Tuesday, October 18, 2011

Understanding Incoterms


Introducing Incoterms to someone new, 4 key questions, and an overview of the key differences.

What are Incoterms? Incoterms are International Commercial Terms, essentially a global set of universal trade terms developed to establish a happy medium between exporter and importer alike.

Where did they come from? Incoterms were developed by the International Chamber of Commerce (ICC) in Paris, France. They were first published in 1936 and the current set were published in 2000.

Why do we need them? Without Incoterms buyer and seller would would be at constant negotiation, international trade would simply not be as efficient. A generic standard set of rules are invaluable and can be thought of as a cost-saving measure. Once a trade term is agreed upon, the parties can continue without having to worry whom is responsible for freight, insurance or other related cost in the future.

How many of these things are there?? There are 13 Incoterms, yes it sounds daunting at first but if we break them down into categories it will improve your understanding. A simple breakdown and explanation of each term......

Departure Terms (here's the goods sort it out yourself!)

EXWEx Works The buyer takes control of the goods at the Suppliers Factory door, all the supplier has to do is make the shipment available at there set location. Any charge thereon falls completely on the buyer

Main carriage unpaid terms (hand balled to your carrier!)

FCA Free Carrier Basically the seller will clear the shipment for export and drop it in the hands of the buyers selected carrier at there chosen location. This term can be used for all modes of transport.

FASFree Alongside Ship Similar to FCA, but maritime specific. The seller will clear shipment for export, and physically leave it at the chosen port, without incurring any Port service charge.

FOBFree On Board Similar to FAS, although the seller will organize to load the shipment on board the buyer's designated ship. Port charge fees are divided between each party.

Main Carriage Paid (drop kicked to your door!)

CFRCost and Freight Seller will pay for carriage and all costs involved to the buyer's destination port. Insurance is buyers responsibility once goods have been loaded aboard vessel.

CIFCost, Insurance and Freight As above, however the seller must cover insurance cost to the destination port.

CPTCarriage Paid To CFR, except Insurance risk commences for buyer as soon as the truck (or first carrier) delivering goods to the port is loaded.

CIPCarriage and Insurance Paid The container freight/multimodal equivalent of CPT.

Arrival terms (confused yet!)

DAFDelivered At Frontier is designed for Road and Rail freight. The buyer will organize customs clerance and transport to the frontier; country borderline / chosen destination. Insurance changes hands at the frontier.

DESDelivered Ex Ship (named port) similiar to CIF/CIP the seller will cover insurance to the destination port. This term is generally used for bulk carriage e.g. minerals or agriculture, as the seller is required to make the product available onboard the vessel itself.

DEQDelivered Ex Quay (named port) Equivalent of DES, except insurance covers goods untill they are unloaded at destination port.

DDUDelivered Duty Unpaid (named destination place) The buyer chooses a destination, from this point onwards the buyer is responsible for any loading charges, or insurance cover. Everything prior is the seller's responsibility. Local customs clearance entry costs or any duty tax can be negotiated in the contract.

DDP – Delivered Duty Paid (named destination place) Essentially the opposite of Ex Works, the seller will pay for all transport charges, insurance, customs clearance and duty. From origin to the buyers warehouse.


StumbleUpon

Sunday, September 25, 2011

Melbourne to Sydney High Speed Train

Ever since seeing the Tyco Super Turbo Train commercial as a child, I have been dying for a High Speed Rail Network linking Australian Capital Cities.


Furthermore after admiring the speed & efficiency of the ICE train around Germany, I have become a complete advocate of the proposed Melbourne to Sydney High Speed Link.

February 2010 I attended UFC 110 at Acer Arena Sydney Olympic Park, having traveled from Geelong Victoria, The round trip involved a 3am wake up call, and arrival home just after midnight, in other words an immensely long & tiring day for a 2.5 hour event.

The reasoning behind this was the available flight times & required Check in periods prior to and fro. The Interlinking public transport from home to Airport, Airport to Venue and so on...

Initial thoughts that passengers could fork out less than $100 per ticket, travel at +350kph and arrive in less than 3 hours blows my mind!

Yes this would be one hell of a expensive logistical challenge given the recent fall in our economy, but I feel the benefits alone should be merit to push this through parliament as soon as possible, and get the construction ball rolling.

(September 12. 2006). Tyco Super Turbo Train w/ Daredevil Jump. [online]Youtube; courtesy of user: panbiscuit. Available from: SOURCE [Accessed 25 Sep 2011].

StumbleUpon

Monday, September 12, 2011

The Secret of calculating Air freight cost


If your company is airfreighting quiet often and using an air freight forwarder, you should have received a rate sheet, usually split into regions.

Generally speaking each region will have four methods of calculating the total charge, maybe a fifth or sixth for a country or airport with additional handling or customs requirements.

An airfreight charge per kilogram, war/fuel surcharge, fixed local charge per shipment and variable local charge per kilogram will typically be the basis for calculating the cost of freight. Additional factors may come into play including origin terminal handling charges or document fees.

Information the freight forwarder will require to quote the shipment composes of the outer carton CBM (Carton dimensions - L x W x H), Volumetric Weight (Outer Carton CBM x 167), Gross Weight of Carton & the number of cartons.

The greater of the Volumetric Weight and the Gross Weight will equal the chargeable weight which will then be plugged into the freight forwarders rate sheet.

For further detail, e.g. calculating the freight per unit cost if say you were shipping 100 units per carton, a units per carton column can be added into the formula.

Click to Download the excel spreadsheet I use to calculate airfreight cost on a day-to-day basis.
StumbleUpon

Friday, July 1, 2011

WFP 125 x 125 Banner

The World Food Programme, has offered great incite on logistical nightmares it has encountered through A-Grade Journalism. I have discussed and used examples in the past including Nepal Logistically Challenge and Libyas desert corridor realising logistical dream.

It is for this reason I have decided to place a 125 x 125 Banner on Logistical Challenge to help support there cause.

Play Freerice and feed the hungry christina aguilera fighting hunger
Share food, change lives Help end child hunger

Once again thanks WFP, and as token of your appreciation, if you can afford it please click here and make a small donation now, If you want to add a banner to your webpage I encourage you too please follow my source below.

WFP (1 July 2011). Link to Us | WFP | United Nations World Food Programme. World Food Program[online] www.wfp.org. Available from: SOURCE [Accessed 1/7/2011 July 2009].
StumbleUpon

Saturday, January 15, 2011

Keywords in a plethora of text


How often does this happen? There was a really relevant point in a body of text you read a few days earlier and after finally tracking down that webpage in Google, or finding that ebook on your PC, its time to start breezing through 500 odd pages of text to find that elusive statement.
.
To save some time simply Hit CTRL & F, & an impresive "Find" Utility should appear which allows you to enter a specific keyword. After you have entered a somewhat unique word or phrase associated with your search, click "Find" and with some luck you should be teleported to the hidden line in no time.
.
Im surprised how often this can be overlooked, people use find / search functions all the time to locate where they have saved files on there hardrive, but never think to use it as an indexing tool throughout large documents.

This could be handy, especially if your house bills, invoice or packing lists have been created in Excel or Word, and you need to find a certain field repeatingly, yet now efficiently. StumbleUpon