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Earth Robotics Science

Studying the Impact of Lost Shipping Containers 236

swellconvivialguy writes "Looking at a picture of the world's largest container ship, it's easy to visualize how 10,000 containers fall overboard from these vessels every year. Scientists from the Monterey Bay Aquarium Research Institute are now undertaking the Lost Container Cruise, an attempt to gauge the effects of shipping containers lost at sea by studying a tire-filled container, which marine biologists discovered in the Monterey Bay National Marine Sanctuary. (The research [PDF] is being funded by a multi-million dollar settlement with the operators of the Med Taipei, the ship that lost the cargo.) The work is not unlike studying a deep water shipwreck: Use robotic submarine to take pictures and collect sediment samples; repeat."
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Studying the Impact of Lost Shipping Containers

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  • Re:Lost vs. "Lost" (Score:5, Interesting)

    by onepoint ( 301486 ) on Monday June 13, 2011 @04:22PM (#36428594) Homepage Journal

    it's rather simple, the way a container get's lost is ...
    a) declared not lifted by the crane operator and marks his list showing that he lifted only 1 less than what he really lifted.
    b) that container is placed on a truck, and stacked near the empties.
    c) wait for the late gate to be opened one day, and have a yard hauler move it over to someone warehouse. ( the late gate is not
    that effective in counting containers leaving the port, that gate is good for last minute cargo that has to make it to the vessel or export.)
    d) unload container
    e) give the container to a buddy at the scrap yard he grinds it and it's gone.

    I once lost a container at the port. I was warned that once I was at the port, I might not make it back ( containers do fall, even on windless days ),
    so I went to the port with a few people, paid a union man to drive me around and stick to my side like butter on bread ( ever see a union port worker nervous )
    and by pot luck found my container. What they did not know at that time is that I was renting P&O and Cast Line containers for redeliver back to china, so these containers were blue, rather easy to see, and I quickly found it. the export cargo was worth in excess of 400K and I did not want this customer to go to another shipper.

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