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Hague Rules, The
A multilateral maritime treaty adopted in
1921 (at
The Hague, Netherlands). Standardizes liability of an international
carrier under the Ocean B/L. Establishes a legal "floor" for B/L.
See COGSA
Harbor Master
An officer who attends to the
berthing, etc., of ships in a harbor.
Harmonized System of Codes (HS)
An international goods
classification system for describing cargo in international trade
under a single commodity-coding scheme. Developed under the
auspices of the Customs Cooperations Council (CCC), an
international Customs organization in Brussels, this code is a
hierarchically structured product nomenclature containing
approximately 5,000 headings and subheadings. It is organized into
99 chapters arranged in 22 sections. Sections encompass an industry
(e.g., Section XI, Textiles and Textile Articles); chapters
encompass the various materials and products of the industry (e.g.,
Chapter 50, Silk; Chapter 55, Manmade Staple Fibers; Chapter 57,
Carpets). The basic code contains four-digit headings and six-digit
subheadings. Many countries add digits for Customs tariff and
statistical purposes. In the United States, duty rates will be the
eight-digit level; statistical suffixes will be at the ten-digit
level. The Harmonized System (HS) is the current U.S. tariff
schedule (TSUSA) for imports and is the basis for the ten-digit
Schedule B export code.
Hatch
The opening in the deck of a vessel;
gives access to the cargo hold.
HAZ MAT
An industry abbreviation for
"Hazardous Material."
Heavy-Lift Charge
A charge made for lifting articles
too heavy to be lifted by a ship's normal tackle.
High-Density Compression
Compression of a flat or standard
bale of cotton to approximately 32 pounds per cubic foot. Usually
applies to cotton exported or shipped coastwise.
Hitchment
The marrying of two or more portions
of one shipment that originate at different locations, moving under
one bill of lading, from one shipper to one consignee. Authority
for this service must be granted by tariff publication. See Bill of
Lading.
Hopper Barge
A barge which loads material dumped
into it by a dredger and discharges the cargo through the bottom.
House-to-House
See Door-to-Door.
Humping
The process of connecting a moving rail car with a
motionless rail car within a rail classification yard in order to
make
up a train. The cars move by gravity from an incline or "hump" onto
the appropriate track.
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