Transloading offers a cost-effective way to bring ocean containers
inland to distribution centers. By transferring cargo without sorting
the contents for shipment to a single destination, transloading services
can reduce total landed costs, and—when combined with value-added
services such as palletizing and shrink-wrapping—reduce handling at the
destination. Jeff McCorstin, senior vice president of air and ocean
products for UPS Global Freight Forwarding, offers these tips for
maximizing savings with transloading services.
1. Understand general transloading rules.
Transloading offers the greatest cost savings when ocean containers can
be consolidated into fewer, larger domestic trailers. The cargo in three
40-foot ocean containers typically fits into two 53-foot domestic
trailers.
2. Ensure overall transportation savings outweigh additional handling costs. Sometimes the savings are negated for destinations located farther east from the U.S. West Coast discharge port.
3. Consider palletizing cargo during transloading.
To best use space in ocean containers, cargo is rarely palletized at the
point of origin. Palletize during the transloading process to improve
distribution center (DC) handling efficiency.
4. Factor transloading into transit time estimates.
Unloading, handling, and reloading ocean container cargo near the port
of discharge takes time. Allow up to three days to ensure customer
delivery commitments are met.
5. Ensure your cargo fits the bill. Transload
operators charge additional fees for containers with more than a certain
number of cartons. The additional costs for containers with several
thousand small cartons could offset any transport`tion savings.
6. Ensure handling flexibility by making Customs entry at the port.
While it is a common practice to clear ocean containers at their final
inland destinations, it is better to make entry at the port of
discharge. This ensures maximum flexibility in handling cargo, and
eliminates the need to move the shipment in-bond, saving additional
costs.
7. Increase supply chain efficiency with merge-in-transit offerings.
This type of deconsolidation allows importers to combine products
arriving in containers from different origins/shippers by transloading
near the port of arrival into domestic trailers. And if importers source
from domestic suppliers—who may also have product arriving via
container—this cargo can be merged in transit to arrive together at the
designated DC.
8. Use transloading to expedite delivery to final destination.
Transloading near the port of discharge provides the flexibility to
bypass DCs and speed delivery to the end customer. The reduced DC
handling charges and improved time in transit can help trim supply chain
costs.
9. Avoid costly containers. Instead of shipping
less-than-containerload, 20-foot, or light-loaded 40-foot containers
from multiple overseas vendors to your inland DC, ship fully
loaded/optimized containers to a single container freight station near
the port of discharge. From there, they can be transloaded, merged in
transit with other inbound cargo, and shipped to the final destination
using the transport mode that best fits the importer's needs.
10. Set up transloading programs in advance. Having
your service provider involved in coordinating with the origin forwarder
translates into better servic levels and reliability.
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