Ch 21 · Dangerous & Hazardous Cargo Contents
21

Part VI — Specialised Cargo & Operations

Dangerous & Hazardous Cargo

The nine UN classes of dangerous goods, the codes that govern each transport mode (IMDG, IATA DGR, ADR), and the forwarder's duties — aware, not expert.

Dangerous & Hazardous Cargo

Some cargo can hurt people, ships and other goods — explosives, gases, flammable liquids, corrosives, toxics. Moving it safely is tightly regulated, and the rules are unforgiving. NAFL sets the forwarder’s position precisely: a forwarder is not expected to be a dangerous-goods expert, but is expected to be fully aware of the steps and procedures for safe packing, handling and acceptance — enough to guide shippers and to know when something is wrong.

Who is responsible — and who is not

The cardinal rule of dangerous goods

Under all UN dangerous-goods codes, it is the shipper who is legally responsible for correctly classifying, packing, marking, labelling and declaring the goods. Freight forwarders are not authorised to sign the dangerous-goods declaration. But because the forwarder handles the shipment, all the requisite information must be supplied to them — and they must know the rules well enough to check it and refuse what doesn’t conform.

The regulatory framework

The system cascades from one UN body down to mode-specific rulebooks:

The nine UN classes — know these cold

NAFL is emphatic that everyone in shipping must know the nine classes, even without the subdivisions:

ClassHazard
1Explosives
2Gases — compressed, liquefied, toxic or dissolved
3Flammable liquids
4Flammable solids (4.1) · spontaneously combustible (4.2) · dangerous when wet (4.3)
5Oxidising substances (5.1) · organic peroxides (5.2)
6Toxic substances (6.1) · infectious substances (6.2)
7Radioactive materials
8Corrosives
9Miscellaneous dangerous substances (anything else requiring the rules)

(Classes 1, 2, 4, 5 and 6 have subdivisions, treated slightly differently by mode.)

The nine UN dangerous-goods hazard-class diamond placards, numbered 1 to 9 with their colours and hazards.
Figure 21.1 The nine UN hazard-class diamonds — recognise them on sight.

Packing, marking and the rest

NAFL works through the controls; in summary, the forwarder must be aware of:

2003 vs Now

The framework NAFL teaches is intact and only tightened. The IMDG Code is now mandatory under SOLAS (amended on a 2-year cycle) and the IATA DGR is updated annually with mandatory recurrent training. The big addition since 2003 is the lithium battery problem — phones, laptops, EVs — now among the most regulated and incident-prone air/sea cargoes, with their own evolving rules. The GHS (Globally Harmonized System) has also aligned hazard symbols across transport and workplace. The nine classes themselves are unchanged.

WorldZone in practice

A WorldZone operator’s DG discipline is exactly NAFL’s: aware, not expert. Recognise the nine classes on sight, insist on the shipper’s signed declaration and proper shipping name before accepting, check the packaging/marking conforms, never sign the declaration yourself, and route DG only through staff and partners with current certification. Many everyday products are hidden DG — aerosols, paints, batteries, the very automotive chemicals in the group’s own trade (Class 3 flammables) — so the habit of asking “is this dangerous goods?” on every enquiry is the safeguard.

What to take from this chapter

  1. The forwarder is aware, not expert — and never signs the DG declaration; the shipper is responsible.
  2. Framework: UN Orange BookIMDG (sea), IATA DGR (air), ADR/RID/ADN (road/rail/waterway).
  3. Memorise the nine UN classes.
  4. Insist on the proper shipping name, UN number, correct packing/marking and signed declaration before acceptance; use certified staff and partners.