The Effects of Containerization on Great Lakes Ports - Special Report No. 2

Partial OCR done. 51 pages total. Containers are a genuine revolution in handling waterborne cargo* The most attractive thing about the container is that it introduces economies where ocean transport costs have been increasing most rapidly—at the dock* Container shipments began on the U*S* inter - c...

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Main Author: Schenker, Eric
Format: Report
Language:English
Published: 2014
Subjects:
Online Access:http://hdl.handle.net/11045/24152
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spelling ftnwmichigancoll:oai:https://dspace.nmc.edu:11045/24152 2024-06-23T07:55:19+00:00 The Effects of Containerization on Great Lakes Ports - Special Report No. 2 Schenker, Eric 2014-05-29 application/pdf http://hdl.handle.net/11045/24152 en_US eng http://hdl.handle.net/11045/24152 The University of Wisconsin-Milwaukee Center for Great Lakes Studies February 1968 Technical Report 2014 ftnwmichigancoll 2024-06-12T03:01:13Z Partial OCR done. 51 pages total. Containers are a genuine revolution in handling waterborne cargo* The most attractive thing about the container is that it introduces economies where ocean transport costs have been increasing most rapidly—at the dock* Container shipments began on the U*S* inter - coastal routes, the Pacific-Coast Hawaii route, and between East Coast ports and Puerto Rico more than ten years ago. The success and steady growth of this traffic prompted the expansion of container service into the North Atlantic routes and, very recently, into the trans-Pacific routes,, The first regular container ship service over the Atlantic routes was inaugurated in April, 1966, when Sea Land began service between New York and Northern Europe.- Today, most of the major American lines serving the Eastern ports are beginning container service to Japan and the Philippines. Presently, 60 to 70 per cent of the cost of ocean transport is incurred while the ship is at the dock* It has been estimated that on the average, using regular break bulk procedures, exports are handled twenty six times between the manufacturer and the overseas customer* Door to door container delivery reduces this to four or five. The savings to the shipper are obvious,* His packing costs, handling charges, insurance costs, and losses from pilferage are significantly reduced* His products also arrive at their destination much faster* The use of containers can reduce the transit time for freight moving from Chicago to Birmingham, England, from 19 to 14 days. A cost analysis of a containerized shipment of 56 electronic communications shelters shipped by the U*S* Army from Clifton, New Jersey, to Germany showed a savings of $31,746 and of four to twelve days time over regular handling* This was a fifty per cent reduction in the cost of the shipment* Report North Atlantic Northwestern Michigan College (NMC): DSpace Repository Pacific
institution Open Polar
collection Northwestern Michigan College (NMC): DSpace Repository
op_collection_id ftnwmichigancoll
language English
topic The University of Wisconsin-Milwaukee Center for Great Lakes Studies
February 1968
spellingShingle The University of Wisconsin-Milwaukee Center for Great Lakes Studies
February 1968
Schenker, Eric
The Effects of Containerization on Great Lakes Ports - Special Report No. 2
topic_facet The University of Wisconsin-Milwaukee Center for Great Lakes Studies
February 1968
description Partial OCR done. 51 pages total. Containers are a genuine revolution in handling waterborne cargo* The most attractive thing about the container is that it introduces economies where ocean transport costs have been increasing most rapidly—at the dock* Container shipments began on the U*S* inter - coastal routes, the Pacific-Coast Hawaii route, and between East Coast ports and Puerto Rico more than ten years ago. The success and steady growth of this traffic prompted the expansion of container service into the North Atlantic routes and, very recently, into the trans-Pacific routes,, The first regular container ship service over the Atlantic routes was inaugurated in April, 1966, when Sea Land began service between New York and Northern Europe.- Today, most of the major American lines serving the Eastern ports are beginning container service to Japan and the Philippines. Presently, 60 to 70 per cent of the cost of ocean transport is incurred while the ship is at the dock* It has been estimated that on the average, using regular break bulk procedures, exports are handled twenty six times between the manufacturer and the overseas customer* Door to door container delivery reduces this to four or five. The savings to the shipper are obvious,* His packing costs, handling charges, insurance costs, and losses from pilferage are significantly reduced* His products also arrive at their destination much faster* The use of containers can reduce the transit time for freight moving from Chicago to Birmingham, England, from 19 to 14 days. A cost analysis of a containerized shipment of 56 electronic communications shelters shipped by the U*S* Army from Clifton, New Jersey, to Germany showed a savings of $31,746 and of four to twelve days time over regular handling* This was a fifty per cent reduction in the cost of the shipment*
format Report
author Schenker, Eric
author_facet Schenker, Eric
author_sort Schenker, Eric
title The Effects of Containerization on Great Lakes Ports - Special Report No. 2
title_short The Effects of Containerization on Great Lakes Ports - Special Report No. 2
title_full The Effects of Containerization on Great Lakes Ports - Special Report No. 2
title_fullStr The Effects of Containerization on Great Lakes Ports - Special Report No. 2
title_full_unstemmed The Effects of Containerization on Great Lakes Ports - Special Report No. 2
title_sort effects of containerization on great lakes ports - special report no. 2
publishDate 2014
url http://hdl.handle.net/11045/24152
geographic Pacific
geographic_facet Pacific
genre North Atlantic
genre_facet North Atlantic
op_relation http://hdl.handle.net/11045/24152
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