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Foreign trade zones (or free ports)

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fullscreen: Foreign trade zones (or free ports)

Monograph

Identifikator:
1801857903
URN:
urn:nbn:de:zbw-retromon-199077
Document type:
Monograph
Title:
Foreign trade zones (or free ports)
Place of publication:
Washington
Publisher:
United States Government Printing Off.
Year of publication:
1929
Scope:
IX, 322 S
Ill., graph. Darst
Digitisation:
2022
Collection:
Economics Books
Usage license:
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Chapter

Document type:
Monograph
Structure type:
Chapter
Title:
Part 1. General analysis
Collection:
Economics Books

Contents

Table of contents

  • Foreign trade zones (or free ports)
  • Title page
  • Contents
  • Part 1. General analysis
  • Part 2. The free ports of Europe
  • Index

Full text

FOREIGN TRADE ZONES 
30 
there are five cranes for bunkering coal. There are oil-bunkering 
facilities of the most modern type in the free port. The free port of 
Santander has 42 steel tanks with a capacity of 21,000,000 litres for 
the storage of lubricants, gasoline, and Diesel oil, which is used to 
supply the national market and to bunker ships entering the port. 
Cadiz has coal-bunkering facilities, as shown by the photograph 
on page 218. At Trieste there is a limited amount of coal and oil bun- 
kering with the use of lighters. Sulina, Fiume, and Genoa have facili- 
ties for storing or manipulating petroleum and petroleum products, 
>ut no data are available showing to what extent bunkering is carried 
on at these ports. 
Except for a countervailing duty on bituminous coal and shale 
imported from countries imposing duties, there is no duty assessed 
on this commodity in the ports of the United States. Nearly all of the 
dutiable coal comes from Canada. Petroleum and its products are 
not subject to duty. 
Where the area of the free port is sufficient to permit the allotment 
of space for bunkering, the establishment of these facilities would be a 
convenience to vessels. The United States customs regulations, how- 
ever, impose no hardships upon vessels entering solely for fuel. They 
provide that vessels arriving in distress or for the purpose of taking 
on bunker coal, bunker oil, or necessary sea stores and which depart 
within 24 hours after arrival without having landed or taken on board 
any merchandise other than bunker coal, bunker oil, or necessary 
sea stores, are not required to make entry at the customhouse, 
provided the master, owner, or agent reports under oath to the col- 
lector the hour and date of arrival and depdrture and the quantity 
»f bunker coal, bunker oil, or sea stores taken on board. 
The opportunity of taking fuel without shifting from her assigned 
verth is always a great convenience to a ship. Usually this is ac- 
complished by means of bunkering lighters and barges, or sometimes, 
in the case of oil, by pipe lines with loading heads on the piers or 
wharves. 
Where the free zone is in or contiguous to an established port, it is 
believed that the use of bunkering barges both for coal and oil offers 
the best solution of the bunkering problem in free ports. These 
barges would have to be bonded under rules to be prescribed. This 
method would effectively prevent any advantage to foreign coal, 
upon which countervailing duties are ordinarily assessed. It would 
make unnecessary the use of any part of the free-port area for storage 
of these bulk commodities. In the case of oil, it would be feasible to 
locate storage tanks outside the free zone, with pipe lines reaching the 
wharves of the free port. 
A4706R° 904
	        

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Foreign Trade Zones (or Free Ports). United States Government Printing Off., 1929.
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