Kukri
Well-Known Member
I must “declare an interest” as I manage container ships by way of a day job. None of “mine” have yet dropped a box OB; the general idea is to deliver the cargo in good nick. But things can go wrong. I have seen ships that have lost containers from deck stacks.
A regular ISO container is made to be weather tight, not water tight, so water will seep in and it will sink. There are two important exceptions to this. One is the proverbial container full of consumer durables packed in expanded polystyrene foam and the other is the refrigerated container which by its nature (its a big fridge!) has lots of insulation and is air tight. When loaded these are usually very heavy and will sink anyway but an empty one will float for ages.
ISO containers are built to be very strong in the corners, because that is where the lashing loads are taken, and fairly strong in the floor, because that is what the contents are lashed to, but much less strong in terms of resistance to impact in the sides and the roof. I would expect a corner to do real damage.
I don’t know of any reliable figures for numbers of boxes either washed overboard or lost due to the loss of the ship. The numbers are all educated guesses. If you lose a container full of cargo you will tell your P&I Club of course but if you lose an empty, why bother?
A regular ISO container is made to be weather tight, not water tight, so water will seep in and it will sink. There are two important exceptions to this. One is the proverbial container full of consumer durables packed in expanded polystyrene foam and the other is the refrigerated container which by its nature (its a big fridge!) has lots of insulation and is air tight. When loaded these are usually very heavy and will sink anyway but an empty one will float for ages.
ISO containers are built to be very strong in the corners, because that is where the lashing loads are taken, and fairly strong in the floor, because that is what the contents are lashed to, but much less strong in terms of resistance to impact in the sides and the roof. I would expect a corner to do real damage.
I don’t know of any reliable figures for numbers of boxes either washed overboard or lost due to the loss of the ship. The numbers are all educated guesses. If you lose a container full of cargo you will tell your P&I Club of course but if you lose an empty, why bother?
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