CABLE SHIP
A specially constructed ship for the laying and repairing of
telegraph and telephone cables across channels, seas, lakes, and
oceans.
CABOTAGE
The carriage of goods or passengers for remuneration taken on at one
point and discharged at another point within the territory of the
same country.
CABOTAGE POLICIES
Reservation of a country's coastal (domestic) shipping for its own
flag vessels.
CAORF
Computer-Assisted Operations Research Facility: A MarAd R&D facility
located at U.S. Merchant Marine Academy, Kings Point, New York.
CARGO HANDLING
The act of loading and discharging a cargo ship.
CARGO PLAN
A plan giving the quantities and description of the various grades carried
in the ship's cargo tanks, after the loading is completed.
CARGO PREFERENCE
Reserving a portion of a nation's imports and exports to national-flag
vessels.
CARRIAGE OF GOODS BY SEA
ACT
A law enacted in 1936 covering the transportation of merchandise by
sea to or from ports of the United States and in foreign trades.
CARRIERS
Owners or operators of vessels providing transportation to shippers.
The term is also used to refer to the vessels.
CATAMARAN
A double or treble-hulled vessel constructed in wood, aluminum or
reinforced glass fibre and is also composed of two or three hulls
diagonally joined together by various methods. Normally no ballast is
needed to counteract the center buoyancy since it enjoys good stability at
sea.
CATUG
Short for Catamaran Tug. A rigid catamaran tug connected to a barge.
When joined together, they form and look like a single hull of sa ship;
oceangoing integrated tug-barge vessels.
CATWALK
A raised bridge running fore and aft from the midship, and also called
"walkway". It affords safe passage over the pipelines and other deck
obstructions.
CCC
Commodity Credit Corporation.
CCF
Capital Construction Fund: A tax benefit for operators of U.S.-built,
U.S.-flag ships in the U.S. foreign, Great Lakes, or noncontiguous
domestic trades, by which taxes may be deferred on income deposited in a
fund to be used for the replacement of vessels.
CDS
Construction Differential Subsidy: A direct subsidy paid to U.S. shipyards
building U.S.-flag ships to offset high construction costs in American
shipyards. An amount of subsidy (up to 50 percent) is determined by
estimates of construction cost differentials between U.S. and foreign
yards.
CERTIFICATE OF
REGISTRY
A document specifying the nation registry of the vessel.
C & F
Cost and Freight
C & I
Cost and Insurance
CHANDLER
A person who deals in the selling of provisions, dried stores, etc.
CHARTERER
The person to whom is given the use of the whole of the carrying
capacity of a ship for the transportation of cargo or passengers to a
stated port for a specified time.
CHARTER RATES
The tariff applied for chartering tonnage in a particular trade.
CHARTER PARTY
A contractual agreement between a ship owner and a cargo owner,
usually arranged by a broker, whereby a ship is chartered (hired) either
for one voyage or a period of time.
CHIEF ENGINEER
The senior engineer officer responsible for the satisfactory working
and upkeep of the main and auxiliary machinery and boiler plant on board
ship.
CHIEF MATE
The officer in the deck department next in rank to the master; second
in command of a ship. He is next to the master, most especially in the
navigation and as far as the deck department is concerned. The chief mate
assumes the position of the Master in his absence.
C.I.F.
Cost, Insurance and Freight: Export term in which the price quoted by
the exporter includes the costs of ocean transportation to the port of
destination and insurance coverage.
CLASSIFICATION SOCIETY
Worldwide experienced and reputable societies. which undertake to
arrange inspections and advise on the hull and machinery of a ship. A
private organization that supervises vessels during their construction and
afterward, in respect to their seaworthiness, and the placing of vessels
in grades or "classes" according to the society's rules for each
particular type. It is not compulsory by law that a shipowner have his
vessel built according to the rules of any classification society; but in
practice, the difficulty in securing satisfactory insurance rates for an
unclassed vessel makes it a commercial obligation.
CLEAN SHIP
Refers to tankers which have their cargo tanks free of traces of dark
persistent oils which remain after carrying crudes and heavy fuel oils.
COASTWISE
Domestic shipping routes along a single coast.
CODE OF LINER CONDUCT
(UNCTAD)
A convention drafted under the auspices of the United Nations
Conference on Trade and Development which provides that all shipping
traffic between two foreign countries is to be regulated as far as the
quantities of shipments are concerned on the following percentages -- 40%
for owners of the country of origin, 40% for owners of country of
destination, and 20% for owners of the country which is neither the origin
nor the destination.
COLLIER
Vessel used for transporting coal.
COLLISION AVOIDANCE
SYSTEM
Electronic system commonly used to prevent collisions in inland navigable
waterways.
COLREG
Convention on International Regulations for Preventing Collisions at
Sea.
COMBI
Combination passenger/cargo vessel; a vessel specifically designed to
carry both containers and conventional cargoes.
COMMON CARRIER
Holds himself out for hire to the general public. Must post rates and
cannot discriminate against customers whose cargo he is equipped to carry.
COMPLEMENT
The number of officers and crew employed upon a vessel for its safe
navigation and operation.
CONFERENCE
An affiliation of shipowners operating over the same route(s) who agree to
charge uniform rates and other terms of carriage. A conference is "closed"
if one can enter only by the consent of existing members of the
conference. It is "open" if anyone can enter by meeting certain technical
and financial standards. Conference members are common carriers.
CONSIGNEE
The person to whom cargo is consigned as stated on the bills of lading.
CONSIGNOR
The person named in the bill of lading as the one from whom the goods have
been received for shipment.
CONTAINER
A van, flatrack, open top trailer or other similar trailer body on or into
which cargo is loaded and transported without chassis aboard ocean
vessels.; a large rectangular or square container/box of a strong
structure that can withstand continuous rough handling from ship to shore
and back. It opens from one side to allow cargo to be stacked and stowed
into it.
CONTAINER SHIP
A ship constructed in such a way that she can easily stack containers near
and on top of each other as well as on deck. A vessel designed to carry
standard intermodal containers enabling efficient loading, unloading, and
transport to and from the vessel. Oceangoing merchant ship designed to
transport a unit load of standard-sized containers 8 feet square and 20 or
40 feet long. The hull is divided into cells that are easily accessible
through large hatches, and more containers can be loaded on deck atop the
closed hatches. Loading and unloading can proceed simultaneously using
giant traveling cranes at special berths. Container ships usually carry in
the range of 25,000 to 50,000 deadweight tons. Whereas a general-cargo
ship may spend as much as 70 percent of its life in port loading and
discharging cargo, a container ship can be turned around in 36 hours or
less, spending as little as 20 percent of its time in port. This ship type
is the result of American design innovation. Specialized types of
container ships are the LASH and SeaBee which carry floating containers
(or "lighters,") and RoRo ships, which may carry containers on truck
trailers.
CONTRACT OF
AFFREIGHTMENT (COA)
A service contract under which a ship owner agrees to transport a
specified quantity of fuel products or specialty products, at a specified
rate per ton, between designated loading and discharge ports. This type
contract differs from a spot or consecutive voyage charter in that no
particular vessel is. specified.
CPI
Consumer Price Index.
CREW
The personnel engaged on board ship, excluding the master and officers
and the passengers on passenger ships.
CREW LIST
List prepared by the master of a ship showing the full names, nationality,
passport or discharge book number, rank and age of every officer and crew
member engaged on board that ship. This serves as one of the essential
ship's documents which is always requested to be presented and handed over
to the customs and immigration authorities when they board the vessel on
arrival.
CROSS-TRADES
Foreign-to-foreign trade carried by ships from a nation other than the two
trading nations.
CRUDE OIL WASHING
A technique of cleaning tanks in oil tankers.
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