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The Box Juggler at Hapag-Lloyd

August 9, 2016

Whenever a Hapag-Lloyd vessel reaches a port, a certain number of containers are usually loaded or discharged before the ship continues along its voyage to the next port. But how do you stow these containers on the ship in the safest and most efficient way possible?

 
Jan Böttjer, the stowage planner, at Hapag-Lloyd says: “Imagine you’d like to unload a container in a port and you realize it’s located all the way at the bottom of the ship’s hold, covered by an entire stack of other containers that don’t need to leave the ship in this port. To get to the container you want, you’d first have to restow the container tiers above it. In addition to being completely uneconomical, it also consumes a whole lot of time.”
 
Of course, one might imagine that the ideal way to stow containers would just be to put the containers that need to leave the ship in the next port at the very top of the stacks. But, in reality, it’s far from that simple. “Our job is much more complex,” Böttjer says. 
 
Indeed, it’s not for nothing that Böttjer holds a degree in nautical sciences and a so-called “master’s ticket,” like all his colleagues at the central stowage planning office in Hamburg. Earning this license requires experience on the high seas and qualifies him to control a ship. Before becoming a stowage planner, he served as a chief mate, which made him responsible for the cargo that sailed on board several Hapag-Lloyd ships.
 
“Having specialized nautical knowledge and experience on board is extremely important for our job, as we coordinate with captains and dockworkers in the terminals every day,” he notes. “We’re familiar with the challenges on board and can adjust our actions accordingly.”
 
Hapag-Lloyd’s seven central stowage planning offices are divided among the Regions. Though spread across the world, they work closely together. For example, a ship sailing from Hamburg toward South America will leave its final port in Region Europe at a certain point.
 
 When that happens, Böttjer will hand responsibility for the ship over to his counterparts in Valparaíso. The information he transmits to South America will include, among other things, data on all the containers currently on board, their exact positions, details on the type of container and VGM information. 
 
With this “basic information,” stowage planners in Valparaíso can likewise get started with their planning. About two days before the ship arrives in the first port of a Region, the stowage planners also receive from the agent in that port the initial load figures of the shipping companies wishing to ship cargo on this vessel. The final stowage planning for the respective port only begins 24 hours before the ship’s arrival.
 
Looking toward the future, Böttjer knows that he and his colleagues have a major challenge in front of them. Due to the merger with UASC, Hapag-Lloyd will soon have a fleet with ship capacities ranging from 700 to 19,000 TEU. 
 
“As the ship gets bigger, so does the amount of work required for each of them,” he says. An 18,800 TEU ship, such as UASC’s “Al Muraykh,” can only call at a small selection of ports due to its massive size and can spend two to three weeks at sea between ports. But then the terminals are especially busy for days because of all the cargo.
 
“In the future, we will encounter these particularities – and we will naturally have to take this into account with our stowage planning,” Böttjer says. But this is precisely the kind of variety that he likes so much about his job. “As stowage planners, we face a new and exciting challenge every day – because no two ships are alike!”
 
(Story excerpted from the recent edition of Hapag-Lloyd Insights)
 
EuropeSouth America

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