Port Security Update
A News Service Of The Congressional Information Bureau
Electronic Seal Technology Maturing, Has Applications For Container
Security
January 8, 2004--Electronic
seal technology is maturing and may be applied to container security,
according to a study just released by the Cargo Handling Cooperative
Program (CHCP).
Electronic seals, or e-seals, have been proposed as a way to improve
security and track cargo movements worldwide. However, e-seals would
likely have to be standardized in order to be widely used, and the
study did not find any one type suitable for use as a standard.
The CHCP, a partnership between the Department of Transportation's
Maritime Administration and private industry, compared five electronic
security seals proposed for use on intermodal freight containers. The
study found that the technology will continue to improve, and that it
is critical to allow for growth in performance in application to the
industry.
"There's an urgent need for effective technology in this area," said
U.S. Secretary of Transportation Norman Y. Mineta. "By testing e-seals
in the laboratory, at terminal gates, on the road, and in a simulated
rail environment, we are making significant steps toward ensuring the
safety of cargo containers throughout the nation."
The seals tested were All Seal by All Set Tracking, DataSeal by Hi-G-Tek,
eSeal by eLogicity, MacSema + Navalink by CGM, and SmartSeal by Savi.
The e-seals have container information and can show if the seal has
been subjected to tampering. The tested seals can be "read" by direct
contact or on a specific radio frequency, which varies with the type
of seal. For a system using e-seals to be efficient, seals would
likely have to be "read" by one kind of reader, using one standard
radio frequency. "For e-seals to be useful, there will have to be an
accepted international standard," said Maritime Administrator Captain
William G. Schubert. "Any real-life solution must also provide real
improvements in security and efficiency without unduly burdening
operators. These results show that the intermodal freight community
needs to take into consideration design and operations issues before
any single e-seal solution can be standardized."
The work of the cooperative was supported by the Space and Naval
Warfare Systems Center of San Diego, California, and the Center for
Commercial Deployment of Transportation Technologies (CCDoTT) at the
California State University, Long Beach.

Container Security Initiative (CSI)
Achieves Major Milestone: 20 of the World's Largest Ports Now
Participating with the U.S. in CSI
Port of Piraeus, Greece, is 20th CSI
Port to Become Operational.
Tuesday, July 27, 2004
Washington,
D.C. — U.S. Customs and Border Protection (CBP) Commissioner Robert C.
Bonner and Vassilios Manolopoulos, Director General, of the Greek
Directorate General of Customs and Excise announced today that CBP
officers have been deployed to the port of Piraeus as part of the
Container Security Initiative (CSI) and that CSI has become
operational there.
As
part of the CSI program, CBP officers are working with host government
personnel as part of CSI, to target cargo containers that pose a
potential risk for terrorism destined for the United States. Greek
Customs officials will inspect containers identified as a potential
terrorist risk.
Deputy Secretary James Loy of the Department of Homeland Security and
Director General Manolopoulos, of Customs and Excise, signed a CSI
agreement on June 25, 2004, during the World Customs Organization (WCO)
council session in Brussels, Belgium.
Commissioner Bonner said, “When the Container Security Initiative was
proposed in early 2002, the goal was to establish CSI in 20 of the
largest or “Mega” container seaports of the world. Today, with the
implementation of CSI at the port of Piraeus, Greece, we have achieved
that goal, and we have done it in record time.
“But
we are not stopping there. We plan to expand the CSI network even
farther,” Commissioner Bonner added. CSI protects our seaports and the
primary system of global trade, containerized shipping against the
threat of international terrorism. It increases the security of the
international trading lanes between CSI ports and U.S. seaports. CSI
was proposed by Commissioner Bonner in January 2002 and has been
accepted globally as a bold and revolutionary initiative to secure
maritime cargo shipments against the terrorist threat.
Greece is the 18th country to enter into a CSI agreement with the
United States. CSI, a U.S. Customs and Border Protection initiative
launched in January 2002, is operational at 20 of the world’s major
seaports in Europe, Asia, Africa, and North America.
CSI
is expanding to Greece before the start of the Olympic games. In order
to jump start CSI in Greece, CBP is loaning Greece two large-scale,
whole container x-ray machines, so that the security protection of CSI
can be in place before the Olympics this summer and are there in time
to contribute to the security of the Olympics.
This
equipment is an essential part of CSI, because it allows the screening
of targeted containers rapidly without slowing down the flow of
movement of legitimate trade. Customs officers use these large-scale
x-ray imaging systems to safely and efficiently screen conveyances for
potential terrorist weapons, including weapons of mass destruction.
This
equipment produces an x-ray type image of the interior of a full-size
40-foot container in under a minute. As part of CSI, Customs officers
also use radiation detection devices to scan for signs of radioactive
materials. If necessary, containers are opened and unloaded by the
host government Customs service for a more intensive manual
inspection.
U.S.
Customs and Border Protection (CBP) is the agency within the
Department of Homeland Security charged with the protection of our
nation’s borders. CBP unified Customs, Immigration, and Agriculture
Inspectors and the Border Patrol into one border agency for the United
States.
Part
of CBP's mission is protecting our nations borders through extended
border initiatives, such as CSI.
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