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| C
& I |
Is a quoted price which includes
costs of goods and insurance. |
| C
& F |
Is a quoted price which includes
cost of goods and freight. |
| C.C.E.F. |
Is a Customs Centralized
Examination Facility. |
| C.I.F. |
Is a quoted price includes
cost of goods, insurance and freight. |
| C.I.T.E.S. |
Committee on International Trade
of Endangered Species. |
| CAA |
Is the Civil Aviation Authority.
Government body responsible for regulating U.K. airlines. |
| Cabotage |
Is where cargo is carried on what
is essentially a domestic flight and therefore not
subject to international agreements that fix set rates.
Cabotage rates are negotiable between shipper and airline
and apply on flights within a country and to its overseas
territories. |
| CAD |
The acronym meaning "cash
against documents," a method of payment for goods
in which documents transferring title are given to
the buyer upon payment of cash to an intermediary acting
for the seller. |
| CAD/CAM |
Computer Aided Design/Computer
Aided Manufacturing. |
| Cage |
The transporting of goods by truck
to or from a vessel, aircraft, or bonded warehouse,
all under customs custody. |
| Cargo |
Is merchandise/commodities/freight
carried by means of transportation. |
| Cargo
Receipt |
Is a receipt of cargo for shipment
by a consolidator (used in ocean freight). |
| Carnet |
A customs document permitting the
holder to carry or send merchandise temporarily into
certain foreign countries (for display, demonstration,
or similar purpose) without paying duties or posting
bonds. |
| Carrier,
Common |
A public or privately owned firm
or corporation that transports the goods of others
over land, sea, or through the air, for a stated freight
rate. By government regulation, a common carrier is
required to carry all goods offered if accommodations
are available and the established rate is paid. |
Carrier(s)
Containers or
Shippers(s)
Containers |
The term Carrier(s) Container(s)
or Shipper(s) Container(s) means containers over which
the carrier or the shipper has control either by ownership
or by the acquisition thereof under lease or rental
from container companies or container suppliers or
from similar sources. Carriers are prohibited from
purchasing, leasing or renting shipper owned containers. |
| Cartel |
Is an association of several independent
national or international business organizations that
regulates competition by controlling the prices, the
production, or the marketing of a product or an industry. |
| Cash
Against Documents (CAD) |
Payment for goods in which a commission
house, or other intermediary, transfers title documents
to the buyer upon payment in cash. |
| Cash
in Advance (C.I.A.) |
Payment for goods in which the
price is paid in full before shipment is made. This
method is usually used only for small purchases or
when the goods are built to order. |
| Certificate
of Analysis |
Is a certificate required by some
countries as proof of the quality and composition of
food products or pharmaceuticals. The required analysis
may be made by a private or government health agency.
The certificate must be legalized by a foreign consul
of the country concerned, as is the case with such
similar certificates as the phytosanitary certificate. |
| Certificate
of Inspection |
A document certifying that the
goods were in apparent good condition immediately prior
to shipment. |
| Certificate
of Manufacture |
A statement in which a producer
specifies where his goods were manufactured, certifies
that manufacturing has been completed, and confirms
that the goods are at the buyer's disposal. |
| Certificate
of Origin |
A statement signed by the exporter,
or his agent, and attested to by a local Chamber of
Commerce, indicating that the goods being shipped,
or a major percentage of them, originated and were
produced in the exporter's country. |
| CES |
Is a Customs Examination Station. |
| CFS
(Container Freight Station) |
The term CFS at loading port means
the location designated by carriers for the receiving
of cargo to be packed into containers by the carrier.
At discharge ports, the term CFS means the bonded location
designated by carriers in the port area for unpacking
and delivery of cargo. |
| CFS
CHARGE (Container Freight Charge) |
The term CFS Charge means the charge
assessed for services performed at the loading or discharging
port in packing or unpacking of cargo into/from containers
at CFS. |
| CFS
Receiving Service |
The term "CFS Receiving Services" means
the service performed at loading port in receiving
and packing cargo into containers from CFS to CY or
shipside. "CFS Receiving Services" referred
herein are restricted to the following 1. Moving empty
containers from CY to CFS 2. Drayage of loaded containers
from CFS to CY and/or ship's tackle 3. Tallying 4.
Issuing dock receipt/shipping order 5. Physical movement
of cargo into, out of and within CFS 6. Stuffing, sealing
and marking containers 7. Storage 8. Ordinary sorting
and stacking 9. Preparing carrier's internal container
load plan. |
| CFS
/ CFS (Pier to Pier) |
The term CFS/CFS means cargo delivered
by break-bulk to Carrier's CFS to be packed by Carrier
into containers and to be unpacked by Carrier from
the container at Carrier's destination port CFS. |
| CFS
/ CY (Pier to House) |
The term CFS/CY means cargo delivered
break-bulk to Carrier's CFS to be packed by Carrier
into containers and accepted by consignee at Carrier's
CY and unpacked by the consignee off Carrier's premises,
all at consignee's risk and expense. |
| Chargeable
Kilo |
Rate for goods where volume exceeds
six cubic metres to the tonne. |
| Charter |
Originally meant a flight where
a shipper contracted hire of an aircraft from an airline.
Has usually come to mean any non-scheduled commercial
service. |
| Charter
Party |
The contract between the owner
of a ship and the individual or company chartering
it. Among other specifications, the contract usually
stipulates the exact obligations of the ship-owner
(loading the goods, carrying the goods to a certain
point, returning to the charterer with other goods,
etc.); or it provides for an outright leasing of the
vessel to the charterer, who then is responsible for
his own loading and delivery. In either case, the charter
party sets forth the exact conditions and requirements
agreed upon by both sides. |
| Charter
Party Bill of Lading |
A bill of lading issued under a
charter party. It is not acceptable by banks under
letters of credit unless so authorized in the credit. |
| Chassis |
A wheel assemble including bogies
constructed to accept mounting of containers. |
| CIA |
The acronym meaning "cash
in advance," a method of payment for goods whereby
buyer pays seller in advance of shipment of goods. |
| CIF
(Cost, Insurance and Freight) |
Seller is responsible for inland
freight, ocean/air freight, and marine/air insurance
to the port of final entry in the buyer's country.
The buyer is responsible for inland transportation
to his or her location. |
| Class
Rates |
A class of goods or commodities
is a large grouping of various items under one general
heading. All items in the group make up a class. The
freight rates that apply to all items in the class
are called class rates. |
| Classification |
Is a customs term. The placement
of an item under the correct number in the customs
tariff for duty purposes. At times this procedure becomes
highly complicated; it is not uncommon for importers
to resort to litigation over the correct duty to be
assessed by the customs on a given item. |
| Claused
Bill of Lading |
Is a bill of lading which has exemptions
to the receipt of merchandise in "apparent good
order" noted. |
| Clean
Bill of Lading |
Is a bill of lading which covers
goods received in "apparent good order and condition" and
without qualification. |
| Clean
Draft |
Is a draft to which no documents
have been attached. |
| cm |
Centimeters. |
| CNS |
Cargo Network Services, an IATA
company. See IATA. |
| Collective
Paper |
All documents (commercial invoices,
bills of lading, etc.) submitted to a buyer for the
purpose of receiving payment for a shipment. |
| Combi |
Is an aircraft with pallet or container
capacity on its main deck as well as in its belly holds. |
| Combination
Vessels |
Container/Break-bulk vessel - this
type of ship accommodates both container and break-bulk
cargo. It can be either self sustaining or non-self
sustaining. |
| Commercial
Code |
A published code designed to reduce
the total number of words required in a cablegram. |
| Commercial
Invoice |
An itemized list of goods shipped,
usually included among an exporter's collection papers. |
| Commercial
Risk |
Risk carried by the exporter (unless
insurance is secured) that the foreign buyer may not
be able to pay for goods delivered on an open account
basis. |
| Commodity
Specialist |
An official authorized by the U.S.
Treasury to determine proper tariff and value of imported
goods. |
| Common
Carrier |
A firm or individual that transports
persons or goods for compensation. |
| Conference |
A group of vessel operators joined
together for the purpose of establishing freight rates.
RoRo/Container Vessel - Ship designed to accommodate
containers and roll-on roll-off cargo. It can be self
sustaining. RoRo/Container/Break-bulk Vessel - Designated
to accommodate three types of cargo, usually self sustaining. |
| Confirmed
Letter of Credit |
A letter of credit, issued by a
foreign bank, with validity confirmed by a U.S. bank.
An exporter who requires a confirmed letter of credit
from the buyer is assured of payment by the U.S. bank
even if the foreign buyer or the foreign bank defaults. |
| Confiscation |
The taking and holding of private
property by a government or an agency acting for a
government. Compensation may or may not be given to
the owner of the property. |
| Consignee |
Person or firm to whom goods are
shipped under a bill of landing. |
| Consignee |
The individual or company to whom
a seller or sipper sends merchandise and who, upon
presentation of necessary documents, is recognized
as merchandise owner for the purpose of declaring and
paying customs duties. |
| Consignee
Marks |
A symbol laced on packages for
identification purposes; generally consisting of a
triangle, square, circle, diamond, cross, with letters
and/or numbers as well as port of discharge. |
| Consignment |
Is the physical transfer of goods
from a seller (consignor) with whom the title remains,
to another legal entity (consignee) who acts as a selling
agent, selling the goods and remitting the new proceeds
to the consignor. |
| Consignor |
A term used to describe any person
who consigns goods to himself or to another party in
a bill of lading or equivalent document. A consignor
might be the owner of the goods, or a freight forwarder
who consigns goods on behalf of his principal. |
| Consolidated
Shipment |
An arrangement whereby various
shippers pool their boxed goods on the same shipment,
sharing the total weight charge for the shipment. |
| Consolidator |
An agent which brings together
a number of shipments for one destination to qualify
for preferential airline rates. |
| Consortium |
The name for an agreement under
which several nations or nationals (usually corporations)
of more than one nation, join together for a common
purpose. It could be for management or exploitation
of a natural resource, as in the case of some international
petroleum consortiums. |
| Consul |
A government official residing
in a foreign country, charged with representing the
interests of his or her country and its nationals. |
| Consular
Declaration |
A formal statement, made to the
consul of a foreign country, describing goods to be
shipped. |
| Consular
Documents |
Special forms signed by the consul
of a country to which cargo is destined. |
| Consular
Invoice |
A document, required by some foreign
countries, describing a shipment of goods and showing
information such as the consignor, consignee, and value
of the shipment. Certified by a consular official of
the foreign country, it is used by the country's customs
officials to verify the value, quantity and nature
of the shipment. |
| Container |
The term container means a single
rigid, non-disposable dry cargo, insulated, temperature
controlled flatrack, vehicle rack portable liquid tank,
or open top container without wheels or bogies attached,
having not less than 350 cubic feet capacity, having
a closure or permanently hinged door that allows ready
access to the cargo (closure or permanently hinged
door not applicable to flatrack vehicle rack or portable
liquid tank). All types of containers will have constructions,
fittings and fastenings able to withstand without permanent
distortion, all the stresses that may be applied in
normal service use of continuous transportation. All
containers must bear manufacturer's specifications. |
| Container
Ship |
Ocean going ship designed to carry
containers both internally and on deck. Some are self
sustaining. |
| Containerization |
Is a concept for the ultimate unitizing
of cargo used by both steamship lines and air cargo
lines. Containers allow a greater amount of cargo protection
from weather, damage, and theft. |
| Containers
(Air Cargo) |
Many types of air cargo containers
are offered The containers are designed in various
sizes and irregular shapes to conform to the inside
dimensions of a specific aircraft. |
| Containers
(Ocean) |
Are designed to be moved inland
on its own chassis and can be loaded at the shippers
plant for shipment overseas. Basic types of containers
are; dry van, open top, half high, hi cube, flat rock,
tank container, refrigerated container, insulated container,
tilting container. Average outside dimensions are generally
20, 35, and 40 feet in length, 8 feet wide and 8 feet
high standard. |
| Continuous
Bond |
Is an annual customs bond insuring
compliance with all regulations and requirements. |
| Contract
Rate |
Is a charge levied by carriers
selling capacity forward over a given route to a shipper
of forwarder; the client is therefore assured of capacity,
which must be paid for regardless of load carried. |
| Coordinating
Committee for Export Controls (COCOM) |
An informal group of 15 western
countries established to prevent the export of certain
strategic products to potentially hostile nations. |
| Correspondent
Bank |
A bank that, in its own country,
handles the business of a foreign bank. |
| Countertrade |
Is a reciprocal trading arrangement,
which includes a variety of transactions involving
two or more parties. |
| Countervailing
Duties |
Is a special duties imposed on
imports to offset the benefits of subsidies to producers
or exporters of the exporting country. |
| Credit
Risk Insurance |
Insurance designed to cover risks
of nonpayment for delivered goods. |
| Customhouse
Broker |
An individual or firm licensed
to enter and clear goods through Customs. |
| Customs
Bonded Warehouse |
Is a warehouse where imported goods
may be stored for a total of three years without the
payment of duty or taxes. |
| Customs
Court |
Is the court to which importers
might appeal or protest decisions made by Customs officers. |
| Customs
Tariff |
Is a schedule of charges assessed
by the federal government on imported goods. |
| Customs
Union |
Is an agreement between two or
more countries in which they arrange to abolish tariffs
and other import restrictions on each other's goods
and establish a common tariff for the imports of all
other countries. |
| CWO |
The acronym meaning "cash
with order," a method of payment for goods where
cash is paid at the time of order and the transaction
becomes binding on both buyer and seller. |
| CY
(Container Yard) |
The term CY means the location
designated by Carrier in the port terminal area for
receiving, assembling, holding, storing and delivering
containers, and where containers may be picked up by
shippers or re-delivered by consignees. No container
yard (CY) shall be a shipper's, consignee's, NVOCC's,
or a forwarder's place of business, unless otherwise
provided. |
| CY
/ CFS (House to Pier) |
The term CY/CFS means containers
packed by shipper of carrier's premises and delivered
by shipper to Carrier's CY, all at shipper's risk and
expense and unpacked by Carrier at the destination
port CFS. |
| CY
/ CY (House to House) |
The term CY/CY means containers
packed by shipper off Carrier's premises and delivered
by shipper to Carrier's CY and accepted by consignee
a t Carrier's CY and unpacked by consignee off Carrier's
premises, all at the risk and expense of cargo. |