Transportation - Marine Transport (9d667890-abc4-48e6-abad-b19983ecb6b0)

- Organization:
- The National Institute for Occupational Safety and Health (NIOSH)
- Pages:
- 46
- File Size:
- 787 KB
- Publication Date:
- Jan 1, 1994
Abstract
Bulk carriers, freighters, and tankers are the three classes of seagoing vessels engaged in transporting mineral commodities. However, vessels in these classes are not exclusively devoted to mineral commodity transport. Bulk carriers move considerable tonnages of agricultural products as well as crude minerals, their concentrates, mineral fertilizers, and the like. Freighters, owing to their great variety, can be devoted wholly to hauling mineral products or wholly to nonmineral goods, as well as carrying mixed mineral commodities and nonmineral commodities. They include general cargo ships, full container ships, partial container ships, roll-on/roll-offships, and barge carriers. Tankers, although largely engaged in moving crude oil and refinery products, also transport liquid chemicals, molasses, wine, liquefied natural gas, and other fluids. Although physical characteristics of vessels such as size, draft, crew requirements, type of propulsion system, ratio of gross tonnage to cargo tonnage, and fuel costs have undeniable influences on shipping industry performance, problems of and changes in the quantity and types of materials moved also significantly affect the shipping sector of the world economy, and thus have a bearing on the minerals sector of that aggregate. Unfortunately, comprehensive global data reflecting changes in these critical variables are not published.
Citation
APA:
(1994) Transportation - Marine Transport (9d667890-abc4-48e6-abad-b19983ecb6b0)MLA: Transportation - Marine Transport (9d667890-abc4-48e6-abad-b19983ecb6b0). The National Institute for Occupational Safety and Health (NIOSH), 1994.