Transport and banks – a slow cocktail
Posted: Thu Feb 23, 2006 12:00 am
As promised:
It seems to me that one of the areas that need the most attention is the transport articles in the UCP 500.
From my chair it looks as if transport practice have slowly been moving away from the wording in the UCP.
There is a great dilemma here, as the banker’s claims not to know anything about transport (!!), and the transporters do not really seem to care about letters of credit (!!).
Or is it just me?
Anyway here are some observations, showing where UCP and transport practice mismatch – as I see it:
Article 26/ISBP para 120
According to UCP/ISBP the document must not show that ONLY ONE mode of transport has been used.
The UNCTAD/ICC Rules for Multimodal Transport Documents says that the rules apply even if one mode of transport is used. I see many examples where the MMTD is used for road transport only.
Article 24
The NN Sea waybill requires that shipment is to be made from one port to another port.
The CIM Uniform rules for sea waybills states that the document covers a transport wholly or partly by sea. In other words: it may be used as a multimodal document, one leg must however be made by sea
Article 23/ article 26
There is no doubt that the document being called for in documentary credits most often is the ocean B/L (Article 23). It seems to me however that what many LC users require is a document that:
- Is a document of title
- Shows that the goods has been shipped on board (to match e.g. FOB or CFR Incoterms)
- Is “open” for the last leg of the transport – as to how goods are shipped from port of discharge to final destination (as this is often now known when goods are shipped).
It goes without saying that the above can be handled via L/C clauses. If however I am right, in saying that many LC users really needs such a document, then why not adjust the rules to match this.
The above are my personal observations, but I would really like to know if you have made similar observations. And if there are any “transporters” “out there” – please speak now.
Thanks
Kim
It seems to me that one of the areas that need the most attention is the transport articles in the UCP 500.
From my chair it looks as if transport practice have slowly been moving away from the wording in the UCP.
There is a great dilemma here, as the banker’s claims not to know anything about transport (!!), and the transporters do not really seem to care about letters of credit (!!).
Or is it just me?
Anyway here are some observations, showing where UCP and transport practice mismatch – as I see it:
Article 26/ISBP para 120
According to UCP/ISBP the document must not show that ONLY ONE mode of transport has been used.
The UNCTAD/ICC Rules for Multimodal Transport Documents says that the rules apply even if one mode of transport is used. I see many examples where the MMTD is used for road transport only.
Article 24
The NN Sea waybill requires that shipment is to be made from one port to another port.
The CIM Uniform rules for sea waybills states that the document covers a transport wholly or partly by sea. In other words: it may be used as a multimodal document, one leg must however be made by sea
Article 23/ article 26
There is no doubt that the document being called for in documentary credits most often is the ocean B/L (Article 23). It seems to me however that what many LC users require is a document that:
- Is a document of title
- Shows that the goods has been shipped on board (to match e.g. FOB or CFR Incoterms)
- Is “open” for the last leg of the transport – as to how goods are shipped from port of discharge to final destination (as this is often now known when goods are shipped).
It goes without saying that the above can be handled via L/C clauses. If however I am right, in saying that many LC users really needs such a document, then why not adjust the rules to match this.
The above are my personal observations, but I would really like to know if you have made similar observations. And if there are any “transporters” “out there” – please speak now.
Thanks
Kim