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📖 Core Concepts Freight transport: Physical movement of commercial products, merchandise goods, and cargo (also called freight forwarding). Modes of shipment: Sea – Carries 70 % of global freight by volume; most cost‑effective for large volumes. Ground (road & rail) – Connects origin/destination to ports/airports; cheaper than air, more expensive than sea. Air – Fastest long‑distance option; highest cost. Multimodal transport: Same contract, at least two modes; cargo changes mode at hubs (ports, airports, rail yards). Intermodal transport: Containerized cargo that moves among ship, rail, plane, truck without unpacking. Incoterms: Standard trade‑contract clauses (e.g., FOB, CFR, CIF) that allocate costs and risk between buyer and seller. Door‑to‑Door (DTD) shipping: One piece of equipment moves cargo from origin to final destination; price includes all handling, duties, customs. Digital freight marketplaces: Online platforms that aggregate maritime, air, and land services, automate documents, and give SMEs access to LCL and multimodal options. --- 📌 Must Remember Global freight volume (2015): 108 trillion tonne‑km; projected 128 trillion tk‑km by 2020 (+3.4 %/yr). Mode share (by volume): Sea 70 %, Road 18 %, Rail 9 %, Inland waterways 2 %, Air < 0.25 %. Sea’s share of trade: 80‑90 % by volume, 60‑70 % by value (UNCTAD 2018). Incoterm basics: FOB – Seller loads on vessel; buyer assumes risk thereafter. CFR / C&F – Seller pays cost & freight to destination port; buyer bears risk after loading. CIF – Same as CFR plus seller pays insurance. Choosing the “best way”: Lowest rate is default, but insurance coverage & transit time can outweigh price. DTD pricing: Includes shipping, handling, import duties, customs fees → hassle‑free for the buyer. --- 🔄 Key Processes Standard freight shipment flow Origin → (ground) → Port/Airport → (sea/air) → Destination port/airport → (ground) → Final delivery. Multimodal contract execution Single contract → cargo moves across ≥2 modes → hand‑off at hub (no new contract). Incoterm responsibility transfer (e.g., FOB) Seller loads cargo → risk passes to buyer → buyer arranges freight, insurance, customs. Door‑to‑Door fulfillment Book DTD service → carrier handles all legs & paperwork → customer receives goods with duties already paid. Digital marketplace booking Log in → enter cargo specs → platform suggests LCL/multimodal options → automated Bill of Lading & customs docs → track in real‑time. --- 🔍 Key Comparisons Sea vs. Air Cost: Sea ≪ Air | Speed: Air ≫ Sea | Volume capacity: Sea ≫ Air Ground vs. Air Cost: Ground < Air | Speed: Air > Ground (long‑distance) | Flexibility: Ground excels for first/last mile. Multimodal vs. Intermodal Multimodal: single contract, ≥2 modes, may involve repacking. Intermodal: containerized, no repacking, same container moves across modes. FOB vs. CIF FOB: buyer arranges freight & insurance. CIF: seller covers freight and insurance to destination port. Door‑to‑Door vs. Standard shipping DTD: one price, all fees included, single equipment. Standard: carrier fee only; duties, taxes added later. --- ⚠️ Common Misunderstandings “Shipping” = only sea – In US English it now includes land and air. Incoterm “CFR” includes insurance – Only CIF adds insurance. Multimodal = intermodal – Intermodal is a type of multimodal that uses containers and avoids unpacking. Air freight always cheapest for speed – While fastest, it can be prohibitively expensive for bulk goods. Digital platforms replace all human agents – They automate docs and matching but still rely on carriers and customs brokers. --- 🧠 Mental Models / Intuition “Layered cost ladder” – Think of freight cost as layers: Base transport (sea > ground > air) Add‑ons (insurance, duties, handling) Service level (standard vs. DTD) The higher you climb the ladder, the more you pay but the fewer surprises. “Single‑contract chain” – In multimodal shipments, the contract is the chain link that holds all mode hops together; break it and you get separate invoices and risk points. --- 🚩 Exceptions & Edge Cases Air freight < 0.25 % of volume but may dominate high‑value, time‑critical shipments (e.g., electronics, pharma). Incoterm choice can be overridden by local regulations (e.g., some countries require CIF for certain commodities). Digital marketplace LCL: Small shipments may still be costlier than a full container if the platform charges high consolidation fees. --- 📍 When to Use Which Sea → Large, non‑time‑critical bulk cargo; cost priority. Air → Small, high‑value, or time‑critical items; budget secondary. Ground → First/last mile, inland connections, or when sea/air terminals are far. Multimodal → When a single contract simplifies coordination (e.g., exporter wants one invoice). Intermodal → When containerized cargo can stay sealed across modes → reduces handling risk. FOB → Buyer wants control over freight and insurance; seller prefers limited responsibility. CIF → Seller wants to guarantee delivery cost and insurance to buyer’s port; buyer prefers “all‑in” price. Door‑to‑Door → Importers who want a hassle‑free experience and predictable total landed cost. --- 👀 Patterns to Recognize Statistical pattern: Any question citing “70 %” freight share → sea mode. Keyword cue: “Containerized, no unpacking” → intermodal. Cost‑vs‑speed trade‑off: Presence of “fastest” + “expensive” → air freight. Incoterm clues: “Seller pays insurance” → CIF; “Seller delivers onto vessel” → FOB. Digital platform mention → expect LCL or multimodal options for SMEs. --- 🗂️ Exam Traps Confusing CFR with CIF – Remember only CIF includes insurance. Assuming “shipping” = sea only – In US English, it covers all modes. Choosing DTD because it’s “cheaper” – DTD is often pricier; its value is in all‑in pricing, not cost savings. Mixing up multimodal vs. intermodal – Intermodal is a subset that requires containers; multimodal may involve repacking. Over‑relying on air for any “fast” question – Air is fastest but only viable for high‑value, low‑weight goods; volume‑heavy items stay sea. ---
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