Jade partner with UCLA

Jade Logistics has partnered with one of the most prestigious business schools in the world. As part of UCLA’s GAP program, Jade will see six MBA students working on a six month project to help us better understand our customer’s world.

We carried out extensive research on the US market around 24 months ago which gave us a good understanding of our target segments and market sizing. Our primary goals for the GAP program are to gain an ever deeper understanding of our USA target market segment and our customer’s world in general.

Tony Davis, Jade’s Director of Marketing, Logistics and Keith McSwain, Vice President of Client Relations recently visited UCLA to kick of the project which will see the UCLA students visit Christchurch in September.

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Multi time zone feature added to Master Terminal

Time is money. For ports and terminals, efficiency is essential and thus the time taken to perform terminal operations needs to be recorded accurately. Master Terminal by Jade Logistics, is a Terminal Operating System (TOS) designed to provide a real-time view of all operations and data in one integrated system. From harbor management to yard operations, warehousing to the gate, Master Terminal tracks all activity across your enterprise ensuring you can capture revenue from your operations.

As port businesses expand, via mergers or organic growth, they acquire or introduce new terminals to open up new business opportunities. In order to realize cost benefits, it is important that processes are standardized across these terminals, and duplication of administration is minimized.

With Master Terminal you can manage multiple terminals from one central location. Whatever your setup, whether your terminals are side by side on a port, inland hubs supporting a quayside terminal, or at different geographical locations, Master Terminal can handle it all in one system.

Master Terminal’s multiple time zone capability enables a port to host multiple terminals located in different geographic locations that have different time zones.

View our Master Terminal multiple time zone fact sheet to learn more.

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Break-bulk logistics industry climbing the technology ladder

Hear what Keith McSwain, Jade’s Vice-President of Client Services has to say about the emergence of IT for break bulk logistics businesses.

While technology drives the containerized supply chain and is responsible for stunning efficiencies and cost reduction, it’s another story with breakbulk. Many in the industry continue to resist investing in information technology, even as the needs become more obvious and the benefits become more apparent. But slim margins are warranting a closer look at IT.

Keith McSwain, Jade’s Vice-President of Client Services recently spoke to the American Journal of Transportation about how logistics businesses that handle break bulk are starting to invest greater time and financial resources into IT.

Read the full article here: The other story: IT’s important to breakbulk

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SOLAS VGM rule takes effect on July 1

From 01 July 2016 the SOLAS VGM regulation will come into effect requiring the weight of a container to be verified before shipment. 

While there has been some discussion about how strictly the regulation will be enforced there has also been some misunderstanding that the regulation has been delayed by three months, but this is not the case. The regulation will take effect from this date, and it is a requirement to obtain a VGM for a packed container.

At Jade Logistics we are well prepared. Our terminal operating system (TOS), Master Terminal, can record a container’s VGM using in-machine technology or weighbridges.

If you would like to find out more about Jade’s approach to VGM, read the Master Terminal container weighing fact sheet or our article Worth the weight?

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Master Terminal helps mixed cargo ports compete with world’s best

Strong business relationships, exceptional technology, and project implementation skills have helped Jade Logistics’ terminal operating system, Master Terminal, to become the world’s leading TOS for mixed cargo ports.

Tony Davis, Director of Marketing, Jade Logistics recently spoke to the Australian Logistics Council about how software can drive efficiency gains and increase a port’s revenue potential. He believes that Jade’s terminal operating system, Master Terminal, is ideally suited to Australian ports, given their mixed cargo focus, and discusses the company’s plans to expand into the Australian market.

Read the full article to see how Davis thinks that cutting-edge technology can provide a significant return on investment. Future Freight Networks 2016: Jade’s Master Terminal helps mixed cargo ports compete with world’s best (page 126).

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Stack of containers at a shipping port

Still confused about the SOLAS VGM rule which takes effect on July 1?

As of July 01, 2016, it will become mandatory to verify a container’s weight before it is loaded onto a vessel.

With the clock counting down to 1 July when the new SOLAS (Safety of Life at Sea) Verified Gross Mass (VGM) rule takes effect, there is still a lot of confusion and many questions being asked about what it will mean to the industry. There have been some suggestions in the media lately that shippers, terminal operators, and container lines will get some leeway in the first three months while things are sorted out. However, this should not be taken as a license to do nothing. The rule is here to stay and those who do nothing risk penalties.

There have been many “how to videos”, infographics and articles published on what the rule is, but very little on how companies can transform their operations and actually undertake the container weighing. At Jade we are well prepared. Our Terminal Operating System (TOS), Master Terminal™, can record a container’s VGM using in-machine technology or weighbridges.

If you would like to find out more about Jade’s approach to VGM, read the Master Terminal container weighing fact sheet or our article Worth the weight?

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Jade first to address weight issue

Since March this year, Jade Logistics’ terminal operating system, Master Terminal, has been ready to capture a container’s VGM, making Jade one of, if not the first TOS vendor to introduce this functionality into their software.

The countdown is on. Less than two months remain until the International Maritime Organization’s new container weighing regulations take effect. As of 1 July 2016, the Safety of Life at Sea (SOLAS) Convention requires, as a condition for loading a packed container onto a ship for export, that the packed container has a Verified Gross Mass (VGM).

Yet despite this impending deadline many terminal operators globally have decided to bury their heads in the sand and will not be ready when the updated maritime treaty comes into force. Whether that is due to disorganization, blind optimism that shippers will take full responsibility for container weighing, or that their software does not have the functionality to record VGM, it was not an option for Jade Software.

Master Terminal can now record a container’s VGM using in-machine technology or weighbridges. Terminal operators also have the option to manually enter a pre-recorded container VGM and mark it as verified.

Paying heed to Ship-planning Message Design Group (SMDG) guidelines and working alongside ship operators, we have updated Master Terminal to enable sending and receiving  the VGM of a container in a variety of accepted EDI message formats. The new VERMAS EDI message, which communicates a container’s VGM, authorized person, and responsible party, is also now part of Master Terminal EDI functionality.

At Jade, we pride ourselves on innovation, and our development process differs from other vendors in our industry. While many of our competitors update their software on a yearly basis, we deliver monthly releases. Our users benefit from this agility. It means we can quickly and easily introduce features like VGM processing, so Master Terminal users can benefit from new functionalities within a matter of weeks, not months or years.

With our agile monthly release process, we are able to work alongside our customers and continually enhance Master Terminal to meet their changing needs. Or as our developers like to put it “we listen”. It may seem like a simple statement, but the fact is that many ports have to make do with a generic TOS that they are shoehorned into. They receive software updates infrequently and don’t have a say in what is included in those updates.

So while our users will be up and running processing and recording container weights, a service that they can ultimately charge shippers for, many of our competitor’s ports will find themselves having to decide whether to record VGM manually, a laborious and time-consuming ordeal, or to purchase additional third-party software, a costly and inelegant solution that often throws up difficulties when trying to interface with existing systems.

If you would like to find out more about Jade’s approach to VGM, read the Master Terminal container weighing fact sheet or our article Worth the weight?

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Jade congratulate Abu Dhabi Ports on 10th Anniversary

Jade Logistics is proud to work alongside Abu Dhabi Ports and congratulate them on their 10th Anniversary.

Jade’s terminal operating system, Master Terminal was selected by Abu Dhabi Ports in 2014 to manage operations at seven terminals as the port embarked on an ambitious program to optimize productivity across their ports.

Learn more in Abu Dhabi Ports’ press release.

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Worth the weight?

With new container weighing regulations due to take effect in July 2016, is your port in position to capitalize on this industry-changing opportunity? 

The International Convention for the Safety of Life at Sea (SOLAS) has, for many years, required the weight of any freight container to match the weight declared in shipping documents. Despite this regulation, a string of incidents due to inaccurate weight measuring has revealed how regularly this rule is glossed over, or interpreted as ‘roughly matching’ rather than ‘exactly matching’.

The Journal of Commerce cite reports that the proportion of global container trade that is wrongly declared could be as high as 20%.

Because ports typically use the weight recorded on the carter’s note to plan for stowage, if the measurement is out, this can have potentially detrimental effects on on-board weight distribution. It also affects port procedures including crane failure due to containers exceeding crane load limit; and instability on trucks or rail carriages.

Heavy boxes may be placed higher in stacks, with lighter boxes bearing the bulk. This can often lead to stacks collapsing, causing damage to the cargo and ship, and putting crew in danger. It could even result in cargo tumbling over board. This can create environmental damage as well as sea vessel navigation hazards. According to The World Shipping Council, approximately 546 containers are lost at sea every year (excluding during catastrophic events).

Reports by The UK Marine Accident Investigation Branch (MAIB) show that a commonality of many stack failure incidences was incorrectly declared container weights.

The MAIB speculated that the reason incorrectly declaring a weight is so prevalent is due to two main factors:

  1. the lack of accurate weighing facilities available to shippers
  2. shippers deliberately declaring lower weights to avoid import duties, maximize container use, and bypass road and rail weight rules.

As the responsible party for setting minimum standards for international shipping design, construction and equipment, SOLAS is taking action. In response to the preventable environmental, economic, and safety accidents caused by inconsistent container weighing, SOLAS is enforcing a new requirement in July 2016 – each container’s weight must be verified.

Reports point to the global insurance industry pushing this initiative hard as a way of reducing losses due to misdeclared container weights.

So what does this mean for terminal operators?

While the main responsibility for accurate weighing falls on shippers, terminal operators do need to protect themselves by ensuring weights are accurately recorded. According to an insurance expert quoted in the Journal of Commerce terminal “operators are at risk when they lack evidence for their refusal to carry a container.”

While the regulation presents an opportunity for some, like Dunedin-based firm Bison who have created revolutionary weighing jacks, many organizations are unprepared for this legislation change and have spent little time planning how to implement this new requirement. Anyone involved in container operations – shippers, hauliers, carriers, and terminals – need to be aware of the time, equipment, and processes required to verify container weight, and have everything in place before 1 July 2016. Otherwise they could be facing serious operational, commercial, and legal consequences.

To learn more about how Jade’s terminal operating system Master Terminal handles the challenge of container weighing, download the Master Terminal container weighing fact sheet.

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