revolutionised rail, road and sea
freight handling. The transshipment of
containers at a container port or terminal can be defined as the number (or proportion) of containers, possibly expressed in
TEU, of the total container flow that is handled at the port or terminal and, after temporary storage in the stack, transferred to another ship to reach their destinations. The exact definition of transshipment may differ between ports, mostly depending on the inclusion of inland water transport (barges operating on canals and rivers to the
hinterland). The definition of transshipment may: • include only
seaborne transfers (a change to another international deep-sea
container ship); or • include both seaborne and inland waterway ship transfers (sometimes called
water-to-water transshipment). Most coastal container ports in
China have a large proportion of riverside "transshipment" to the hinterland. In both cases, a single, unique, transshipped container is counted twice in the port performance, since it is handled twice by the waterside
container cranes (separate unloading from arriving ship A, waiting in the stack, and loading onto departing ship B). == Transshipment at sea ==