Evergreen Vice Group Chairman Chang Kuo-Cheng Calls For Transportation Industry Effort to Protect the Environment; Urges Development of a Sustainable Container Business.LONG BEACH, Calif. -- Evergreen Vice Group Chairman Chang, Kuo-Cheng today urged the international transportation industry to "come together - ocean carriers, ports, terminals, inland carriers and shippers - to develop new ways to protect the environment for future generations while we maintain the efficiency of our global network." As the keynote speaker at the annual Transpacific trans·pa·cif·ic adj. 1. Situated on or coming from the other side of the Pacific Ocean. 2. Spanning or crossing the Pacific Ocean. Maritime Conference (TPM (1) See TP monitor. (2) (Transactions Per Minute) The number of transactions processed within one minute. See TPS. (3) (Trusted Platform M ), Mr. Chang, who is also Chairman of Evergreen Marine Evergreen Marine Corporation (LSE: EGMD), based in Taipei, Taiwan, is a containerized-freight shipping company, mainly serving the east coast of Asia and the west coast of North America, with over 150 container ships. Corporation, said: "At past industry conferences, this issue might be dismissed as commercially insignificant - not something we as business people, transportation professionals, need be concerned with. This is no longer the case." He continued: "We must begin to develop the foundation for a sustainable container transportation industry - environmentally, socially, economically and commercially responsible and viable." Once we have developed this foundation, Chang said, "We must educate. We must raise the awareness of the world's people to the importance of our industry and why investment is so critical - investment from everyone worldwide. We all realize the benefits of container shipping when we acquire goods at affordable prices - as our shared standard of living improves worldwide." Chang highlighted some of the technology available that can be used in vessel upgrades and new shipbuilding design. These include --double-skinned hull; --fuel tanks situated within the transverse To cross from side to side. bulkhead spaces, minimizing the risk of oil pollution or fire as a result of grounding or collision; --high-capacity oily water separator enabling the oil content of waste water to be reduced to just 15ppm; --larger separator bilge bilge n. 1. Nautical a. The rounded portion of a ship's hull, forming a transition between the bottom and the sides. b. The lowest inner part of a ship's hull. 2. Bilge water. 3. oil and bilge oil holding tanks providing more storage capacity than normal; --Similar arrangements for handling sewage and so-called gray water, including water from the cargo hold bilges bilge n. 1. Nautical a. The rounded portion of a ship's hull, forming a transition between the bottom and the sides. b. The lowest inner part of a ship's hull. 2. Bilge water. 3. , when the vessels are in port or close to shore --Main engines and generators incorporating low-NOx technology while the ships are also able to switch to low-sulfur fuels when sailing in restricted areas; --'Cold-ironing,' the ability to shut down all shipboard ship·board n. 1. The condition of being aboard a ship: on shipboard. 2. Archaic The side of a ship. adj. generators while in port, switching to shore-based electricity supplies; --The latest tin-free anti-fouling systems are also being used for the underwater hull coatings. Much of this new technology, he noted, is being incorporated into all new Evergreen Group shipbuildings. But, he noted: "In our new technologically advanced and sometimes complex world, it is easy to forget that long before containers, mankind has depended on the oceans for survival and progress. On the ocean, people of different cultures have broken through natural boundaries to interact with other cultures and to create more advanced societies. Civilizations have grown through economic development relying on trade. Ocean transportation has made this possible with more than 75 percent of global trade - more than 6.6 trillion US dollars of merchandise - today carried over the seas. Commenting on the upcoming 50th anniversary of containerization con·tain·er·ize v.tr. con·tain·er·ized, con·tain·er·iz·ing, con·tain·er·iz·es 1. To package (cargo) in large standardized containers for efficient shipping and handling. 2. , Chang told the audience of nearly 1,000 industry professionals at the Journal of Commerce-sponsored event: "We must realize we are no longer unconnected. Our success - all of us in an integrated global supply and demand chain - depends on the success of the whole. The success of the entire world economy and the well being of all of the world's people depends on our ability to succeed as sustainable businesses A business is sustainable if it has adapted its practices for the use of renewable resources and holds itself accountable for the environmental and human rights impacts of its activities. at this critical juncture in our industry's history." Editors: Photos and a complete text of the speech are available from BSY BSY Busy BSY British School of Yoga BSY Bit Sync BSY Busy Line Associates Inc. |
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