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Supply Chain Security: “The Virtual Border” UNECE Trade Facilitation Conference Honorable D. Robert Quartel CEO and Chairman FreightDesk Technologies www.freightdesk.com Proprietary and Confidential Complex Data Flow for International Shipments Purchasing Export Import • Up to 25 Involved Parties • 200+ data elements • Manual data exchange processes • Multiple data platforms • 30+ documents or messages Bill of lading, Documentation Vessel Booking Request Confirmed Line of Credit Importer’s Bank Vessel Booking Confirmation Exporter’s Bank Original B/L, Invoice, PO, Packing List Fund Transfer Line of Credit Proforma Invoice Rated Bill of Lading LC Confirmation Letter of Instruction Invoice, PO Shipping & funding detail Release/Hold Notice Inland Carrier Manifest Dock receipt Export Declaration AES Cargo Status Customs House Broker Pick-up & Delivery Order Shipping & Funding Detail Marine Insurance Company Demurrage guarantee & payment Dock receipt Freight Forwarder / NVOCC Import Terminal Operator Ocean Carrier Export Terminal Operator Exporter Proforma Invoice Arrival Notice Dock Receipt Purchase Order Importer Release/Approval Bill of Lading Import Docs Cargo Status Customs ( Import ) Vessel Manifest Export Declaration Port Customs (Export) Importer Notice Private and Confidential Converted Vessel Manifest Pick-up & Delivery Order Inland Carrier Information Sources and Timing Days to Arrival Today’s border is “fuzzy”: data is reported at fluid times and not analyzed for threat Process Step Seller • Seller and Buyer agree 40 25 21 • One or more consolidation layers mask goods’ origins and involved parties (40%) Virtual Border • Carriers accept containers from multiple sources, with only partial data on contents and origins Overseas Inland Consolidation Warehouse Foreign Port of Voyage Origin 5 Carrier Reporting First U.S. Destination Port 0 Buyer Fluid Time Frame Voyage Underway 4 Proprietary • Earliest possible filing of U.S. Customs entry information (ABI) Source of Data • Seller generates documents •Shippers Letter of Instruction • Commercial Invoice • Forwarder/consolidator generates documents •House Bill of Lading • Carrier generates documents •Master Bill of Lading • Customs broker and/or shipper reporting •Customs form 7501 and 3461 • Ship manifest information must be filed by 4 days prior to arrival (AMS) • Additional carrier reporting • U.S. Customs applies physical and commercial border in port zones • Additional documents may finally be received here Border Today Red documents reported to Customs •Shipment Status •Vessel Manifest •Surface Bill of Lading • Buyer generates Purchase •Purchase Order Aggregating Commercial Data Leg Data Route Data Conveyance Data Carrier/Party Data Carrieres/Parties Data Sample Data Elements and Application Data Data Elements Buy e r S hipp er's/E xpo rters n ame & addre ss S uppl ier A gent of E xp orter/P ac ker Inl and Ca rrier (o rigi n) Oc ean Ca rrier Na me cus toms brok er Inl and Ca rrier (De stina tion ) Delive ring Ca rrier (d esti natio n) S elle r's Ba nk n ame & a ddre ss B uyer 's B an k na me & a ddres s Inte rmed iate Co nsi gnee 's nam e & add ress Ultima te Con sign ee's n ame & a ddre ss Count ry of O rig in P oint of O rigi n (City & S tate ) Meth od o f S hip men t to Forwa rder Inl and carrie r rout e (orig in) Oc ean Ca rrier Ro ute V oyag e Num ber V esse l Fla g Forei gn P or t of E xp ort Count ry W hic h S hip ped Loa din g P ier Tran shi pme nt P orts P ort of Un loa ding US P o rt of A rrival Inl and Ca rrier Rou te (de stin atio n) Delive ring Ca rrier Rou te (de stin atio n) Count ry of Ul tima te Desti nati on At time of Purchase Order Prior to shipment S e lle r S upplie r Ex port Forw a rde r Ca rrie r Im port Forw a rde r/ Brok e r Consig ne e x x x x x x x x x x x x x x x x x x x x x x x x x x x x En route to port of export Private and Confidential On water/after arrival US Dual Purpose Information • BUSINESS: In-transit VISIBILITY for the purposes of contract management, planning, process tracking, risk mitigation, documentation, etc. • GOVERNMENT: Process and regulatory TRANSPARENCY for the purposes of anti-corruption, counter-terrorism, trade processing, health and safety, etc Private and Confidential Commercial Data Is Critical to Security: - Cargo – What is being transported? Carriers – Who is handling the cargo? Conveyance – What is the route, how is it moving? Commerce – Who are the parties to the transaction? Private and Confidential Proprietary Commercial Data Key to the Security Schema Ocean Carriers Shipper Third Parties Intelligence Commercial Data-store Law Enforcement Government Data-store Data Fusion & Profiling Government Agency Responsible for Cargo Security Decision Release Portfolio of: intercept -inspection actions Data Mining for Threat and Risk Assessment • Employs a synergistic array of data mining techniques • Knowledge based, both specific and general • Based on rules and known facts • Statistical patterns and profiling • Mathematical models for risk assessment and threat identification • Evolutionary algorithms to detect changes in patterns and discover new patterns Private and Confidential Anomalies Generated from Commercial Data Anomaly Commercial Document Data element for Anomaly Cargo Incongruent with Origin Commercial Invoice, Master Bill of Lading Routing, Item listing High value cargo and slow mode Commercial Invoice, Master Bill of Lading Item values, routing information Document discrepancy Any Documents do not conform to each other New Shipper or Consignee Commercial Invoice, Bill of Lading, Certificate of Origin Any Shipper or Consignee Sections Violation of established shipping or commercial patterns by parties Any – more in timing/receipt of documents (ex. Once-aweek shipper ships twice in one week) Origin of cargo, route Suspect source area and transship to small ship Shippers Letter of Instruction, Bill of Lading Point of origin Shippers Letter of Instruction Pickup location Illogical commercial transactions Commercial Invoice Comparison of Consignee and Cargo (ex. Furniture company receiving garments) Private and Confidential A Global Issue • EC & US Customs, 22 October 2002 • “….major principles for future co-operation were stressed, most particularly reciprocity….common standards for selection….” • “…. agreed… to explore…. a declaration of principle to co-operate on a mutually acceptable container security system covering the whole EU….” • WCO and IMO are making it a mandate: IMO Secretary-General, William O’Neil, has strongly urged all parties concerned “to start putting in place all the necessary legislative, administrative and operational provisions needed…”. Private and Confidential Principles of a Successful Data Effort • This IS a transportation and logistics issue, not just a maritime issue. • This IS NOT a compliance issue. A legal cargo can become a lethal cargo. • Security should be dynamic: The port and customs processing is a node within the process, not even the most important focus for security. • Profiling should and can begin in the Importing Country at the issuance of the purchase order from the buyer. • The shipper/importer should be responsible for the process, not the carriers. Private and Confidential Issues for Small Importers and Exporters • Longer lead times for moving cargoes • Delays in trans-shipped containers • Negative impact vs. cargo originating in direct service countries • Many exports to smaller US companies that are not C-TPAT certified, and not in CSI ports • Technology infrastructure to comply with big country data requirements Another hurdle to competitiveness Private and Confidential Benefits • • • • • Source-once, APPROPRIATELY to the process Flexible, intermodal, sourcing Profiling on demand (Dynamic, not Static) Business-process centric Goes beyond human expertise Private and Confidential