HCB Magazine January 2021

Page 6

04

30 YEARS AGO A LOOK BACK AT JANUARY 1991

January 1991 had a big impact on the dangerous goods transport business. After some 15 years in preparation, new rules arrived on packaging specifications, along with the UN specification marking, designed to make it easier for cargo acceptance and enforcement personnel to see if dangerous goods packaging was up to scratch. HCB offered some useful examples of these new UN markings, along with several advertisements from packaging manufacturers eager to show that they were up to speed with the requirements. The new provisions arrived during what HCB described as “a lean market” for packaging manufacturers, with the slowdown in client industries following the 1988/89 economic contraction, together with high inflation in some countries, putting pressure both on sales volumes and margins. Perhaps not surprisingly, then, the drum reconditioning sector was doing pretty well. HCB’s January 1991 number included news from an increasing number of companies getting involved in the business and the drive to set some standards. HCB’s founding editor, Mike Corkhill, still at his desk, had this to say: “The enforcement authorities have nailed their colours firmly to the mast. A new dangerous goods regime is in place which will be

yet received enough ratifications to enter into force, some territories had decided to go ahead and implement it in any case, not least since its requirements were already bound up in the latest revision to the IMDG Code. Another important but upcoming change was decided by IMO’s Bulk Chemicals Sub-committee, which had met in London in October 1990. One item on its very busy schedule was agreement on provisions for vapour emissions control systems, a complex issue for maritime regulators since it involves coordination with shoreside operations. There were many technical difficulties to overcome, though thankfully OCIMF was already on the case and, it was stressed, there was at that time no intention to make the provisions mandatory. Rather, were it the case that local legislation required such controls, then the provisions developed by IMO would offer a standard to measure up to. Elsewhere, we reported that bulk liquids storage terminals were doing fairly well, despite the slowdown in the chemical industry and the effects of the (first) Gulf War. “The desire to hoard in times of uncertainty has helped,” we said then. The same could be said for the current situation, not least since ‘uncertainty’ and ‘volatility’

rigorously enforced and it behoves shippers and carriers to ensure that they are familiar with the new requirements.” That may have been the case (then and now), though there is still plenty of evidence to show that some shippers are failing to discharge their responsibilities. January also saw the arrival of Amendment 25 to the IMDG Code which, for the first time, covered marine pollutant hazards. Although Annex III of Marpol, dealing with packaged dangerous goods, had not

are words that are featuring increasingly often in our pages. Indeed, we have often remarked that storage terminals offer a comparatively reliable cash flow in good times and bad – which has attracted investment funds into the business – though the roundup of construction and expansion activity in the January 1991 issue did include many company names that will be unfamiliar to anyone who has joined the industry in the past five or ten years.

HCB MONTHLY | JANUARY 2021


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Articles inside

Calendar of regulatory meetings

2min
page 65

Marpol recognises persistent floaters

2min
page 63

News bulletin – regulations

2min
page 64

Joint Meeting starts work on 2023 texts

22min
pages 50-57

PHMSA responds to petitions

16min
pages 58-62

Hoyer’s approach to benchmarking

3min
page 49

Cefic’s guidance on butadiene transfer

3min
page 48

NTSB’s learnings from Hyndman derailment

3min
page 47

ITCO looks at tank container safety

8min
pages 44-46

Conference diary New for 2021

2min
page 40

Incident Log Cut the claims

6min
pages 42-43

GPCA plans a special Forum

2min
page 41

News bulletin – industrial packaging

3min
page 39

News bulletin – storage terminals

5min
pages 34-35

Schütz expands reconditioning capacity

3min
pages 36-38

TSA helps operators deal with the crisis

2min
page 33

Adding to US export capacity

2min
page 32

Product flows again in the US

6min
pages 30-31

Introducing BW Epic Kosan

2min
page 25

Stena stands up for older ships

6min
pages 26-27

News bulletin – tanker shipping

5min
pages 28-29

Making plans for methanol fuel

4min
pages 22-23

Planning an ammonia chain

2min
page 24

BRS looks at the chemship market

5min
pages 20-21

News bulletin – tanks and logistics

5min
pages 18-19

Nexxiot upgrades gateway device

2min
page 11

View from the Porch Swing

8min
pages 8-9

H Essers continues to grow

6min
pages 14-15

Hoyer develops Chempark centre

2min
pages 12-13

Tyczka Gase digitises rail tanks

2min
page 10

BTT provides the links ports need

2min
pages 16-17

Learning by Training

2min
page 7

30 Years Ago

2min
page 6
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