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G |
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Shipping
Terms
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G.R.Wt./G.W. |
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Gross Weight

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| Gang |
Group of stevedores
usually 4 to 5 members with supervisor assigned to a hold or portion
of the vessel being loaded or unloaded.

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| Gateway |
Port of entry into
a country or region.

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| GATT |
General Agreement
on Tariffs and Trade, a multilateral treaty intended to help reduce
trade barriers and promote tariff concessions.

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| GCR |
General Cargo Rate.
The basic tariff category which was introduced to cover most air
cargo now covers only a minority, the remainder being under SCR or
class rates.

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| General
Average |
When damage to
cargo on board a vessel exceeds carrier's insurance, carrier will
release cargo only with an acceptance agreement to claim only a
general percentage of all the damage sustained.

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| General
Export License |
Any of various
export licenses covering export commodities for which validated
export licenses are not required. No formal application or written
authorization is needed to ship exports under a general export
license.

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General
Order
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Government contract
warehouse for the storage of cargoes left unclaimed for ten working
days after availability. Unclaimed cargoes are auctioned publicly
after one year.

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| Gross
Weight |
Entire
weight of goods, packing, and container,, ready for shipment.

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| GSA |
General Sales Agent
acting on behalf of an airline. Usually Broker or Forwarder.

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H |
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Shipping
Terms
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Harmonized Code |
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An internationally accepted and uniform description system for
classifying goods for customs, statistical and other purposes.

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| Harmonized
Systems |
A key provision of
the recently signed trade bill, effective Jan. 1, 1989, that
establishes international uniformity for product classifications.
Most U.S. Trading partners adopted it a year earlier, and it was
drafted in Brussels a decade ago with U.S. representatives' input.
In essence, it is a new tariff schedule in that it changes methods
of rating some items.

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Hatch
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The cover of - or
opening- in the deck of a vessel, through which cargo is loaded.

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| Heavy
Lift Vessel |
Specifically
designed to be self sustaining with heavy lift cranes, to handle
unusually heavy and/or out-sized cargoes.

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| Heavy
Lifts |
Freight too heavy
to be handled by regular ship's tackle

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House
Air Waybill
 |
An air waybill
issued by a freight consolidator. See Air Waybill
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| Hub |
A central location
to which traffic from many cities is directed and from which traffic
is fed to other areas.

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| Hundredweight
(cwt.) |
A short ton
hundredweight = 100 pounds. Long ton hundredweight = 112 pounds.

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Husbanding
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Term used by
steamship lines, agents, or port captains who are appointed to
handle all matters in assisting the master of the vessel while in
port to obtain bunkering, fresh water, food and supplies, payroll
for the crew, doctors appointments, ship repair, etc.

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