Showing posts with label Víctor. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Víctor. Show all posts

Monday, 25 November 2019

DOCUMENTATION & FINANCE IN FOREIGN TRADE (VIII)

Logistics Team
Today, The Grandma is going to finish her Logistic course in Sant Boi de Llobregat. It has been a great course full of interesting information, wonderful experiences and the most important, fantastic and kind partners.

For the last day, The Grandma has decided to talk about Documentation and Finance in Logistics, especially documents in foreign trade, import instructions and payment methods. She has been checking information from the European Union Trade Helpdesk, especially that information related with Documents for Customs Clearance and she has read a manual that explains how to create great writings in English.


The Grandma wants to thank her partners -David, Fabio, Jéssica, Joan, Margot, Mirèia, Ricard and Víctor- for sharing these nice days and learning lots of new things together. It has been a great pleasure and she hopes her partner's future will be full of great projects, fortune and friendship.




COMMERCIAL INVOICE

The commercial invoice is a record or evidence of the transaction between the exporter and the importer.


Once the goods are available, the exporter issues a commercial invoice to the importer in order to charge him for the goods.

The commercial invoice contains the basic information on the transaction and it is always required for customs clearance.

Although some entries specific to the export-import trade are added, it is similar to an ordinary sales invoice. The minimum data generally included are the following:

-Information on the exporter and the importer (name and address)

-Date of issue

-Invoice number

-Description of the goods (name or quality)

-Unit of measure

-Quantity of goods

-Unit value

-Total item value

-Total invoice value and currency of payment. The equivalent amount must be indicated in a currency freely convertible to Euro or other legal tender in the importing Member State

-The terms of payment (method and date of payment or discounts)

-The terms of delivery according to the appropriate Incoterm

-Means of transport

No specific form is required. The commercial invoice is to be prepared by the exporter according to standard business practice and it must be submitted in the original along with at least one copy.


In general, there is no need for the invoice to be signed. In practice, both the original and the copy of the commercial invoice are often signed. The commercial invoice may be prepared in any language. However, a translation into English is recommended.

More information: The Balance Small Business

CUSTOMS VALUES DECLARATION

The Customs Value Declaration is a document, which must be presented to the customs authorities where the value of the imported goods exceeds EUR 20000.


The Customs Value Declaration must be drawn up conforming to form DV 1, whose specimen is laid down in Annex 8 to Regulation (EU) 2016/341 (OJ L-69 15/03/2016) (CELEX 32016R0341) known as UCC Transitional Delegated Act. This form must be presented with the Single Administrative Document (SAD).

The main purpose of this requirement is to assess the value of the transaction in order to fix the customs value (taxable value) to apply the tariff duties. 

Logistics Team
The customs value corresponds to the value of the goods including all the costs incurred (e.g.: commercial price, transport, insurance) until the first point of entry in the European Union.

The usual method to establish the customs value is using the transaction value (the price paid or payable for the imported goods). In certain cases the transaction value of the imported goods may be subject to an adjustment, which involves additions or deductions. For instance:

-Commissions or royalties may need to be added to the price

-The internal transport (from the entry point to the final destination in the Community Customs Territory) must be deducted

The customs authorities shall waive the requirement of all or part of the customs value declaration where:

-The customs value of the imported goods in a consignment does not exceed EUR 20 000, provided that they do not constitute split or multiple consignments from the same consignor to the same consignee, or

-The importations involved are of a non-commercial nature; or

-The submission of the particulars in question is not necessary for the application of the Customs Tariff of the European Communities or where the customs duties provided for in the Tariff are not chargeable pursuant to specific customs provisions.

Legislation

-Regulation (EU) No 952/2013 of the European Parliament and the Council, laying down the Customs Code(OJ L-269 10/10/2013) (CELEX 32013R0952)

-Commission Delegated Regulation (EU) 2016/341 supplementing Regulation (EU) No 952/2013 of the European Parliament and of the Council as regards transitional rules for certain provisions of the Union Customs Code where the relevant electronic systems are not yet operational and amending Delegated Regulation (EU) 2015/2446 (OJ L-69 15/03/2016) (CELEX 32016R0341)


More information: Mohawk Global

FREIGHT DOCUMENTS (TRANSPORT DOCUMENTATION)

Depending on the means of transport used, the following documents are to be filled in and presented to the customs authorities of the importing European Union (EU) Member State (MS) upon importation in order for the goods to be cleared:

-Bill of Lading

-FIATA Bill of Lading

-Road Waybill (CMR)

-Air Waybill (AWB)

-Rail Waybill (CIM)

-ATA Carnet

-TIR Carnet

Bill of Lading


The Bill of Lading (B/L) is a document issued by the shipping company to the operating shipper, which acknowledges that the goods have been received on board. In this way the Bill of Lading serves as proof of receipt of the goods by the carrier obliging him to deliver the goods to the consignee.

Supply Change Management
It contains the details of the goods, the vessel and the port of destination. It evidences the contract of carriage and conveys title to the goods, meaning that the bearer of the Bill of Lading is the owner of the goods.

The Bill of Lading may be a negotiable document. A number of different types of bills of lading can be used. Clean Bills of Lading state that the goods have been received in an apparent good order and condition. Unclean or Dirty Bills of Lading indicate that the goods are damaged or in bad order, in this case, the financing bank may refuse to accept the consignor's documents.

FIATA Bill of Lading

The FIATA Bill of Lading is a document designed to be used as a multimodal or combined transport document with negotiable status, which has been developed by the International Federation of Freight Forwarders Associations (FIATA).

Road Waybill (CMR)

The Road Waybill is a document containing the details of the international transportation of goods by road, set out by the Convention for the Contract of the International Carriage of Goods by Road 1956 (the CMR Convention).


It enables the consignor to have the goods at his disposal during transportation. It must be issued in quadruplicate and signed by the consignor and the carrier. The first copy is intended for the consignor; the second remains in the possession of the carrier; the third accompanies the goods and is delivered to the consignee and the forth one must be signed and stamped by the consignee and then returned to the consignor. Usually, a CMR is issued for each vehicle.
The CMR note is not a document of title and is non-negotiable.

Air Waybill (AWB)


The Air Waybill is a document, which serves as a proof of the transport contract between the consignor and the carrier's company. It is issued by the carrier's agent and falls under the provisions of the Warsaw Convention (Convention for the Unification of Certain Rules relating to International Carriage by Air, 12 October 1929).

Logistics Services
A single Air Waybill may be used for multiple shipments of goods; it contains three originals and several extra copies. One original is kept by each of the parties involved inhe transport (the consignor, the consignee and the carrier). The copies may be required at the airport of departure/destination, for the delivery and in some cases, for further freight carriers.

The Air Waybill is a freight bill, which evidences a contract of carriage and proves receipt of goods.

A specific type of Air Waybill is the one used by all carriers belonging to the International Air Transport Association (IATA); a bill called the IATA Standard Air Waybill. It embodies standard conditions associated to those set out in the Warsaw Convention.

Rail Waybill (CIM)

The Rail Waybill (CIM) is a document required for the transportation of goods by rail. It is regulated by the Convention concerning International Carriage by Rail 1980 (COTIF-CIM). The CIM is issued by the carrier in five copies, the original accompanies the goods, the duplicate of the original is kept by the consignor and the three remaining copies by the carrier for internal purposes. It is considered the rail transport contract.

ATA Carnet

ATA (Admission Temporaire/Temporary Admission) Carnets are international customs documents issued by the chambers of commerce in the majority of the industrialized world to allow the temporary importation of goods, free of customs duties and taxes.


ATA carnets can be issued for the following categories of goods: commercial samples, professional equipment and goods for presentation or use at trade fairs, shows, exhibitions and the like.

More information: ICCWBO

TIR Carnet

TIR Carnets are customs transit documents used for the international transport of goods, a part of which has to be made by road.


They allow the transport of goods under a procedure called the TIR procedure, laid down in the 1975 TIR Convention, signed under the auspices of the United Nations Economic Commission for Europe (UNECE).

More information: UNECE

The TIR system requires the goods to travel in secure vehicles or containers, all duties and taxes at risk throughout the journey to be covered by an internationally valid guarantee, the goods to be accompanied by a TIR carnet, and customs control measures in the country of departure to be accepted by the countries of transit and destination.


More information: Tipac

FREIGHT INSURANCE

The insurance is an agreement by which the insured is indemnified in the event of damages caused by a risk covered in the policy.


Insurance is all-important in the transport of goods because of their exposure to more common risks during handling, storing, loading or transporting cargo, but also to other rare risks, such as riots, strikes or terrorism.

Mirèia & The Grandma calculate insurance invoice
There is a difference between the goods transport insurance and the carrier's responsibility insurance. 

The covered risks, fixed compensation and indemnity of the contract of transport insurance are left to the holder's choice. Nevertheless, the hauler's responsibility insurance is determined by different regulations. 

Depending on the means of transport, indemnity is limited by the weight and value of the goods and is only given in case the transporter has been unable to evade responsibility.

The insurance invoice is required for customs clearance only when the relevant data do not appear in the commercial invoice indicating the premium paid to insure the merchandise.

The standard extent of the transporter's responsibility is laid down in the following international conventions:

1. Road Freight

International transport of goods by road is governed by the Convention for the Contract of the International Carriage of Goods by Road (CMR Convention) signed in Geneva in 1956.

Under this Convention, the road hauler is not responsible for losses of or damages to the goods if he proves that they arise from:

-The merchandise's own defect(s)

-Force majeure

-A fault by the loader or consignee

There is no European Union's regulation regarding indemnifications for road freight.

2. The Rail Carrier

International transport of goods by rail is regulated by the Convention concerning Intercarriage by Rail (CIM Convention), signed in Bern in 1980.
The rail carrier is not responsible for losses of or damages to the goods if he proves that they arise from:

-The merchandise's own defect(s)

-Force majeure

-A fault by the loader or consignee

Regarding compensation, currently there is no European Union regulation. Indemnification is normally limited to a maximum amount per gross kilo lost or damaged. What can be concluded from this system is that, in the majority of the cases, the company is unlikely to receive anything approaching the value of its goods.

3. The Shipping Company

The 1968 International Convention on Bill of Lading, better known as The Hague Rules or the Brussels Convention dictates the marine carrier's responsibilities when transporting international goods.

The shipping company is not responsible for losses of, or damage to, the goods if it proves that they arise from:


Logistics Workers
-The merchandise's own defects and loss in weight during transport

-A nautical mistake by the crew or
the loader

-A fire, a f
orce majeure, strikes or a lock-out

-If the ship is not seaworthy

-Hidden defects on board ship, which went unnoticed during rigorous inspection

-An attempt to save lives or goods at sea

As far as compensation is concerned, there is currently no harmonisation at European Union level. It is normally limited to a certain sum per kilogram of lost or damaged goods. This system causes the same problems as with rail accidents, being the exporter likely to lose much of the value of the goods.

4. The Air Carrier

The 1929 Warsaw Convention as well as the Montreal draft Treaty of 1975 determines that the air carrier is not responsible for damages or loss of goods if it is proved that:

-The carrier and associates took all the measures necessary to avoid the damage or that it was impossible for them to be taken (force majeure)

-The losses arise from a pilotage or navigation mistake

-The injured party was the cause of the damage or contributed to it

Concerning the injured party's indemnification, there is no European Union standard. Compensation is normally limited to a set amount per gross kilogram of damaged or lost goods.

The air carrier can state specific reservations at the time of receiving the cargo. These reservations will be written on the air consignment note (ACN) (air transport contract) and will be used as evidence. However, airlines will normally refuse dubious packages or those not corresponding to the ACN.


More information: Manage Study Guide

PACKING LIST

The Packing List (P/L) is a commercial document accompanying the commercial invoice and the transport documents.


It provides information on the imported items and the packaging details of each shipment (weight, dimensions and handling issues)

It is required for customs clearance as an inventory of the incoming cargo.
The generally included data are:

-Information on the exporter, the importer and the transport company

-Date of issue

-Number of the freight invoice

-Type of packaging (drum, crate, carton, box, barrel or bag)

-Number of packages

-Content of each package (description of the goods and number of items per package)

-Marks and numbers

-Net weight, gross weight and measurement of the packages

No specific form is required. The Packing List is to be prepared by the exporter according to standard business practice and the original along with at least one copy must be submitted. Generally there is no need to be signed. However, in practice, the original and the copy of the packing list are often signed. The packing list may be prepared in any language. However, a translation into English is recommended.


More information: Global Logistics

CUSTOMS IMPORT DECLARATION (SAD)

All goods imported into the European Union (EU) must be declared to the customs authorities of the respective Member State using the Single Administrative Document (SAD), which is the common import declaration form for all the Member States, laid down in the Union Customs Code (UCC) adopted in Regulation (EU) No 952/2013 of the European Parliament and the Council (OJ L-269 10/10/2013) (CELEX 32013R0952) and the UCC Transitional Delegated Act adopted in Commission Delegated Regulation No 2016/341 (OJ L-69 15/03/2016) (CELEX 32016R0341).

The declaration must be drawn up in one of the official languages of the EU, which is acceptable to the customs authorities of the Member State where the formalities are carried out.

The SAD may be presented either by:

-Using an approved computerised system linked to Customs authorities; or lodging it with the designated Customs Office premises

The main information that shall be declared is:

-Identifying data of the parties involved in the operation (importer, exporter and representative)


The Grandma prepares the documentation
-Custom approved treatment (release for free circulation, release for consumption, temporary importation and transit)

-Identifying data of the goods (taric code, weight, units), location and packaging 


-Declaration and method of payment of import taxes (tariff duties and VAT, Excises)

-Commercial and financial information (incoterms, invoice value, invoice currency, exchange rate and insurance) 

-Data about country of origin, country of export and destination

-Information referred to the means of transport

-List of documents associated to the SAD (import licenses, inspection certificates, document of origin, transport document and commercial invoice)

The SAD set consists of eight copies; the operator completes all or part of the sheets depending on the type of operation.

In the case of importation generally three copies shall be used: one is to be retained by the authorities of the Member State in which arrival formalities are completed, other is used for statistical purposes by the Member State of destination and the last one is returned to the consignee after being stamped by the customs authority.

Documents Associated to the SAD

According to the operation and the nature of the imported goods, additional documents shall be declared with the SAD and shall be presented together with it. The most important documents are:

-Documentary proof of origin, normally used to apply a tariff preferential treatment


-Certificate confirming the special nature of the product

-Transport Document

-Commercial Invoice

-Customs Value Declaration

-Inspections Certificates (Health, Veterinary, Plant Health Certificates)

-Import Licenses

-Community Surveillance Document

-Cites Certificate

-Documents to support a claim of a tariff quota

-Documents required for Excise purposes

-Evidence to support a claim to VAT relief 

Legislation

-Regulation (EU) No 952/2013 of the European Parliament and the Council, laying down the Customs Code(OJ L-269 10/10/2013) (CELEX 32013R0952).

-Commission Delegated Regulation (EU) 2016/341 supplementing Regulation (EU) No 952/2013 of the European Parliament and of the Council as regards transitional rules for certain provisions of the Union Customs Code where the relevant electronic systems are not yet operational and amending Delegated Regulation (EU) 2015/2446 (OJ L-69 15/03/2016) (CELEX 32016R0341).



Foreign trade clearly holds down the cost of products we buy.

Tim Bishop

Sunday, 24 November 2019

LOGISTICS, WAREHOUSING & STORAGE AREAS (VII)

The Grandma arrives to the ZAL, Barcelona
Today, The Grandma visited the ZAL in the Port of Barcelona located in the old beach of La Marina de Sants. It is the logistics zone and she thinks she can learn a lot discovering what Warehouse Management System is.

She has remembered Les Salines and Fonollar, the Logistic areas in Sant Boi de Llobregat whose names come from 'salt' and 'fennel' the kind of natural elements that grew in those lands. The Grandma has also remembered the ancient Roman warehouses in Barcelona located in Sitges, a beautiful town near the big capital. Sitges means silos, a word from the Greek σιρόςsiros, that means pit for holding grain. Sitges, today a famous touristic place, was the main warehouse of Barcino -Barcelona during the Roman age.

The future of Logistics has a close relationship with warehousing. Nobody can guess the future and as economists say, the best way to predict the future is to invent it.

The Grandma has remembered the Sibyl, the character from the Classic Greek, reborn during the Middle Age as character who predicted the end of the world, that has arrived until our days in our popular culture as an expression to predict the future. She has also played Cluedo, an amazing game of questions that allows you to practice with the W-, What, Where, When, Who, How..., to guess some hidden information.

Warehousing is the act of storing goods that will be sold or distributed later. While a small, home-based business might be warehousing products in a spare room, basement, or garage, larger businesses typically own or rent space in a building that is specifically designed for storage.

You might hear warehouse and distribution center used interchangeably, but technically, a warehouse provides nothing more than storage. A distribution center, on the other hand, stores product but also fulfills orders.

Whether the purpose is strictly storage or storage plus order fulfillment, warehouses use specific elements that help manufacturers, distributors, and retailers monitor inventory and store it safely. An overview of basic elements includes:

-Shelving and rack systems that offer maximum storage capacity and easy product access.


Víctor is working in the warehouse
-A climate control system for the product being stored. This is particularly important for frozen products or those requiring refrigeration, including certain pharmaceutical or laboratory products, and others that degrade if exposed to too much heat.

-Inventory control software that tells the product owner  -who isn’t necessarily the building owner- where all individual units are in the system at all times.

-Equipment that can move products from point A to point B  -forklifts, pallet jacks, bins that hold products for orders, and conveyor belts, for example.


-People who load products into a warehouse and others pickers who fill orders in a true distribution center, plus those who manage the facility and operation.

-Access to cost-effective transportation to bring products in or move them out as orders are fulfilled. That often means easy access to interstates, rail lines, or airports. 

-Shipping supplies for order fulfillment.

-Security to protect stored products.

Warehousing and all that goes along with it is part of a sophisticated industry known as logistics management.


Logistics includes procurement, inventory management, and distribution. It falls under the supply chain umbrella, which also includes product development, marketing, sales, and other product-related disciplines.

More information: ZAL-Port de Barcelona

A warehouse is a building for storing goods. Warehouses are used by manufacturers, importers, exporters, wholesalers, transport businesses or customs. They are usually large plain buildings in industrial parks on the outskirts of cities, towns or villages.

They usually have loading docks to load and unload goods from trucks. Sometimes warehouses are designed for the loading and unloading of goods directly from railways, airports, or seaports. They often have cranes and forklifts for moving goods, which are usually placed on ISO standard pallets loaded into pallet racks. Stored goods can include any raw materials, packing materials, spare parts, components, or finished goods associated with agriculture, manufacturing, and production. In India and Hong Kong, a warehouse may be referred to as a godown.

A warehouse can be defined functionally as a building in which to store bulk produce or goods (wares) for commercial purposes.


The Grandma visits a warehouse in the ZAL
The built form of warehouse structures throughout time depends on many contexts: materials, technologies, sites, and cultures.

In this sense, the warehouse postdates the need for communal or state-based mass storage of surplus food. Prehistoric civilizations relied on family -or community-owned storage pits, or palace storerooms, such as at Knossos, to protect surplus food. The archaeologist Colin Renfrew argued that gathering and storing agricultural surpluses in Bronze Age Minoan palaces was a critical ingredient in the formation of proto-state power.

The need for warehouses developed in societies in which trade reached a critical mass requiring storage at some point in the exchange process


This was highly evident in ancient Rome, where the horreum, in plural horrea became a standard building form.  The most studied examples are in Ostia, the port city that served Rome. The Horrea Galbae, a warehouse complex on the road towards Ostia, demonstrates that these buildings could be substantial, even by modern standards. Galba's horrea complex contained 140 rooms on the ground floor alone, covering an area of some 21,000 m². As a point of reference, less than half of U.S. warehouses today are larger than 9290 m².

More information: Veridian

The need for a warehouse implies having quantities of goods too big to be stored in a domestic storeroom. But as attested by legislation concerning the levy of duties, some medieval merchants across Europe commonly kept goods in their large household storerooms, often on the ground floor or cellars. An example is the Fondaco dei Tedeschi, the substantial quarters of German traders in Venice, which combined a dwelling, warehouse, market and quarters for travellers.

From the Middle Ages on, dedicated warehouses were constructed around ports and other commercial hubs to facilitate large-scale trade


The warehouses of the trading port Bryggen in Bergen, Norway (now a World Heritage site), demonstrate characteristic European gabled timber forms dating from the late Middle Ages, though what remains today was largely rebuilt in the same traditional style following great fires in 1702 and 1955.

During the industrial revolution, the function of warehouses evolved and became more specialised. Always a building of function, in the past few decades warehouses have adapted to standardisation, mechanisation, technological innovation and changes in supply chain methods.

Warehousing & Distribution
The mass production of goods launched by the industrial revolution of the 18th and 19th centuries fuelled the development of larger and more specialised warehouses, usually located close to transport hubs on canals, at railways and portside. Specialisation of tasks is characteristic of the factory system, which developed in British textile mills and potteries in the mid-late 1700s. Factory processes speeded up work and deskilled labour, bringing new profits to capital investment.

Warehouses also fulfill a range of commercial functions besides simple storage, exemplified by Manchester's cotton warehouses and Australian wool stores: receiving, stockpiling and despatching goods; displaying goods for commercial buyers; packing, checking and labelling orders, and dispatching them.

The utilitarian architecture of warehouses responded fast to emerging technologies. Before and into the nineteenth century, the basic European warehouse was built of load-bearing masonry walls or heavy-framed timber with a suitable external cladding. Inside, heavy timber posts supported timber beams and joists for the upper levels, rarely more than four to five stories high.

A gabled roof was conventional, with a gate in the gable facing the street, rail lines or port for a crane to hoist goods into the window-gates on each floor below. Convenient access for road transport was built-in via very large doors on the ground floor. If not in a separate building, office and display spaces were located on the ground or first floor.


More information: Build Industries

Technological innovations of the early 19th century changed the shape of warehouses and the work performed inside them: cast iron columns and later, moulded steel posts; saw-tooth roofs; and steam power. All (except steel) were adopted quickly and were in common use by the middle of the 19th century.

-Strong, slender cast iron columns began to replace masonry piers or timber posts to carry levels above the ground floor. As modern steel framing developed in the late 19th century, its strength and constructability enabled the first skyscrapers. Steel girders replaced timber beams, increasing the span of internal bays in the warehouse.

-The saw-tooth roof brought natural light to the top story of the warehouse. It transformed the shape of the warehouse, from the traditional peaked hip or gable to an essentially flat roof form that was often hidden behind a parapet. Warehouse buildings now became strongly horizontal. Inside the top floor, the vertical glazed pane of each saw-tooth enabled natural lighting over displayed goods, improving buyer inspection.

-Hoists and cranes driven by steam power expanded the capacity of manual labour to lift and move heavy goods.


Warehousing
Two more new power sources, hydraulics, and electricity, re-shaped warehouse design and practice at the end of the 19th century and into the 20th century.

-Public hydraulic power networks were constructed in many large industrial cities around the world in the 1870s-80s, exemplified by Manchester. They were highly effective to power cranes and lifts, whose application in warehouses served taller buildings and enabled new labour efficiencies.

-Public electricity networks emerged in the 1890s. They were used at first mainly for lighting and soon to electrify lifts, making possible taller, more efficient warehouses. It took several decades for electrical power to be distributed widely throughout cities in the western world.

20th-century technologies made warehousing ever more efficient. Electricity became widely available and transformed lighting, security, lifting and transport from the 1900s. The internal combustion engine, developed in the late 19th century, was installed in mass-produced vehicles from the 1910s. It not only reshaped transport methods but enabled many applications as a compact, portable power plant, wherever small engines were needed.

The forklift truck was invented in the early 20th century and came into wide use after World War II. Forklifts transformed the possibilities of multi-level pallet racking of goods in taller, single-level steel-framed buildings for higher storage density. The forklift, and its load fixed to a uniform pallet, enabled the rise of logistic approaches to storage in the later 20th century.


More information: Oberlo

Warehouses are generally considered industrial buildings and are usually located in industrial districts or zones, such as the outskirts of a city.


Types of warehouses include storage warehouses, distribution centers -including fulfillment centers and truck terminals-, retail warehouses, cold storage warehouses, and flex space.

These displayed goods for the home trade. This would be finished goods- such as the latest cotton blouses or fashion items. Their street frontage was impressive, so they took the styles of Italianate Palazzi.


Richard Cobden's construction in Manchester's Mosley Street was the first palazzo warehouse. There were already seven warehouses on Portland Street when they commenced building the elaborate Watts Warehouse of 1855, but four more were opened before it was finished.

Cold Storage Room
Cold storage preserves agricultural products. Refrigerated storage helps in eliminating sprouting, rotting and insect damage. Edible products are generally not stored for more than one year. Several perishable products require a storage temperature as low as −25 °C.

Cold storage helps stabilize market prices and evenly distribute goods both on demand and timely basis. The farmers get the opportunity of producing cash crops to get remunerative prices. The consumers get the supply of perishable commodities with lower fluctuation of prices.

Ammonia and Freon compressors are commonly used in cold storage warehouses to maintain the temperature. Ammonia refrigerant is cheaper, easily available, and has a high latent heat of evaporation, but it is also highly toxic and can form an explosive mixture when mixed with fuel oil. Insulation is also important, to reduce the loss of cold and to keep different sections of the warehouse at different temperatures.

There are two main types of refrigeration system used in cold storage warehouses: Vapor Absorption Systems (VAS) and Vapor-Compression Systems (VCS). VAS, although comparatively costlier to install, is more economical in operation.

The temperature necessary for preservation depends on the storage time required and the type of product. In general, there are three groups of products, foods that are alive (e.g. fruits and vegetables), foods that are no longer alive and have been processed in some form (e.g. meat and fish products), and commodities that benefit from storage at controlled temperature (e.g. beer, tobacco).

More information: Ship Bob

Location is important for the success of a cold storage facility. It should be in close proximity to a growing area as well as a market, be easily accessible for heavy vehicles, and have an uninterrupted power supply.

These catered for the overseas trade. They became the meeting places for overseas wholesale buyers where printed and plain could be discussed and ordered. Trade in cloth in Manchester was conducted by many nationalities.

Behrens Warehouse is on the corner of Oxford Street and Portland Street. It was built for Louis Behrens & Son by P Nunn in 1860. It is a four-storey predominantly red brick build with 23 bays along Portland Street and 9 along Oxford Street. The Behrens family were prominent in banking and in the social life of the German Community in Manchester.

The main purpose of packing warehouses was the picking, checking, labelling and packing of goods for export.


The packing warehouses: Asia House, India House and Velvet House along Whitworth Street in Manchester were some of the tallest buildings of their time. See List of packing houses.

Warehousing & Handling Equipment
Warehouses were built close to the major stations in railway hubs.

The first railway warehouse to be built was opposite the passenger platform at the terminus of the Liverpool and Manchester Railway. There was an important group of warehouses around London Road station, now Piccadilly station. In the 1890s the Great Northern Railway Company’s warehouse was completed on Deansgate: this was the last major railway warehouse to be built.

The London Warehouse Picadilly was one of four warehouses built by the Manchester, Sheffield and Lincolnshire Railway in about 1865 to service the new London Road Station. It had its own branch to the Ashton Canal. This warehouse was built of brick with stone detailing. It had cast iron columns with wrought iron beams.

All these warehouse types can trace their origins back to the canal warehouses which were used for trans-shipment and storage. Castlefield warehouses are of this type- and important as they were built at the terminus of the Bridgewater Canal in 1761.


A customised storage building, a warehouse enables a business to stockpile goods, e.g., to build up a full load prior to transport, or hold unloaded goods before further distribution, or store goods like wine and cheese that require maturation. As a place for storage, the warehouse has to be secure, convenient, and as spacious as possible, according to the owner's resources, the site and contemporary building technology.  Before mechanised technology developed, warehouse functions relied on human labour, using mechanical lifting aids like pulley systems.

More information: IIFIIR

Some of the most common warehouse storage systems are:

-Pallet racking including selective, drive-in, drive-thru, double-deep, pushback, and gravity flow.

-Cantilever racking uses arms, rather than pallets, to store long thin objects like timber.

-Mezzanine adds a semi-permanent story of storage within a warehouse.

-Vertical Lift Modules are packed systems with vertically arranged trays stored on both sides of the unit.

-Horizontal Carousels consist of a frame and a rotating carriage of bins.

-Vertical Carousels consisting of a series of carriers mounted on a vertical closed-loop track, inside a metal enclosure.

A piece pick is a type of order selection process where a product is picked and handled in individual units and placed in an outer carton, tote or another container before shipping.


Víctor is working in the warehouse
Catalog companies and internet retailers are examples of predominantly piece-pick operations. Their customers rarely order in pallet or case quantities; instead, they typically order just one or two pieces of one or two items.

Several elements make up the piece-pick system. They include the order, the picker, the pick module, the pick area, handling equipment, the container, the pick method used and the information technology used. Every movement inside a warehouse must be accompanied by a work order. Warehouse operation can fail when workers move goods without work orders, or when a storage position is left unregistered in the system.

Material direction and tracking in a warehouse can be coordinated by a Warehouse Management System (WMS), a database driven computer program.


Logistics personnel use the WMS to improve warehouse efficiency by directing pathways and to maintain accurate inventory by recording warehouse transactions.

Some warehouses are completely automated, and require only operators to work and handle all the task.


Pallets and product move on a system of automated conveyors, cranes and automated storage and retrieval systems coordinated by programmable logic controllers and computers running logistics automation software. These systems are often installed in refrigerated warehouses where temperatures are kept very cold to keep the product from spoiling. This is especially true in electronics warehouses that require specific temperatures to avoid damaging parts. Automation is also common where land is expensive, as automated storage systems can use vertical space efficiently. These high-bay storage areas are often more than 10 meters high, with some over 20 meters high. Automated storage systems can be built up to 40m high.

More information: Pallet Tracking Systems

For a warehouse to function efficiently, the facility must be properly slotted. Slotting addresses which storage medium a product is picked from (pallet rack or carton flow), and how they are picked (pick-to-light, pick-to-voice, or pick-to-paper). With a proper slotting plan, a warehouse can improve its inventory rotation requirements -such as First In, First Out (FIFO) and Last In, First Out (LIFO)- control labor costs and increase productivity.

Pallet racks are commonly used to organize a warehouse. It is important to know the dimensions of racking and the number of bays needed as well as the dimensions of the product to be stored. Clearance should be accounted for if using a forklift or pallet mover to move inventory.


Modern warehouses commonly use a system of wide aisle pallet racking to store goods which can be loaded and unloaded using forklift trucks.

Warehousing
Traditional warehousing has declined since the last decades of the 20th century, with the gradual introduction of Just In Time techniques.

The JIT system promotes product delivery directly from suppliers to consumer without the use of warehouses. However, with the gradual implementation of offshore outsourcing and offshoring in about the same time period, the distance between the manufacturer and the retailer or the parts manufacturer and the industrial plant grew considerably in many domains, necessitating at least one warehouse per country or per region in any typical supply chain for a given range of products.

Recent retailing trends have led to the development of warehouse-style retail stores. These high-ceiling buildings display retail goods on tall, heavy-duty industrial racks rather than conventional retail shelving. Typically, items ready for sale are on the bottom of the racks, and crated or palletized inventory is in the upper rack. Essentially, the same building serves as both a warehouse and retail store.


Another trend relates to Vendor-Managed Inventory (VMI). This gives the vendor the control to maintain the level of stock in the store. This method has its own issue that the vendor gains access to the warehouse.

More information: Inbound Logistics

Large exporters and manufacturers use warehouses as distribution points for developing retail outlets in a particular region or country. This concept reduces end cost to the consumer and enhances the production sale ratio.

Cross-Docking is a specialised type of distribution center (DC) in that little or no inventory is stored and product is received, processed (if needed) and shipped within a short timeframe. As in warehousing, there are different types of cross-docks.

Reverse logistics is another type of warehousing that has become popular for environmental reasons. The term refers to items that are going from the end user back to the distributor or manufacturer.


Finally, The Grandma has revised the Adverbs of Manner in English. They are very useful to explain how is an action done by a verb and she has also studied some vocabulary about the city.



Our company wouldn't exist 
and wouldn't be around without
our warehouse employees 
and our call center employees.

Jennifer Hyman