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Liquid Bulk Fertilizer Transport: An Exhaustive Guide

January 28, 2021 by luis uribe

Liquid Bulk fertilizer transport is stressful enough. There are a lot of processes, paperwork, and tracking to be done. But if you think that is stressful, try bulk liquid fertilizer transport when the fertilizer contains hazardous materials — and boy, many fertilizers do!. It’s another world of stress, with countless regulations and regulatory bodies brandishing their penalties like whips in the air for when you break a rule.

Your business doesn’t need the extra pressure. When you partner with a reliable agricultural logistics company like Total Connection, you can concentrate on your business without the constant yapping of regulations at your heels. The experienced logistics company will handle your liquid bulk fertilizer transport for you.

Here, you’ll learn everything about the liquid bulk transport of fertilizers that contain hazardous chemicals and the regulations that surround them. You’ll also learn how to transport your liquid bulk fertilizer. Then you’ll see how Total Connection takes these off of your shoulders.

Content

Part A

The Challenge of Shipping Liquid Bulk Fertilizers

Part B

HAZMAT Classifications for Fertilizers

Regulations for Shipping Fertilizers Containing Hazardous Materials

Part C

Important Steps in Liquid Bulk Fertilizer Transport

Part D

How Total Connection Eases Your Liquid Bulk Fertilizer Transport

The Challenge of Shipping Liquid Bulk Fertilizers

Plants require a lot of nutrients for healthy growth. Crops need potassium to help them grow roots that are deep and strong, for instance. Nitrogen boosts the development of plant stems and leaves, especially when the plants are in the mid-stages of their lifespan. And phosphate strengthens root, leave, and stem systems of plants, especially in young plants.

Aerial view of fertilizer spreading on a field.

Like these three, there are other nutrients that a plant should not do without. About 17 of them. But unfortunately, not all soils contain them all at once. Thanks to fertilizers, however, you can give the soil a boost in the nutrients it is deficient in. And thanks to bulk fertilizer transport as well, allowing you to spend less for more value and quantity.

However, bulk fertilizer transport comes with its challenges, with the major one arising from the unavoidable use of hazardous materials (HAZMAT) in many fertilizers. And if you were to get careless with these materials, all hell could break loose.

As a result, you must be extra careful and smart when dealing with bulk fertilizer shipping matters. A good place to start is to understand the hazardous classification of your fertilizer shipment, irrespective of whether you are a farmer or a fertilizer distributor.

HAZMAT Classifications for liquid chemical Fertilizers

Many fertilizers contain compounds that could be dangerous when they are not being used on the farm. Ammonium nitrate, for instance, is not only an important ingredient in fertilizers but also in explosives. “Why is a hazardous material used in making fertilizers,” you may ask. It is because ammonium nitrate is an inexpensive source of nitrogen. And since nitrogen is needed in large quantities on farms, it is hard to completely scrap the use of the potentially dangerous chemical.

Sulfur is another important component in many fertilizers, but it could be dangerous when mishandled. Because of the potential dangers that accompany the use of these chemicals in fertilizers, many regulations control and monitor the shipping of these hazardous chemicals.

The Hazardous Materials Regulations (HMR) of the United States Department of Transportation (USDOT) classifies hazardous materials into nine major categories. Many fertilizers fall into some of the categories:

Hazardous Materials Classes Fertilizers May Belong To

Of the nine classes of hazardous materials, fertilizers may fit into seven of them.

●      Class 2: Gases

Some fertilizers contain sulfur. And under the wrong conditions, these fertilizers could emit some gases that are dangerous to the humans close by.

●      Class 3: Flammable Liquids

Not all liquid fertilizers can ignite, but those that can fall into this category.

●      Class 4: Flammable Solids

Apart from granular fertilizers, liquid Fertilizers that are combustible when wet fall into this category.

●      Class 5: Oxidizers and Peroxides

Ammonium nitrate is an oxidizer. The compound could also irritate your lungs and eyes when it comes in contact with them. It could even be a recipe for disaster when it spills in large quantities.

●      Class 6: Poisons

This class belongs to fertilizers that are poisonous when they get into your body.

●      Class 8: Corrosive

Some fertilizers are also considered corrosive.

●      Class 9: Miscellaneous Hazardous Materials

If you want to be sure of the hazard classifications of your shipment, refer to this Hazard Determination document provided by the Occupational Safety and Health Administration (OSHA). Your fertilizer manufacturer or importer should also provide you with labels for hazard classes of your shipment.

Also, never ship fertilizer containing hazardous materials without providing the logistics company with your Safety Data Sheet (SDS). This way, everyone who is involved in the shipping is certain about what materials are being transported. The SDS contains details about the chemicals that make up the fertilizer. It also describes safety measures, such as cleanup procedures, fire-fighting techniques, and first aid measures, in case of accidents.

Regulations for Shipping Fertilizers Containing Hazardous Materials

A liquid bulk fertilizer chemical processing plant view from above.

The Federal Motor Carrier Safety Administration (FMCSA) of the USDOT has a lot of regulations shippers of hazardous materials must adhere to. The body has a document where it describes how to comply with federal HMR. Although the document addresses the transport of hazardous materials by highway, it also applies to:

  • HAZMAT transport within and between states, and to foreign countries through aircraft, motor vehicles, rail cars, and vessels.
  • Any form of representation that suggests that an aircraft, container, motor vehicle, package, railcar, or vessel contains hazardous materials. Even in comic books.
  • The process of fabrication, maintenance, manufacture, marking, reconditioning, testing, or repairing of a container or package that is meant for use in the transportation of HAZMAT.

When you are transporting fertilizers containing hazardous materials (HM), there are responsibilities that FMCSA expects of you. These responsibilities are:

●      Shipping papers.

Carriers of HM are never to be without shipping papers during transport. The shipping papers contain all the details of the hazardous materials you are transporting according to HMR.

●      Marking and placarding your vehicle.

The shipper of your fertilizers should give you placards to attach to the outside of your transport vehicle. You must attach these placards where they are easily visible on your transport vehicle so that it effectively communicates its hazardous material content.

●      Loading and unloading responsibilities.

There are a lot of packaging responsibilities for HM, and you can find them in Title 49 of the Code of Federal Regulations from par 174 to 177. Here, the CFR gives requirements for transporting hazardous materials by air, highway, rail, and water. And in the 177.834-177.854 of part 177, it discusses the specific requirements for loading and unloading the materials.

●      Compatibility.

Compatibility addresses situations where the hazardous materials are being transported in multi-compartmented tanks in the transport vehicles. This is because some chemicals that are incompatible with one another and should never be transported in the same cargo. For instance, you must not transport cyanide and its mixtures, found in some fertilizers, with acids, irrespective of the hazard class.

●      Blocking and bracing.

This responsibility covers the proper containment of hazardous materials during transportation. It requires that the materials are well contained and secured to avoid leakages or spills because of inadequate blocking and bracing.

●      Incident reporting.

In the case of incidents, a carrier must immediately notify the Department as early as they can. Eight consequences of these incidents warrant reporting when they occur. Death, fire outbreak, serious injury, public evacuation, and spillage are some of these consequences. You are to report incidents to the DOT and/or CDC. However, this emergency report does not replace the formally written incident report the carrier is still responsible for providing.

●      Security plan.

A security plan cuts the amount of liability you may be exposed to if an illegal act involves your potentially dangerous fertilizer.

●      Employee training.

It is the responsibility of shippers and carriers to invest in the training of employees who would handle the hazardous materials. This training should include safety and security training, first aid training, and other important training sessions. This training should not only be limited to new employees, but it should also cover every other employee regularly.

●      Emergency response information.

You must include emergency response information in the employee training sessions. This information should contain who the employees are to contact. You may contact the National Response Center (NRC) for spills via telephone at (800) 424-8802. And for incidents that involve etiologic agents (infectious hazardous materials), report to the Center for Disease Control (CDC) at (800) 232-0124 instead of the NRC. Employees should memorize emergency response phone numbers.

Exceptions to Hazardous Fertilizer Transport

As you might have already guessed, the rules are voluminous. And with regulations such as this, exceptions litter the whole place.

There are exemptions from requirements on employee training, emergency response information, and some packaging requirements if you are a farmer transporting hazardous fertilizers (apart from Class 2 gases) within a 150-mile radius of your farm. But these exemptions only apply to when:

  • A farmer who is an intrastate private motor carrier transports the agricultural product
  • You are already transporting your agricultural product in compliance with the requirements of the state you’re transporting in, and you have been specifically authorized by a state statute that was in effect before the 1st of October, 1998.
  • The total amount of hazardous agricultural product being transported in a vehicle does not exceed
    • 7,300 kg (16,094 lbs) of ammonium nitrate fertilizer.
    • 1900 L (502 gallons) of liquid or gaseous agricultural products.
    • 2,300 kg (5,070 lbs) of solid agricultural products.

The HMR also lists some other exceptions relating to the Agricultural Operations Section. These exceptions concern you if

  • You are a private motor carrier who is transporting less than 220 L (58 gals) of formulated liquid agricultural products with proper transporting equipment. This transporting equipment includes several closures to a closed mixed system, which is fully equipped with positive dry disconnect devices from right before transit till the products get to their final destination.
  • The products are only nurse tanks of anhydrous ammonia.
  • Or trade materials.

Important Steps in Liquid Bulk Fertilizer Transport

The steps include how to get HAZMAT verified, how to label your containers and tankers properly, and general safe handling tips for liquid bulk fertilizers.

These processes are very important because liquid bulk transport of any hazardous material requires special attention. A little leak could contaminate water bodies, cause injuries to people, and lead to loss of lives and property.

But first, there is an alternative to liquid fertilizers that we just can’t ignore: dry or granular fertilizers. Apart from the obvious difference in the forms of the fertilizers, how are they different from each other? And what advantages do liquid fertilizers have over dry fertilizers?

Liquid Fertilizer vs Dry (Granular) Fertilizer

We base our comparison on the advantages one has over the other

The advantages of liquid fertilizers over granular fertilizers.

  • Liquid fertilizers are easy to apply, especially on large farms.
  • Plants and soils absorb liquid fertilizers faster than granular fertilizers, thanks to the liquid form of the fertilizers
  • Liquid fertilizers are better than dry fertilizers for starter and in-seasons applications.
  • You can easily blend liquid fertilizers with other crop protection products.
  • It is easier to attain a uniform application over a large farm with liquid fertilizers.
Farmer tending their crops with agrochemicals like pesticides, herbicides and fertilizer.

The advantages of Granular Fertilizers over Liquid fertilizers.

  • Because they are slowly absorbed into the soils and plants, their effects last longer. And you don’t need to apply them as often as you would need to apply liquid fertilizers.
  • There is no risk of them sinking into the ground when they are applied, unlike the way it is with liquid fertilizers that aren’t well prepared.
  • Better for intensive pre-plant applications than liquid fertilizers.

So which is better, liquid fertilizers or dry fertilizers? They are both good for various purposes, so one isn’t necessarily better than the other. And farmers often use the two kinds of fertilizers over several stages of their farming process.

But before you jump to a conclusion about whether to use liquid or dry fertilizers, consider which is better for bulk transport.

Liquid Bulk Fertilizer Transport vs Dry Bulk Fertilizer Transport?

Transporting your bulk fertilizer in liquid form beats dry from in the following ways:

●      Space and Cost Efficiency.

If a tanker could carry liquid or dry bulk fertilizer, it would carry more liquid fertilizer than dry fertilizer. And because you save more space with bulk liquid fertilizer shipping, you can transport more at once and save cost.

●      Greater control over your products.

Imagine your crops are in dire need of nutrients, and you need to revitalize them quickly. Dry fertilizers are already out of the question because of their delayed effectiveness. But liquid fertilizers can quickly help your crops back to health. Not just because of their liquid form, but also because liquid fertilizer tankers have features like in-transit heating systems that keep your fertilizers at an optimal temperature at delivery. This way, your fertilizer is ready for use as soon as it gets to you.

●      Ease of unloading.

You would have to depend on forklifts and heavy manual labor to unload your dry fertilizers from the truck. This is a waste of time, human labor, and money on extra employee wages. But when you opt for liquid bulk fertilizer transport, you unload with hoses into your container. You save time, rely on less manual labor, and save more on employee wages.

●      Damage Protection.

When your dry bulk transport truck drives under suboptimal conditions, your bags, skids, and totes of dry fertilizers are prone to damage and tear. This could lead to the loss of valuable products, making you get less for your money. But liquid bulk fertilizer tankers are built to withstand abnormal road conditions. This way, your products never waste during transit.

How to be HAZMAT Certified

Your employees who are in direct control of the transport and removal of your hazardous materials may need HAZMAT certification. There are several HAZMAT fields to get certified in, including management, training, or shipping. However, the USDOT itself is not in charge of the certification. There are HAZMAT schools where you could take the training and get certified.

The process of getting HAZMAT certified involves HAZMAT training, which often includes learning all HMR requirements. The certification is an optional process for employees, and you or your employees won’t get into trouble for not having them. However, anyone who handles your hazardous materials MUST go through HAZMAT training. This part is non-negotiable.

Proper Labelling of HAZMAT Containers and Tankers

There is a label that goes with each hazard classification. The labels are the same all over the world to avoid any confusion. And they must be placed on the bodies of the containers so that they can be visible from some distance away.

Without these labels, it would be hard to determine the amount of risk involved when an accident that involves a HAZMAT container occurs. And since the hazardous content could be anything from flammable, corrosive, radioactive, or even toxic, going about without these labels could incur some heavy penalties.

With tankers or any vehicle carrying potentially dangerous materials, they must always have hazard classification placards on them. The placards are like the labels. And they must be visible on all sides of the tanker.

Safe handling of Liquid Bulk Fertilizers

liquid bulk fertilizer tanker at sunset

Every employee that would handle these potentially dangerous chemicals at any point must be well trained. Your carriers must first be licensed to drive a tanker truck. Then they should be familiar with laws concerning the transport of hazardous materials. Also, your carriers should always have a copy of the SDS your shipper provides for the fertilizer you are transporting.

How Total Connection Eases Your Liquid Bulk Fertilizer Transport

All the rules and regulations surrounding bulk chemical transport could be hard to follow, especially for fertilizers containing hazardous materials. And the law is unforgiving when you break any of them. Keeping up with the regulation updates is another challenge on its own. And don’t forget the paperwork that comes with the entire process. Then comes the anticipation that comes with tracking your shipments. The processes are so demanding that if you created a department within your company or farm to handle them, it would be worth it.

But the good news is that you don’t have to do all those when you partner with a reliable and competent logistics company like Total Connection. We let you concentrate on your business and nothing more. We will handle the delivery for you and obey all the rules and regulations on your behalf.

Benefits of Shipping your Liquid Bulk Fertilizer with Total Connection

Here’s how Total Connection eases liquid bulk fertilizer transport for you.

●      Vast experience.

After 25 years in the business of shipping agricultural chemicals, we have all the experience it takes to handle your bulk liquid fertilizer transport smoothly. Whatever kind of liquid fertilizer you intend to ship, whether organic, HAZMAT, or any other kind, thousands of other clients have trusted us to ship it for them. So, yours wouldn’t be a problem.

●      Emergency on-demand coverage.

We are a private family-owned business. We don’t have unnecessary “delivery processing hierarchies“ that do nothing but slow down your delivery process. Instead, we deliver your bulk fertilizer as soon as you want it. Contact Total Connection anytime, 24/7, to make that last-minute shipment.

●      Cost-Efficient and Insured Delivery.

You don’t have to take up more liability than you need to. Our services are inexpensive and we always insure your products that are with us. So, even in an extremely rare case of an accident, you still have nothing to worry about.

●      Flexibility.

This is where we most pride ourselves in. We immerse ourselves into your business when you partner with us so that we can provide solutions that are best suited to you. We do last-minute reschedules, and offer you just the perfect quote for your business, just so that we don’t interrupt your supply chain.

Conclusion

Liquid bulk fertilizer transport is a complex process, but you don’t have to do it on your own. Relieve your business of the stress and pressure of bulk fertilizer transport by filling the quote form below.

Filed Under: Agricultural Shipping, Liquid Bulk Shipping Tagged With: Agriculture, hazmat transport, liquid bulk, liquid tanker

Bulk Liquid Tanker Carriers

March 26, 2019 by luis uribe

Getting liquid production materials in bulk is non-negotiable if you’re a manufacturer or a large-scale producer. And that is why you have to pay attention to bulk liquid tanker carriers. They could make or break your business.

Bulk liquid tanker carriers are companies every production plant should have for the transport of their bulk liquid materials. These companies can impact your business by reducing your logistics costs if you partner with the right ones. Otherwise, they could get your business into trouble.

In this article, you’ll learn:

  • What bulk liquid tanker carriers are
  • What bulk liquid tanker carriers do
  • What could go wrong when shipping bulk liquids with carriers, and 
  • How the right bulk liquid tanker carrier could save you and your business money

What are Bulk Liquid Tanker Carriers?

Bulk liquid tanker carriers are companies that handle the transport of bulk liquids. They are responsible for the safety and maintenance of the quality of the bulk liquid cargo during transit. 

Usually, bulk liquid tanker carriers are standalone third-party logistics companies because of the scope of the job. In one of such companies, there are a lot of departments. But the most common ones are the sales, finance, and dispatch departments. These departments may, in turn, have their sub-departments that handle more specific responsibilities. 

For manufacturing companies that only need the bulk liquid materials, having the extra burden of transporting and tracking the cargo could be cost-inefficient. This is why many manufacturers prefer to outsource the shipping of their bulk liquids to carriers who haul liquid bulk. 

Without a doubt, this requires a lot of trust on the part of the manufacturers. They get to leave the transport of expensive bulk liquids in the hands of other companies. It then becomes important to understand the responsibilities of bulk liquid tanker carriers and how they may benefit your company.

What Bulk Liquid Tanker Carriers Do

What bulk liquid tanker carriers do vary, depending on the carrier and some other factors. But in general, the basic responsibilities of a bulk liquid tanker carrier are:

Bulk Liquid chemical transport

Safety and Adherence to Road Rules

Proper Equipment Selection

Loading and Unloading Bulk Liquid Tanks

Tank Washing and Proper Product Disposal

Let’s take a closer look at these responsibilities.

Bulk Liquid Chemical Transport

Bulk liquid chemical transport is the first responsibility of any bulk liquid carrier. When the carrier is unable to fulfill this responsibility, it is no longer a carrier. However, it is not enough that a carrier is only able to transport your bulk liquid chemical. The carrier has to be capable of doing it with maximum effectiveness and efficiency. 

Efficiency is important because large-scale production often requires a lot of keeping to time. A slight delay could lead to a ripple of negative consequences for the manufacturing company. 

Maintaining the quality of the bulk liquid freight is also as important as its timely transportation. Some bulk liquids, such as oils and fats, could suffer quality deterioration during transit due to the carelessness of the carriers. So, it is in the best interest of the shipper to only use reliable carriers.

  • Proper Equipment Selection

Once you contact a bulk liquid carrier, you get to discuss the nature of the bulk liquid freight. This helps to make sure that the carrier prepares the proper equipment for the transport. Without the proper equipment, the carrier would be unable to perform this responsibility and some others. 

For instance, some chemicals are temperature sensitive. You have to keep them above a particular temperature during transit to either get them ready for use immediately after unloading or to maintain their quality. Oil is a good example of such a chemical, as it solidifies into fat at low temperatures. For this, the carrier would need an in-transit heat trailer. And proper communication of the nature of the bulk liquid freight could help the carrier select suitable equipment.

Other instances where the proper equipment selection is crucial are in offloading situations where you could use compressors or pumps, and volume and weight situations for choosing what tanker size to use.

As the shipper, you don’t need the details of the equipment the carrier is to use. All you need is to tell the carrier what you intend to ship. A competent bulk liquid carrier should already know what equipment to use.

  • Loading and Unloading Bulk Liquid Tanks

It is also the responsibility of the bulk liquid carrier to see to the proper loading and unloading of the bulk liquid. But you may need to supply the carrier with some important pieces of information to help them serve you well. The pieces of information include the layout of your warehouse and the structure of your storage tank.

During the loading of the bulk liquid, you and the carrier must have personnel on-site to confirm the cargo quality from the supplier. These persons are also to make sure all the necessary tools and equipment are in place to transport the freight. Doing this should make the transport easier and less risky.

And when unloading a tanker, the two main methods are the use of a pump or a compressor. One of the differences between them is that the storage tank at your warehouse must be closed at the top when a compressor is being used. When using a pump, however, the tank should be open to ensure that the vacuum generated in the process does not damage pieces of equipment. 

Also, the unload points of tanker trucks sometimes differ. Some tanker trucks offload from the rear while others offload from the center. Unloading from an inclined surface, a rear offloading tanker truck could lead to waste when the liquid remains stuck at the front end. This waste could be expensive if there’s no way to get it out.

  • Safety and Adherence to Road Rules

Safety and adherence to road rules are the responsibilities of bulk liquid tanker carriers that ensure that the liquid freight is not a risk to lives and properties during transit. 

Many bulk liquids are hazardous materials, and they require extra care during transport. Mishandling them could bear catastrophic consequences for the shipper, the carrier, and innocents around. And that is why there are a lot of regulations from national regulatory bodies concerning the shipping of these materials. One of these regulations includes the proper regular training of every person involved in the transport of bulk liquids. :

Hazardous materials aren’t the only materials that require safe shipping and adherence to road rules. Every bulk liquid freight does. And the carrier company is to ensure that all their workers do the right thing.

  • Tank Washing and Proper Product Disposal

Bulk liquid tanker carriers have to ensure that their tankers are washed clean after every offload. 

Some chemicals must not mix, even in negligible quantities. In fact, some chemicals can only be transported in the same tanker two or three cargoes after the shipping of some other chemical. But when a carrier does not clean the tanker properly before shipping another chemical, they risk reducing the quality of the bulk liquid, and this is in the best-case scenario. At worst, some catastrophic reactions could ensue, leading to equipment damage or even loss of lives. 

Proper product disposal is also a huge responsibility of the carrier because we can’t have harmful chemicals sitting around. We also can’t have them destroying our dear Earth when they are not properly disposed of. 

What Could Go Wrong When Shipping Bulk Liquids

A lot of things could go wrong when shipping bulk liquids. These things include product contamination, faulty bulk liquid tanker equipment, and the mishandling of hazardous materials. When these things go wrong, they bring losses of all kinds to both the carrier and the shipper. Hundreds and millions of dollars are lost, for instance, brand trust takes a hit, and lawsuits may sprout.

Here are some ways things could go wrong when shipping bulk liquids:

  • Product Contamination

Product contamination is bad for everyone, including the shipper and the carrier. On the shipper’s end, product contamination leads to a reduction in the quality of the final product in the best-case scenario. And in the worst-case scenario, the bulk liquid becomes unusable. Even if insurance covered these losses, valuable production time would have gone to waste. 

The carrier can have it just as bad when the product contamination results from the carelessness of its workers. This could get them in trouble with regulatory bodies, insurance companies, and the shipper. It is also bad business for the carrier because it may affect its ability to attract new clients.

Bulk liquid tanker carriers can avoid the risk of product contamination when they are careful, use the right equipment, and have an expert-level understanding of the nature of their bulk liquid freights.

  • Mishandling of Hazardous Materials

The mishandling of hazardous bulk liquid materials is usually catastrophic. Nothing but catastrophe. That is why this challenge is one all carriers hope to never have. It could get them in trouble with the shipper or/and the government. It gets worse if the carrier is at fault, because it may not have the full cover of insurance then.

The proper training of all personnel involved in the handling of hazardous materials by the carrier is non-negotiable. This way, the workers know what not to do to avoid potential disasters, and what to do in emergencies.

  • Production Plant Shut Down

Production plants often work based on schedules. They need the supply of their bulk liquid materials to be timely or it could lead to massive delays and charges. And that is why the inconsistencies of a carrier could affect a production plant to the point of shutdown. 

  • Untrained and Irresponsible Carriers

Carriers bear the responsibility of training their workers. Without proper training, these workers may fumble in situations that require the competence of a well-trained worker. And when a carrier falters in this responsibility, it exposes its business and shippers to unnecessary risks.

In some cases, the lack of training is not the problem. Instead, it is the deliberate irresponsibility of the workers. When workers who know the right thing to do intentionally neglect them for the wrong things, disaster is always around the corner. And this could be just as costly as any other challenge bulk liquid tanker carriers may have.

Just as it is with the mishandling of hazardous materials, the proper training of all workers can solve this problem. Besides that, the recruitment process for carriers should be thorough to filter out potentially volatile and/or incompetent workers. This is important, as they would be in charge of bulk liquids worth hundreds or thousands.

  • Faulty Bulk Liquid Tanker Equipment

Faulty equipment could lead to the loss of the chemical shipment. Imagine a leaking tanker truck traveling across hundreds of miles. Depending on the frequency of the leak, the tanker truck could get to its destination with only half of the product it had at the loading point. 

That is why it is imperative that the carrier checks all tools and equipment before any shipment. And all faulty equipment should not be managed in that state, but be fixed as before use.

Summary

By now, you should already have a good understanding of what bulk liquid tanker carriers are about. They are companies that handle the transport of your bulk liquids, from the loading to the transit, and finally to the unloading. It is also their responsibility to ensure that your bulk liquid freights get to your warehouse with no significant diminishing in quality. 

However, things could quickly go wrong when your bulk liquid tanker carrier is incompetent. They could mishandle your cargo and cause the quality to diminish. Or they could waste your chemicals through their faulty tanker equipment or irresponsible workers. And when these happen, your business could suffer for it. Fortunately, these issues are avoidable when you partner with the right bulk liquid tanker carrier, such as Total Connection.

How Total Connection Makes a Difference

Total Connection is a third-party logistics company that deals in bulk liquid transport of all kinds. We have the experience, expertise, and equipment to administer any kind of bulk liquid logistics solution to your needs, without causing you to dig holes in your pocket. You can rest assured that your liquid cargo will always get to you whenever, wherever, and however you want it. No delay, no reduction in quality.

You too can add your business to our growing list of businesses that never have bulk liquid logistics issues when you contact us. Start by filling out the quote form below.

Filed Under: Liquid Bulk Shipping Tagged With: carriers, liquid chemical, liquid freight, liquid tanker

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