be assumed to be representative of the
population. This is an important characteristic when the
population size is unknown or extremely large.
Spot checking of production. Different kinds of random sample
methods may be used.
Freighting measurement used in certain trades for various
commodities.
A timetable including arrival/departure times of ocean- and
feeder vessels and also inland transportation. It refers to named
ports in a specific voyage (journey) within a certain trade
indicating the voyage number(s). In general: The plan of times
for starting and/or finishing activities.
Supply Chain Management. Strategies and operations aimed at
optimising productivity and efficiency along the supply chain,
reducing lead times and cost.

Supply-Chain Optimisation Modelling Architecture


A procedure covering non-restricted goods which enables
approved exporters or agents to export goods on presentation of
minimum information. The full statistical information is supplied
within 14 days of shipment.
See Specific Commodity Rate.

SDR
SDT
Seal
Seal Log
Seasonal Fluctuation
Seasonal Inventory

Seasonal Stock
Seaworthiness
Sectional Rate
SED
Segregation
Selective inventory Control

Selective Stock Keeping


Seller's Market

Semi Finished Goods


Semi Fixed Cost
Semi Trailer

Sender
Service Bill

Service Cost
Service Differentiation
Service Elements

See Special Drawing Rights.


Shippers Declaration for the Transport of Dangerous Goods
(FIATA approved)
A device used for containers, lockers, trucks or lorries to proof
relevant parties that they have remained closed during transport.
A document used to record seal numbers.
Fluctuation in demand according to different seasons, e.g. great
demand for skis during the winter season.
A kind of cycle stock. Usually occurs when levelled production
builds up the inventory during the low season for use during the
high season.
See Anticipation Stock.
Fitness of a vessel to travel in open sea mostly related to a
particular voyage with a particular cargo.
The rate established by scheduled air carrier(s) for a section of a
through route (air cargo).
See Shipper's Export Declaration.
Distance required by the rules of IMDG or BC codes between the
various commodities of dangerous and or bulk cargoes.
The application of varying levels of control to the total inventory
to enable managers to concentrate on significant matters (see
ABC analysis and ABC classification).
The situation in which only certain warehouses maintain the full
inventory range.
A 'seller's market' is considered to exist when goods cannot
easily be secured and when the economic forces of business tend
to be priced at the vendor's estimate of value. In other words, a
state of trade favourable to the seller, with relatively great
demand and high prices of something for sale.
A part or a product which is intended to be included in a finished
product.
Cost which is fixed within certain limits of volume changes.
A vehicle without motive power and with one or more axles
designed to be drawn by a truck tractor and constructed in such
way that a portion of its weight and that of its load rest upon e.g.
the fifth wheel of the towing vehicle.
See Shipper.
A service Bill (of Lading) is a contract of carriage issued by one
carrier to another for documentary and internal control purposes.
For internal documentary and control purposes a so-called
participating agent in a consortium uses some kind of document
which, depending on the trade, is referred to as 'Memo Bill' which
will among others state: 1. Name of Carrier on whose behalf the
original document (Way Bill, Bill of Lading, etc.) was issued. 2.
The original document number. 3. The agent who issued the
original document and his opponent at the discharging side. 4.
The number of packages, weight and measurement, marks and
numbers and goods description. 5. Further mandatory details in
case of special cargo. 6. No freight details will be mentioned and
the Memo Bill is not a contract of carriage. See Bill of Lading.
The cost that arises as a result of a poor service level. It is thus
synonymous with shortage cost. Please also see "shortage cost".
Different service levels set for different customers, products,
markets etc. based on a conscious choice of priorities.
Items included in customer service, e.g. delivery time, order

Service Level

Service Level

Setting/Air Delivery
Temperature
Setup Cost

Setup Time
Shed
Shelf Life

SHEX
Shift
Ship
Ship Broker

Shipment

Shipment Structure

Shipoperator

Shipowner

status information, percentage of orders met from stock.


Measures the extent to which the right product is shipped and
received undamaged. Can be presented as a percentage of the
number of orders forwarded, e.g. 99% or better in general.
Please also see percentage of order fulfillment.
The desired probability that a demand can be met from stock (for
an individual item, group of items or a system) which can be
expressed in a number of ways: Percentage of orders completely
satisfied from stock. Percentage of units demanded which are
met from stock. Percentage of units demanded which are
delivered on time. Percentage of time there is stock available.
Percentage of stock cycles without shortages. Percentage of
item-months there is stock available.
An indication in the documents (B/L) stating the air supply
temperature to the container. Note: No other details than this
temperature shall be included in the Bill of Lading.
The costs which occur when production machines have to be
setup or reset for a new job operation, including, of among other
things the working hours needed to set up the machines and the
downtime costs incurred during the setup time. There can also
be setup costs for tools, adjustment of a machine etc. for a job
operation. Includes e.g. the working hours cost for adjustment
and lower production efficiency until normal production efficiency
is achieved.
The time needed to prepare a machine or a machine group.
See Warehouse.
The specified length of time prior to use for which items which
are inherently subject to deterioration are deemed to remain fit
for use under prescribed conditions. Synonym: Storage life.
Sundays and Holidays excepted
Part of the work-program of a stevedoring company (a working
day can have up to 3 shifts {24 hours}).
See Vessel.
Acts as intermediary between shipowners or carriers by sea on
the one hand and cargo interests on the other. The functions are
to act as forwarding agent or custom broker, fixing of charters,
and acting as chartering agent.
A separately identifiable collection of goods to be carried. See
Consignment. Note: In the United States of America the word
shipment is used instead of the word consignment.
Arrangements for the shipment of different products, raw
materials, semifinished goods or finished products between
different places in a company's material flow. These relationships
can include e.g. the shipment structure to customers, the
number of shipments, the size division of the shipment according
to volume or weight, the type of goods etc.
A ship operator is either the shipowner or the (legal) person
responsible for the actual management of the vessel and its
crew.
The (legal) person officially registered as such in the certificate of
registry where the following particulars are contained. Name of
vessel and port of registry. Details contained in surveyors
certificate. The particulars respecting the origin stated in the
declaration of ownership. The name and description of the
registered owner, if more than one owner the proportionate
share of each.

Shipper

The merchant (person) by whom, in whose name or on whose


behalf a contract of carriage of goods has been concluded with a
carrier or any party by whom, in whose name or on whose behalf
the goods are actually delivered to the carrier in relation to the
contract of carriage. Synonym: Consignor, Sender.
Shipper's Export Declaration Abbreviation: SED. A United States customs form to be
completed for all exports to assist the government in compiling
export statistics.
Shipper's Letter of Instruction Abbreviation: SLI. A document containing instructions given by
the shipper or the shipper's agent for preparing documents and
forwarding (air cargo).
Shipping
The professional activity whereby one receives and ships goods
on other companies' behalf and, when appropriate, is responsible
for a joint cargo system, reloading, customs clearance,
insurance, storage etc.
Shipping Container
Standard-sized rectangular box used to transport freight by ship,
rail and highway. International shipping containers are 20 or 40
feet long, conform to International Standards Organization (ISO)
standards and are designed to fit in ships' holds. Containers are
transported on public roads atop a container chassis towed by a
tractor.
Shipping Documents
Documents required for the carriage of goods. Synonym:
Transport Documents.
Shipping Instruction
Document advising details of cargo and exporter's requirements
of its physical movement.
Shipping Label
A label attached to a shipping unit, containing certain data.
Shipping Marks
The identification shown on individual packages in order to help
in moving it without delay or confusion to its final destination and
to enable the checking of cargo against documents. Synonym:
Marks.
Shipping Note
Document provided by the shipper or his agent to the carrier,
multimodal transport operator, terminal or other receiving
authority, giving information about export consignments offered
for transport, and providing for the necessary receipts and
declarations of liability.
Shipping Weight
Dry weight of a truck including all standard equipment, but
excluding fuel and coolant.
Ship's Protest
Statement of the master of a vessel before (in the presence of)
competent authorities, concerning exceptional events which
occurred during a voyage.
Shop Floor Control
Planning of the production process in detail. Includes among
other things specification of materials needed, the capacity
different operations will need, the time at which different job
operations should be undertaken. Provides information about
production results etc.
Shop Floor Stock
That part of the stock which consists of parts in frequent use and
which are not normally recorded when handed out (normally
additional material).
Shortage
The negative difference between actual available or delivered
quantity and the required quantity.
Shortage (or Stockout Costs) The economic consequences of an external or internal inability to
meet a demand from stock. External impacts can include
backorder costs, present profit loss from lost sales and future
profit loss from loss of goodwill and reputation. Internal impacts
can include lost production, production rescheduling and delays
in completion dates.

Shortage Cost

Shrink Wrapping

Shrinkage
Shut-out
Shuttle Service
SIC
Siding
Simulation
Simulation Model

Single Administrative
Document

Single Market

SITC
SITPRO

Skeleton Trailer
Skids

SKU
SL&C
SL/NL
SLA
Sleeper
Sleeper Team
SLI
Sliding Tandem

Arises when a requested part cannot be delivered. It can be a


notional cost related to loss of custom and the resulting
reduction in revenues. It can also be a question of real cost, for
example for a shut-down in one's own production or penalties to
be met according to contract for delays in deliveries to a
customer, shipment, backorder booking etc. Also includes
additional costs in order to avoid shortage as e.g. extra
administration costs for backorder handling, increased
transportation costs etc.
Heat treatment that shrinks an envelope of poly-ethylene or
similar substance around several units, thus forming one unit. It
is used e.g. to secure packages on a pallet.
The decrease in inventory quantities over time from loss or theft.
Containers not carried on intended vessel.
The carriage back and forth over an often short route between
two points.
See Standard Industrial Classification.
A short railroad track connected with a main track by a switch to
serve a warehouse or an industrial area.
The imitation of the reality for studying the effect of changing
parameters in a model as a means of preparing a decision.
Calculation model intended to assist in the evaluation of
alternative solutions. Simulation models are used for sensitivity
analysis before a system's change is carried through.
Abbreviation: SAD. A set of documents, replacing the various
(national) forms for customs declaration within European
Community, implemented on January 1st, 1988. The introduction
of the SAD constitutes an intermediate stage in the abolition of
all administrative documentation in intra European Community
trade in goods between member states.
In which the twelve member states of the European Community
form a Single Market in which there is free movement of goods,
persons, services and capital. Came into being 01 01 1993, when
export and import Custom entries were abolished for intracommunity trade.
Standard International Trade Classification
National organization for the Simplification of International Trade
PROcedures in the United Kingdom (e.g. in The Netherlands
SITPRO is called 'Sitproneth', in France 'Simprofrance' and in
Japan 'Jastpro').
Road trailer consisting of a frame and wheels, specially designed
to carry containers. See chassis.
Battens fitted underneath frames, boxes or packages to raise
them off the floor and allow easy access for fork lift trucks, slings
or other handling equipment.
Stock Keeping Unit
Shippers load and count
Ship lost or not lost
Service Level Agreement
Sleeping compartment mounted behind a truck cab, sometimes
attached to the cab or even designed to be an integral part of it.
Team of two drivers who alternative driving and resting.
See Shipper's Letter of Instruction.
An undercarriage with a subframe having provision for
convenient fore and aft adjustment of its position on the

Sling
Slot
Slot Charter

SM
SMED (Single Minute
Exchange of Dies)

SOB - Shipped on board


SOL
SOLAS
SPA
Space Charter
Spares (Spare Parts)

Special Drawing Rights

Special Rate
Specific Commodity Rate
Specified Rate
Speculation Inventory
Speedability

Spoke
Spontaneous Ignition
Temperature
Spot market

Spreader

Sq.cm(s)
Sq.ins{s)
Square Root Formula

chassis/semi-trailer. The purpose being to be able to shift part of


the load to either the king pin or the suspension to maximize
legally permitted axle loads (road cargo).
Special chain, wire rope, synthetic fibre strap or ropes used for
cargo handling purposes.
The space on board a vessel, required by one TEU, mainly used
for administrative purposes
A voyage charter whereby the shipowner agrees to place a
certain number of container slots (TEU and/or FEU) at the
charterer's disposal.
Selling Manager
General description of an approach which aims to minimize the
time for replacing machine tools by e.g. preparing a tool change
as far as possible without stopping the machine and by keeping
the tools in close proximity to the machine in order to minimize
the time for the change.
An endorsment on a B/L confirming loading of goods on the
vessel. See also Cell Position.
Shipowners liability
International Convention on the Safety of Life at Sea
Subject to particular average
A voyage charter whereby the shipowner agrees to place part of
the vessels capacity at the charterers disposal.
Components or parts, either consumable or repairable, from the
associated bill of material used to maintain or repair machinery
or equipment.
Abbreviation: SDR. Unit of account from the International
Monetary Fund (IMF), i.a. used to express the amount of the
limitations of a carrier's liability.
A rate other than a normal rate (air cargo).
Abbreviation: SCR. A rate applicable to carriage of specifically
designated commodities (air cargo).
A rate specified in an IATA Cargo Tariff Coordination Conference
resolution (air cargo).
Relates to the storage of material which for some reason can be
bought or produced particularly profitably at a certain time.
Top speed a vehicle can attain as determined by engine power,
engine governed speed, gross weight, driveline efficiency, air
resistance, grade and load.
The stretch between a hub and one of the group of consignees
and/or consignors being served by the hub.
The lowest temperature at which a substance will start burning
spontaneously without an external source of ignition.
A market for unplanned purchases not made under contract
terms. Transactions usually made on a one-time basis. Related
terms: spot buy, spot demand.
Device used for lifting containers and unitized cargo. Beam or
frame that holds the slings vertical when hoisting a load, to
prevent damage to cargo.
Square centimeter
Square inch(s)
A formula that is used for calculating the optimal purchasing
quantity. This is done by balancing the additional purchasing
costs and carrying costs. It can also be used for calculation of
optimal lot size. In its most simple form the formula is the root

SRCC
SSCC
S-s-SYSTEM

Stability

Stack

Stacking
Stackweight
Standard Costs

Standard Industrial
Classification
Standard Product Module

Standards

Standards Testing
Starboard
STC
Steering of Containers

Stem
Sticky, stickiness

of: twice the annual consumption times additional purchasing


costs, divided by the additional carrying cost per unit and year.
The square root formula is also described as the EOQ-formula or
the Wilson-formula.
Strike, riots, civil commotions
Serial Shipping Container Code
This is a type of inventory control system which means that for
every part two limits are set, namely S and s. If the part in
physical inventory has a balance greater than s, no order is
made. If the balance is less than s, a new order corresponding to
S minus the balance is placed.
The capacity of a vessel to return to its original position after
having been displaced by external forces. The stability of a vessel
depends on the meta-centric height.
An identifiable amount of containers stowed in an orderly way in
one specified place on an (ocean) terminal, container freight
station, container yard or depot (see container stack).
To pile boxes, bags, containers etc. on top of each other.
The total weight of the containers and cargo in a certain row.
A carefully prepared estimate of the cost of performing a given
operation under specified conditions. Note: A standard work
order describes a standard operation for which a standard cost is
to be established.
Abbreviation: SIC. A method, used in the United States, to
categorize companies into different industrial groupings.
Abbreviation: SPM. The building blocks used by business
management to define services (shipment products) which can
be offered to customers. They describe a more or less isolated
set of activities with a standard cost attached to it. For
operations management each module defines a combination of
standard operations that needs to be carried out for a customer.
Note: SPM's can be regarded as the interface between business
and operations management.
Efforts to create wide use of specific protocols so software from
different vendors can interoperate more easily, particularly within
a vertical industry. Standards bodies or efforts often work more
slowly than entrepreneurial companies in setting up interoperable
terms of trade. Many e-commerce standards today are based on
XML (eXtensible Markup Language), which provides a flexible
way to describe product specifications or business terms.
Relevant b2b e-commerce standards efforts include BizTalk,
promoted by Microsoft so different industries can communicate
online with each other; Open Buying on the Internet (OBI),
overseen by trade group CommerceNet; and RosettaNet, an
effort within the computer manufacturing industry.
Determines whether the national, international, or military
standards and specifications) are viable and implementable.
Right side of a vessel when facing towards the front or forward
end.
See Said To Contain.
The function, with the aid of specific software for tracking and
forecasting (IRMA, MINKA), to direct empty containers to
demanding areas at minimum costs.
The foremost part of a vessel.
The ability to retain participants. (See switching costs, lifetime
value of the customer.)

Stock

Stock Analysis
Stock Control
Stock Cover

Stock Difference (or Stock


Discrepancy)
Stock Hotel
Stock in Transit/ Clearing

Stock Investment
Stock Keeping

Stock Keeping Cost


Stock Keeping Unit
Stock Location System
Stock Locator System
Stock Management
Stock Norm

Stock on Order

Stock Out Percentage

Stock Point
Stock Policy
Stock Position

Products for sale or raw material, material, equipment,


semifinished goods or goods intended for own use. The concept
can also mean the place/location where products are stored. The
concept is often synonymous with stock keeping.
The process of analysing the stock position and the stock pattern
as well as signaling differences with regard to the stock norms.
The systematic administration of stocklevels with respect to
quantity at all times.
The current stock divided by the average weekly demand
(weekly demand can be based on either past history or forward
forecast).
The difference between the actual stock held and the calculated
stock or registered stock.
Building where storage services are offered for several
companies.
All materials, components or finished products in transit from one
point in a supply chain to another supply chain destination,
expressed in quantitative or financial terms.
The amount of money that invested in all levels of stock at any
given point in time.
A goods reserve kept in the company in order to meet
irregularities in consumption, procurement disturbances or to
make cost savings through purchasing larger quantities on one
occasion. It can consist of raw material (raw material stock),
semi-finished goods (semi-finished goods stock) or several
finished products (finished products stock). Please also compare
with stock.
Investment- and risk costs related to the material stored, i.e.
capital costs and waste costs, insurance, destruction.
The description of the unit of measurement by which the stock
items are recorded on the stock record.
A system where all places within a warehouse are identified in
some way to facilitate storage and retrieval of stock.
A system in which all places within a warehouse are named or
numbered.
The planning and control of the quantities, qualities and location
of stocks.
A ratio of stock to e.g. sales, set as a standard and expressed as
a percentage, or as a factor or as a number' of days, weeks or
months. The stock norm is determined by taking into account
the:
The quantity represented by the total of all out-standing orders
for a particular item. The on order balance increases when a new
order is released and decreases when an order is received or
cancelled.
A measure of the effectiveness with which a company responds
to actual demand. The stock-out percentage can be a
measurement of total stock-outs to total orders, or of line items
incurring stock-outs during a period of total line items ordered.
A point in the supply chain meant to keep materials available.
The policy with regard to the level and location of stock to be
held and where and how this should be done.
The situation of a particular product, at a particular time, with
regard to the relationship between the expected demand and/or
requirement, the physical stock and the outstanding procurement

Stock Record

Stock Site
Stock Turn

Stock Turnover (or Stock


Turn)
Stock Types
Stock-Out
Stock-Out Costs

Stock-Out Risk
Stockroom Cost

Stocktaking
Storage
Storage Charge
Stores
Stowage
Stowage Factor

Stowage Instructions
Stowage Plan
Stowaway
Straddle Carrier

Straddle Crane
Straight Truck
Strange attractor

Strap

orders.
A record of the quantity of stock of a single item, often
containing a history of recent transactions and information for
controlling the replenishment of stock.
A location at which stock is held.
The number of times that an inventory turns over during the
year and normally obtained by dividing the average inventory
value into the annual cost of sales.
A widely used measure of inventory performance expressed as
the ratio of the cost of units sold to the average value of stock
The products which are determined for delivery from stock.
The situation when demand for a stock item is received but there
is insufficient stock to satisfy the demand.
The economic consequences of an internal or external stockout
such as missed sales, delayed deliveries, anticipated lower sales
in the future because of loss of goodwill, costs resulting from
production stoppages and all kinds of associated costs.
The accepted risk of having a shortage of stock of an item which
is used in calculating the required level of safety stock.
Costs related to physical handling, i.e. costs for stock personnel,
stock equipment, stock buildings etc. Also known as stockkeeping cost.
A physical count of products actually held in stock as a basis for
verification of the stock records and accounts.
The activity of placing goods into a store or the state of being in
store (e.g. a warehouse).
The fee for keeping goods in a warehouse.
Provisions and supplies on board required for running a vessel.
The placing and securing of cargo or containers on board a vessel
or an aircraft or of cargo in a container.
Ratio of a cargo's cubic measurement to its weight, expressed in
cubic feet to the ton or cubic meters to the tonne, used in order
to determine the total quantity of cargo which can be loaded in a
certain space.
Imperative details about the way certain cargo is to be stowed,
given by the shipper or his agent.
A plan indicating the locations on the vessel of all the
consignments for the benefit of stevedores and vessel's officers.
An unwanted person who hides on board of a vessel or an
aircraft to get free passage, to evade port officials etc.
Wheeled vehicle designed to lift and carry shipping containers
within its own framework. It is used for moving, and sometimes
stacking, shipping containers at a container terminal.
A crane usually running on rails and spanning an open area such
as rail-tracks or roadways.
Vehicle which carries cargo in a body mounted to its chassis,
rather than on a trailer towed by the vehicle.
A key feature that causes buyers and sellers to use a Net
market, often eliminating a transaction cost in a specific industry.
Examples: CarStation (locating, then obtaining auto body parts),
e-Chemical (distributing industrial chemicals), Chemdex
(comparing chemical reagents from different vendors), Floraplex
(paying sellers in seven days, not 45).
A band of metal, plastic or other flexible material used to hold
cargo or cases together.

Strategic Stock

Strategy
Stretch
Stripping
Structure

Stuffing
Stvdrs
Sub L/C
Sub licence
Subassembly and
Manufacturing
Subcontracting

Subcontractor

Suboptimisation

Substretch
Supercargo

Supplier Follow-up

Supplier Instructions

Supplier Rating

Supply Chain

The stock of goods of essential importance for the continuation of


the production process and which is built up in order to
compensate for long hold-ups of incoming goods (caused by
strikes and political difficulties etc. in a particular country or
region).
Line of action prepared in order to achieve and maintain an
agreed business concept.
The leg between two points.
The unloading of cargo out of a container. Synonym: Devanning,
Unstuffing, Unpacking.
A stable pattern of physical relations or actions in a process. In a
materials management connection the concept is used to
describe a company's customer structure, order structure,
supplier structure, part structure, shipment structure,
distribution structure, purchasing structure, supplying structure.
The loading of cargo into a container. Synonym: Vanning,
Packing.
Stevedores
Subject to letter of credit being opened
Subject to licence being granted
The building and assembling of component parts designed to aid
in the manufacturing process of finished goods.
Production by a subcontractor according to a buying company's
product specification. Includes both machining and finished
product.
Independent company which has undertaken to manufacture
parts (assembly parts etc.) on another company's behalf to be
used in that company's range of goods/ production.
Optimisation of a problem by optimizing its parts. The concept is
often used in relation to wrongful suboptimisation, which means
optimization of parts of a problem which is producing negative
effects on other parts of the problem and thus prevents the
overall problem being optimised. Please compare with "total
optimisation".
Part of a stretch. This term is used if it is necessary to distinguish
between a stretch and a part thereof.
Experienced officer assigned by the charterer of a vessel to
advise the management of the vessel and protect the interests of
the charterer.
The real performances of the supplier are measured and
compared with the previously agreed objectives. Examples of
such performances can be delivery time, delivery reliability,
service level and quality.
Written instructions provided to the supplier. The instructions can
be in the form of quality specifications, freight instructions,
packing instructions, control instructions etc.
Evaluating of different suppliers in order to select those most
suitable for the company. Factors which should be considered for
the rating are price, product quality, customer service, company
history, size, location, organization, finance, manufacturing
capacity, factory facilities, workshop equipment, store and
inventory. Special qualities such as the willingness and possibility
to develop with the customer are also important.
A sequence of events in a goods flow which adds to the value of
a specific good. These events may include: 1. conversion. 2.

Supply chain management

Supply Vessel
Surcharge
Survey
Surveyor
Switching Costs

SWL
Swop Body

SWOT
Synergy

System
System

assembling and/or disassembling. 3. movements and placements


An attempt to coordinate processes involved in producing,
shipping and distributing products, generally with large suppliers.
Net markets can extend supply chain management to all trading
partners regardless of size because they provide a central hub to
integrate information from buyers and sellers.
Vessel which carries stock and stores to offshore drilling rigs,
platforms.
An additional charge added to the usual or customary freight.
An inspection of a certain item or object by a recognized
specialist.
A specialist who carries out surveys. Note: A surveyor is quite
representing a classification bureau or a governmental body.
Costs incurred in changing suppliers or marketplaces. Net
markets often seek to re-architect procurement, search, and
other processes so buyers stay put, a key reason switching costs
are higher in business-to-business than consumer e-commerce.
(See lifetime value of the customer, churn).
See Safe Working Load.
Separate unit without wheels to carry cargo via road sometimes
equipped with legs to be used to carry cargo intermodal within
Europe. The advantage being that this unit can be left behind to
load or discharge whilst the driver with the truck/chassis can
change to another unit. These units are not used for sea
transport.
Strengths, Weaknesses, Opportunities and Threats
The simultaneous joint action of separate parties which,
together, have greater total effect than the sum of their
individual effects.
A whole body of connected elements which influence each other
and have specific relations with the environment.
A comprehensive description of a number of components which
form a unit. Relations between the components, resources,
management and objectives are also included in the concept.

T
T/C
T1
T2
TA
TACT
Tallyman

Tank Container
Tanker
Tare Mass of Container
Tare Weight of Container

Tariff
Tarpaulin
Taxonomy
TBL
TBN
TC
TC (2)
TD
TDI
TDO
TEC
TECE
TEEM
TEN
Terminal
Terms of delivery

Terms of Freight

TEU
Thermal Container

Time charter
Goods that are not in free circulation are assigned the EC
Customs code T1.
Goods that are in free circulation are assigned the EC Customs
code T2.
Telegraphic address
The air cargo tariff
A person who records the number of cargo items together with
the condition thereof at the time it is loaded into or discharged
from a vessel.
A tank, surrounded by a framework with the overall dimensions
of a container for the transport of liquids or gasses in bulk.
A vessel designed for the carriage of liquid cargo in bulk.
See Tare Weight of Container.
Mass of an empty container including all fittings and appliances
associated with that particular type of container on its normal
operating condition. Synonym: Tare Mass of Container.
The schedule of rates, charges and related transport conditions.
Waterproof material, e.g. canvas, to spread over cargo to protect
it from getting wet.
A classification system for items based on their relationship to
one another. Related terms: ontology, normalize.
Through bill of lading
To be named (ship)
Traffic conference area (IATA)
Transcontainer
Time of departure
Trade Data Interchange (EDP)
Telegraph delivery order
Trans-European Combined rail service
Trans-Europe-Container Express rail service
Trans-Europe-Express Marchandises rail service
Trans-European Network
A place where goods may be reloaded or where passengers may
change mode of transportation.
Provisions in a purchasing agreement which regulate the seller's
and the buyer's obligations and rights in connection with
delivery/transportation of goods. The terms of delivery mainly
regulate who is responsible for paying transportation costs, who
will bear the risks for the goods during delivery and who is
responsible for insurance. The definitions of different terms of
delivery can be seen in Incoterms or Combiterms.
All the conditions agreed upon between a carrier and a merchant
about the type of freight and charges due to the carrier and
whether these are prepaid or are to be collected. Note: The socalled Combi terms based on the INCO terms do make a
distinction what of the freight and related costs is to be paid by
the seller and what by the buyer. In the UN recommendation 23
a coding system is recommended to recognize the various items.
See Twenty Foot Equivalent Unit.
A container built with insulating walls, doors, floor and roof by
which heat exchange with the environment is minimized thus
limiting temperature variations of the cargo.

Third Party Logistics


Third-Party Provider
Through Charge

Through Rate
Throughput Time

Tied-up Capital

Tied-up Capital Chart

Tier

TIF
Tilt Transport

Time and Place Use

Time Charter

Time Compression
Time Sheet

TIR
TIS
TL
TLF
Tnge
TNT
TOD
TOFC
Ton

Tonnage

See: 3PL
An organization selected to provide logistics management
services.
The total rate from point of departure to point of destination. It
may be a joint rate or a combination of rates (air cargo).
Synonym: Through Rate.
See Through Charge.
Is the time which is needed to manufacture a detail or a product
from the first to the last job operation in the overall time-frame.
The throughput time for an order is the time period which is
needed to produce the products included in the order, i.e. the
time from receiving the order until delivery has been effected.
The total of capital tied up i.e. invested in the company, e.g.
capital, fixed assets, inventory and customer claims. It can also
include work in progress, premises, machines, etc.
A chart showing how much capital is tied up in stores,
manufacturing, inventory during the whole material flow in a
company. It is also divided into different types of cost.
A horizontal division of a vessel from bottom to top. The
numbers run from bottom to deck and from deck upwards and
are used as a part of the indication of a stowage place for
containers.
International transit by rail
Roadtransport whereby the cargo area is protected against the
elements by means of a tilt made of canvas or other pliable
material.
A part has this characteristic only when it is in the place where it
is needed at the right time. The part normally does not have this
capacity when held in stock.
A contract whereby a vessel is let to a charterer for a stipulated
period of time or voyage, for a remuneration known as hire,
generally a monthly rate per ton deadweight or a daily rate. The
charterer is free to employ the vessel as he thinks fit within the
terms as agreed, but the shipowner continues to manage his own
vessel through the master and crew who remain his servants.
The reduction of the time consumed by business processes
through elimination of non value-adding process time.
Statement, drawn-up by the ship's agent at the loading and
discharging ports, which details the time worked in loading and
discharging the cargo together with the amount of laytime used.
Transport International by Road. Customs Convention on the
international transport of goods under cover of TIR carnets
International declaration of goods carried by rail
Total loss
Tariff level factor
Tonnage
Thomas Nationwide Transport
Time of dispatch
See Trailer on Flat Car.
Unit of weight measurement: 1000 kilograms (metric ton) or
2,240 lbs (long ton). Unit of cubic measurement, mainly used to
express the cubic capacity of a vessel. Unit of weight or
measurement used as a basis for the calculation of freights
(freight ton).
Cubic capacity of a merchant vessel. Total weight or amount of

TOR
TOT
Total Cost Analysis

Total Optimisation

TOW
TPAC

TPND
TQM
Traceability

Tracing
Traction
Tractor
Trade

Trade-Off

Trade-off Analysis
Traffic
Trailer
Trailer on Flat Car
Tramp Vessel
Trans Siberian Landbridge
Transaction
Transfer Cargo
Transferring Carrier
Transit Cargo

cargo expressed in tons. The displacement of a vessel in tons of


water; or a duty charged per ton of cargo at a port, pier, dock or
canal.
Time of receipt
Time of transmission
Is a balance of the sub-costs, aimed at reducing the total cost.
This analysis is built on the thesis that an activity which causes
an increase in a certain sub-cost still can be valuable if the total
cost can be reduced.
Optimisation of a problem by balancing between the parts of the
problem. This means that an activity that does not lead to an
optimisation of a part of a problem can still be valuable.
Tier on weight (container stacking according to weight)
Short form for Transpacific route as in: Sea/Air TPAC route

Theft, pilferage, non delivery


Total Quality Management
The identification of goods or material used in manufacturing or
processing to enable the relevant production batch and material
source to be traced in case of subsequent defects.
The action of retrieving information concerning the whereabouts
of cargo, cargo items, consignments or equipment.
The power to grip or hold to a surface while moving without
slipping.
A powered vehicle designed and used for towing other vehicles.
a)The exchange of goods, funds, services or information with
value to the parties involved. This value is either previously
agreed or established during business. b)A commercial
connection between two or more individual markets.
A benefit obtained within the supply chain through the balanced
evaluation of actions which will bring an overall business benefit,
in terms of reduced cost and/or increased customer service. This
benefit can accrue both within an organisation and between
organisations.
A balancing analysis achieved by using a total cost estimate of
different alternatives in order to reach an optimal solution.
The number of passengers, quantity of cargo etc. carried over a
certain route.
A vehicle without motive power, designed for the carriage of
cargo and to be towed by a motor vehicle.
Abbreviation: TOFC. Carriage of piggyback highway trailers on
specially equipped railway wagons.
A vessel not operating under a regular schedule.
Overland route from Europe to the Far East via the Trans
Siberian Railway (TSR).
Recording of a material movement or an adjustment event that
impacts on a stock position.
Cargo arriving at a point by one flight and continuing there-from
by another flight (air cargo).
A participating carrier who delivers the consignment to another
carrier at a transfer point (air cargo).
Cargo between outwards customs clearance and inwards customs

clearance. Cargo arriving at a point and departing there-from by


the same through flight (air cargo).
Transit Shipment
A shipment passing between one port and another, or between a
port and a final destination.
Transit Time
The total time taken from the point when the supplier makes the
material ready for delivery to the time when the same material
arrives at the customer's premises.
Transmission Control
A compilation of network and transport level protocols that allow
Protocol/Internet Protocol
a PC to speak the same language as other PCs on the Internet or
other networks. Acronym: TCP/IP
Transponder
A device (chip) used for identification, which automatically
transmits certain coded data when actuated by a special signal
from an interrogator.
Transport
The assisted movement of people and or goods. Synonym:
Carriage. Note: Transport is often used as a generic term for
various means of transport, and is distinguished from
'movement' in that it requires such means.
Transport Documents
See Shipping Documents.
Transport International by
Abbreviation: TIR. A set of rules following a customs convention
Road
to facilitate the international, European transport of goods by
road with minimal interference under cover of TIR-carnets.
Transport Policy
The subject of several legislative decisions since 1983, but while
regulations apply to several different transport sectors, there is
as yet no common transport policy.
Transportation Inventory
Inventory held during transportation. Transportation inventories
are often necessary as it takes time to transport.
Transportation Management The management of customers' logistics requirements.
Transportation System
A comprehensive description of all activities, relations between
the different activities, resources, management and objectives in
a system for internal and external transportation.
Trip
See Voyage.
Trip Leasing
Leasing a company's vehicle to another transportation provider
for a single trip.
Trip Recorder
Cab-mounted device which electronically or mechanically records
data such as truck speed, engine rpm, idle time and other
information useful to trucking management.
Truck
Class of automotive vehicles of various sizes and designs for
transporting goods.
Truckload
The quantity of freight required to fill a trailer; usually more than
10,000 pounds. Acronym: TL
Truly Productive Organisation To guide strategy, one way is to build a truly productive
(TPO)
organisation (TPO). This is an organisation which utilises its
resources effectively over the long term and is able to deal with
new and novel situations efficiently.
Trunk
The stretch between two hubs mutually.
Trunking
Movement of containers between terminal and carrier's inland
facilities.
TT
Terms of trade
Tugmaster
Brand name of tractor unit used in ports to pull trailers. They are
equipped with a fifth wheel or a gooseneck type of coupling.
TUPE
Transfer of Undertakings Protection of Employment
Tweendeck
Cargo carrying surface below the main deck dividing a hold
horizontally in an upper and a lower compartment.
Twenty Foot Equivalent Unit Abbreviation: TEU. Unit of measurement equivalent to one
twenty foot shipping container.

Twenty-Eighty Rule
Twistlock

Two Way Pallet


Type of Cargo
Type of Equipment
Type of Load indicator

Type of Means of Transport


Type of Movement

Type of Packing

Type of Transport

Type of Vessel

See Pareto Principle.


Device which has to be inserted into the corner fittings of a
shipping container and is turned or twisted, thus locking the
container for the purpose of securing or lifting.
A pallet of which the frame permits the entry of forks of (e.g. a
fork lift at two opposite sides).
An indication of the sort of cargo to be transported, (e.g. Break
Bulk, Containerized, RoRo).
The type of material used, e.g. 40 feet container, four way pallet
or mafi trailer.
A general reference or a classification of loads of cargo like 'FCL',
'LCL', 'unpacked' and even ship's convenience container, though
this is rarely used nowadays.
The type of vehicle used in the transport process, e.g. wide-body
aircraft, tank truck or passenger vessel.
Description of the service for movement of containers. Note: The
following type of movement can be indicated on B/L and Manifest
all combinations of FCL and LCL and break bulk and RoRo. Whilst
only on the manifest combinations of House, Yard and CFS can
be mentioned.
Description of the packaging material used to wrap, contain and
protect goods to be transported. Synonym: Kind of Packing,
Package Type.
The indication whether the carrier or the merchant effects and
bears the responsibility for inland transport of cargo in containers
i.e. a differentiation between the logistical and legal
responsibility. Note: Values are Carrier haulage and Merchant
haulage, whilst in this context special cases are carriernominated merchant haulage, and merchant nominated carrier
haulage.
The sort of vessel used in the transport process e.g. Container,
RoRo, or Multi Purpose

U
U.D
U.Dk.
U/w
UC
UCP 500
UIC
ULCC
ULD
Ullage

Under deck
Upper deck
Underwriter
Usual conditions
See Uniform Customs and Practice for Documentary Credits.
See Union Internationale des Chemins de Fer.
See Ultra Large Crude Carrier.
See Unit Load Device.
Free space above a liquid contained in a tank, drum or tankcontainer, expressed as a percentage of the total capacity. Ullage
is often used to leave room for possible expansion of the liquid.
Ultra Large Crude Carrier
Abbreviation: ULCC. A vessel designed for the carriage of liquid
cargo in bulk with a loading capacity from 250.000 till 500.000
DWT.
UNCTAD
See United Nations Conference on Trade And Development.
Undercarriage
A supporting frame or structure of a wheeled vehicle. The landing
gear of an aircraft.
Undercarrier
A carrier in a conference or consortium who carries less cargo
than the allotment distributed to him.
UNDG Number
See United Nations Dangerous Goods Number.
UNECE
See United Nations Economic Commission for Europe.
Uniform Customs and Practice The in 1993 revised rules of the International Chamber of
for Documentary Credits
Commerce (ICC) governing a letter of credit issued in respect of
goods shipped applicable as from 1-1-1994.
Union Internationale des
Abbreviation: UIC. International railway union, in which most of
Chemins de Fer
the European national railway companies are united.
Unit
The standard size or quantity of a stock item.
Unit Load
A number of individual packages bonded, palletized or strapped
together to form a single unit for more efficient handling by
mechanical equipment.
Unit Load Device
Abbreviation: ULD. Any type of container or pallet, in which a
consignment can be transported by air whether or not such a
container is considered aircraft equipment. Any type of air freight
container, aircraft container, aircraft pallet with a net, or aircraft
pallet with a net over an igloo.
Unit of Measure
The standard unit of an item used in the stock account and to
construct order quantities.
United Nations Conference on Abbreviation: UNCTAD. A United Nations agency whose work in
Trade and Development
shipping includes the liner code involving the sharing of cargoes
between the shipping lines of the importing and exporting
countries and third countries in the ratio 40:40:20.
United Nations Dangerous
Abbreviation: UNDG Number. The four-digit number assigned by
Goods Number
the United Nations Committee of Experts on the Transport of
Dangerous Goods to classify a substance or a particular groups of
substances. Note: The prefix 'UN' must always be used in
conjunction with these numbers.
United Nations Economic
Abbreviation: UN/ECE. The UN/ECE is one of a number of
Commission for Europe
Economic and Social Commissions established by the General
Assembly of the United Nations. Despite its name it embraces
both Europe and North America. The UN/ECE comprises twenty
nine core member states, as well as any country which is a
member of the United Nations and which applies under Article 11
of the United Nations constitution for delegate status. The aim is

United Nations Layout Key

United Nations Standard


Message

UNLK
UNSM
USC
User Network
Utilisation
Utilisation Period

Utilization Rate

to advance the economic development of Europe and associated


countries through trade facilitation and common agreements.
Abbreviation: UNLK. A standard (ISO6422) which lays down the
basic principles for the design of the image area on documents
for use in international trade. Synonym: Layout Key.
Abbreviation: UNSM. A collection of structured data that is
exchanged to convey information related to a specific transaction
between partners engaged in electronic data interchange.
Messages are composed of logically grouped segments required
for the type of message transaction covered. Note: A set of
segments in the order specified in a message directory starting
with the message header and ending with the message trailer
(ISO9735).
See United Nations Layout Key.
See United Nations Standard Message.
United States Currency
A public network made up of thousands of newsgroups and
organized by topic. Acronym: USENET
A measure of productivity which is defined as: Used
input/available input.
Describes the time (period) and the extent to which the capacity
within the factory or a part of this, such as the machinery or the
production (group), has been used or reserved.
The quotient of used capacity and available capacity

V/W
W.A
W.E.F.
W.P.A.
W/B
W/D
W/T
W/V
Waiting Time

Waiver Clause

Val.
Valuable Cargo
Valuation
Valuation Charge
Value Added Logistics (VAL)

Value Added Tax

Value Surcharge
Value-Added Services

Vanning
Warehouse
Warehouse Keeper
Warehouse Receipt
Warehousing
Variability Accounting

Variable Cost
Warsaw Convention

Waste Disposal

With average (Institute Cargo Clause)


With effect from
With particular average
Waybill
Working day(s)
Weight tons
Weight/volume
The period of time between the moment at which one is ready
for an activity to start and the moment at which this activity can
actually begin. See also queue time.
Clause in a marine insurance policy stating that no acts of the
insurer or insured in recovering, saving or preserving the
property insured, shall be considered a dismissal from or
acceptance of abandonment.
value
A consignment which contains one or more valuable articles (air
cargo).
A clause in a marine policy that fixes the insured value.
Transport charges for certain goods, based on the value declared
for the carriage of such goods (air cargo).
Adding value means incorporating our operational skills into a
contract and utilising them to the best of our ability. This may
involve providing additional services and or improving the lead
times and stock reduction.
Abbreviation: VAT. A form of indirect sales tax paid on products
and services at each stage of production or distribution, based on
the value added at that stage and included in the cost to the
ultimate customer.
A surcharge for the carriage of cargo having a value in excess of
a specified amount per kilogram (air cargo).
A range of additional services that a provider can offer their
client. Usually offered as an attractive and cost effective
alternative to in-house or competitor equivalents.
See Stuffing.
A building specially designed for receipt, storage and handling of
goods. Synonyms: Shed, Store.
Party who takes responsibility for goods entered into a
warehouse.
Receipt for products deposited in a warehouse.
Those activities of holding and handling goods in a warehouse
(store).
An accounting system which contains a new dimension for
registering objectives as well as type of cost and cost centre. The
objective explains why resource consumption occurs. This
accounting form is suitable for use in following up BL-costs.
A cost which is continuously changing with the activity volume
during a certain period.
The Convention for the Unification of Certain Rules Relating to
International Carriage by Air, signed at Warsaw, 12 October
1929, or that Convention as amended by the Hague Protocol,
1955, stipulating obligations or parties and limitations and/or
exonerations of carriers (air cargo).
Processing and or removal to final resting place or transfer to a

Waste Logistics

VAT
Waybill
VC
Wccon.
Wdt/wth
Wear and Tear
Web page
Web server

Vehicle Manufacturer (VM)


Weight Ton
Vendee
Vendor
Vendor Hub

Vendor Managed Inventory


(VMI)

Ventilated/Coffee

Very Easy Rodent-Oriented


Netwide Index to
Computerized Archives
Very Large Crude Carrier

Ves.
Vessel
WFP
Wharf
Wharfage
Whf
WHO
Wholesaler

Whse
VIC
VIO
VIP

place for re-use or recovering of waste.


The collection of used, damaged, or outdated products and or
packaging from designated users. Synonym: Reverse
Distribution.
See Value Added Tax.
Non-negotiable document evidencing the contract for the
transport of cargo.
Vessels convenience
Whether cleared customs or not
Width
Loss or deterioration resulting from ordinary use.
A hypertext page accessible via the Web.
A computer on the Internet that is hosting Web sites and handles
requests by serving the required resource. A Web browser is
typically used as the Web client that requests the resources.
An automobile manufacturer, assembler and buyer of automotive
components.
A ton of 1000 kilos.
Buyer.
Seller.
Third party operation of a warehouse, funded by suppliers,
containing Vendor-Owned stock for delivery to a customer (See
Lineside Warehouse).
An element of inventory stocked by one organisation but where
the forecast demand, and required stock levels to meet that
demand, are calculated by the manufacturer or distributor of the
stock items concerned.
Identical to the GP, except for the inclusion of full length
ventilation galleries sited along the top and bottom side rails, and
thus ideal for the carriage of coffee, as condesation is prevented
from accumulating. 20' only
A search tool (like archie) that searches text that appears in
Gopher menus. Acronym: VERONICA
Abbreviation: VLCC. A vessel designed for the carriage of liquid
cargo in bulk with a loading capacity from 50.000 till 250.000
DWT.
Vessel
A floating structure designed for the transport of cargo and/or
passengers. Synonym: Ship. Boiler, drum.
See: World Food Programme
A place for berthing vessels to facilitate loading and discharging
of cargo.
The fee charged for the use of a wharf for mooring, loading or
discharging a vessel or for storing goods.
Wharfage
See World Health Organization.
An intermediary between manufacturers and retailers in various
activities such as promotion, warehousing, and the arranging of
transport and or distribution.
Warehouse
Very Important Cargo
Very Important Object
Very Important Person

WIP

WIPON
Viral

Virtual Logistics

Virtual Private Marketplace

VLCC
Volatility Allowance

Volume
Volume Charge
Work in Progress Stock

Work in Progress WIP


Work Load

Work Sampling

Workflow Marketplace

Working Stock

An abbreviation for "work-in-progress" which relates to products


which are in the manufacturing process. They can e.g. be in
some job operation or in a buffer stock waiting for a job
operation.
Whether in port or not
A self-propagating practice or pattern of Internet use that moves
from person to person. Works best in consumer e-commerce
because of easy adoption. Longer sales cycle for b2b ecommerce makes viral practices less important. Example:
HotMail's explosive growth
A phrase coined by David Frentzel of Mercer Management
Consulting to describe the disappearance of the in-house logistics
function by name and traditional description. In this scenario,
logistics will be managed by many individuals throughout the
supply chain, or be outsourced altogether.
A private market to enable approved suppliers to bid on a large
buyer's business or to enable more cost-effective transactions
under negotiated terms. Can be a hosted extranet or a feature a
larger Net market. For example, National Transportation
Exchange sets VPMs for large shippers to schedule and obtain
bids from approved carriers, in addition to NTE's main spot
market. FreeMarkets sets up VPMs for large buyers to interact
with their suppliers through reverse auctions.
See Very Large Crude Carrier.
The largest difference in container availability taking into account
past peaks in net demand after having removed the trend in
container demand during the repositioning trade-off period.
Size or measure of anything in three dimensions.
A charge for carriage of goods based on their volume (air cargo).
The stock of products and/or materials and components which
are still in the production department and are not, or are no
longer, included in the stock in the store.
The total amount of work in processing, between production
stages or subject to a waiting time.
The quantity of work ahead assigned to a certain facility such as
a work station, capacity group or a department respectively
staff-member.
A measuring method using random sample observations, e.g. in
order to investigate the output frequency of different parts from
inventory.
Provides project tracking or collaboration services for complex,
iterative, multi-party projects in construction, syndicated bank
debt, or licensed trademarks. Charge subscriptions but add
transaction fees, such as Bidcom.com charging a contractor to
print project blueprints. Create an information-sharing network
that gives all parties an appropriate view of the project.
Examples: Bidcom (construction), Hurricane (intellectual
property). Also, many Net markets incorporate workflow to hold
onto users. Once a Net market becomes part of everyday
business processes, the switching to another Net market
becomes much harder.
The stock of materials, components and sub-assemblies
(excluding safety stock) held in advance of demand so that
ordering can done on a lot size rather than on an as needed
basis. In other words, the normal stocks formed by products
arriving in large regular orders to meet smaller, more frequent

World Food Programme

World Health Organization

World Wide Web (WWW)

Voucher
Voyage
Voyage Charter

Voyage Number
WP
VPN
WR
WRI
WTO
VV
WW
WWD
WWW

customer demand. Also known as cycle stock or lot size stock.


United Nations front-line food aid agency. WFP has grown to
become the largest humanitarian aid agency in the world. In
turn, it has also become the UNs logistics arm, delivering food
aid where and when its most needed to fight hunger and
malnutrition.
Abbreviation: WHO. The global agency linked with the United
Nations and cooperating with other technical agencies relating to
health matters at sea and on land.
The definition of the World Wide Web - popularly known as the
Web - varies depending on whom you ask. It can be seen as the
collection of resources that can be accessed via a Web browser
with specific protocols over the Internet. The resources are
hypertext and multimedia documents interconnected with
hyperlinks.
A receipt, entry or other document which establish the accounts.
A journey by sea from one port or country to another one or, in
case of a round trip, to the same port. Synonym: Trip.
A contract under which the shipowner agrees to carry an agreed
quantity of cargo from a specified port or ports to another port or
ports for a remuneration called freight, which is calculated
according to the quantity of cargo loaded, or sometimes at a
lumpsum freight.
Reference number assigned by the carrier or his agent to the
voyage of the vessel.
Weather permitting
Virtual Private Network. Imitation of a secluded intranet on the
Web, enabling secure traffic of encrypted data.
Warehouse Receipt
War Risk Insurance
World Trade Organization (FN)
Vice versa
Warehouse warrant
Weather working days
See: World Wide Web

X
X
X.25
X.400

X.500

XL & UL
XML

XP
XPRL
X-ray

International standard of the CCITT for packet switching.


A CCITT recommendation designed to facilitate international
message and information exchange between subscribers of
computer based store-and-forward services and office
information systems in association with public and private data
networks.
The CCITT now ITU recommendations (ISO9594) for the
structure of directories for the maintenance of addresses used in
electronic mail.
Exclusive of loading and unloading
Extensible Markup Language. A way to create common
information formats and share both the format and the data on
the Internet or an intranet. "The EDI of the Internet era" allows
companies to share information consistently. XML can be used to
present information directly to a web page.
Express paid
Without privileges
High frequency electromagnetic ray of short wave-length,
capable of penetrating most solid substances

Y
Y/C
Y/L
Y/O
Yard
Yawl

Yday
Yield Bucket
Yield Management

York-Antwerp Rules

Your cable
Your letter
Your order
Fenced off, outdoor storage and repair area.
A vessel's small boat moved by one oar. Synonym: a jolly-boat.
A small sailboat rigged fore-and-aft, with a short mizzenmast
astern of the cockpit; distinguished from ketch.
Yesterday
The remaining slot capacity for a trade/voyage in a certain port
of loading after deduction of the allowance for specific contracts.
The process of maximising the contribution of every slot, vessel,
trade and network. Basically it should be seen as the process of
allocating the right type of capacity to the right kind of customer
at the right price as to maximise revenue or yield. The concept
should be used in combination with load factor management.
See General Average Act

Z
Zero Inventories
Zero Point
Zodiac
Zone
Zone Haulage Rate

Zone Improvement Plan

Part of the principles of just-in-time which relates the elimination


of waste by having only required materials when needed.
Describes the sales size when the contribution exactly covers the
fixed costs. There will be neither a surplus nor a loss.
A rubber dinghy. An inflatable craft for the transport of people.
Area, belt or district extending about a certain point defined for
transport and/or charge purpose.
The rate for which the carrier will undertake the haulage of goods
or containers between either the place of delivery and the
carrier's appropriate terminal. Such haulage will be undertaken
only subject to the terms and conditions of the tariff and of the
carrier's Combined Transport Bill of Lading.
Abbreviation: ZIP. System to simplify sorting and delivery of
mail, consisting of a number of five digits (the so-called ZIPcode) for identification of the state, city or district, and the postal
zone in the U.S.A. delivery areas

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