According to The International Air Cargo
Association (TIACA), significant further testing must be conducted
into the provision of advance data for air cargo and mail parcels
security screening. Furthermore, common global standards and
procedures must be developed to avoid potentially serious
disruption to the flow of world trade.
In his address to the World
Customs Organization’s (WCO) Annual Technical Experts Group on Air
Cargo Security Conference in Brussels, TIACA Secretary General
Doug Brittin cautioned customs regulators against taking
unilateral action to require submission of certain customs
information for all air cargo shipments, in advance of aircraft
departure.
He told delegates “We recommend that all
regulatory parties coordinate this process through the WCO and
that they consult more closely with industry before they move
forward on establishing regulations.”
“A similar process should be
followed to establish common procedures for member states’
security regulators to ensure common cargo screening methods are
in place after the analysis process is completed,” he said.
While country specific advance data programs have been tested by
customs regulators – including ACAS in the U.S, PRECISE in Europe
and PACT in Canada – and some results shared through the WCO and
other venues, gaps in ‘global standards’ remain.
Brittin said the
air cargo industry fully supports the concept of advance data risk
analysis, stating that many positive lessons had been learned in
relation to the creation of data sets, data transmission, data
analysis and the message ‘return’ process. However, he highlighted
a series of challenges that must still be overcome. These, he
said, included the lack of compatibility between many carrier and
forwarder IT systems, inaccurate or incomplete information, wide variations in the timing of data availability, and limited testing
of forwarder capabilities, especially outside of the U.S.
Another big challenge for the industry, according to TIACA, is the
diverse regulatory needs of customs and security regulators,
ranging from information acceptance, analysis and messaging to
action and physical screening. While compliance is the
responsibility of both customs and security regulators both have
different needs that often involve separate functions within
industry management structures, the association says.
Doug
Brittin told the WCO conference that the air cargo industry still
has a number of concerns about advance data analysis, notably
systems and standards are not yet established, ‘operational’
testing is not yet sufficient in terms of getting messages to the
freight dock in time, and airline and forwarder responsibilities
and roles are not fully defined.
“Real rule sets are not
yet tested and it is essential to determine cost, effort and
capability. Actual screening protocols lack common practices, even
within some of the mutual recognition practices such as the
U.S./EU, Canada, Japan and others. Further questions surround
issues such as how e-AWB and e-CSD (trusted shipper) messaging
procedures could link to a regulator data scheme. Will customs
regimes impose penalties on advance filings and, if so, against
whom? Without common customs and security regulatory processes,
cargo transiting or transferring at a gateway may be required to
be located, off-loaded and screened – and the shipment may be only
one piece in a ULD container. Carriers may be required to submit
the same or similar data to multiple customs regimes, based on
routing. We also face a situation where different screening
procedures, varying by country, will continue for targeted, higher
risk shipments,” he said. Beyond that, he expressed concern that
smaller and medium sized forwarders may be left out in the
process.
As the next step, TIACA wants customs and security
regulators to work with industry to ensure data elements, analysis
and messaging procedures, screening and response protocols are all
standardized. The association says the best way to achieve this is
by customs regulators and industry working collaboratively through
the WCO while security regulators work to develop common
‘targeted’ cargo screening and compliance standards.
In the
meantime, TIACA recommends regulators continue to utilize the
current testing approach and procedures until global standards are
established.
TIACA,
Air Cargo,
Security
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