DAKOSY and dbh digitalise the release process for “German Ports”

DAKOSY and dbh digitalise the release process for “German Ports”

A German joint solution for the digitalised release process of import containers is being developed by the service providers DAKOSY AG, Hamburg, and dbh Logistics IT AG, Bremen, both of whom specialise in port community systems.

By the end of the year, the first shipping companies and forwarders will be connected to the platform, which will be henceforth marketed under the label “German Ports.”

DAKOSY and dbh have laid the foundation for standardising and digitalising the release process for import containers in the German seaports of Hamburg, Bremerhaven, Bremen and Wilhelmshaven. The application offers multiple options for the release process, providing users with choices in technology and processes.

DAKOSY and dbh are now making blockchain technology available to their users for the first time. Blockchain’s suitability and practicality for the release process has already been confirmed as part of the IHATEC research project ROboB.

Another incentive for the rapid implementation of this project is the high level of interest among carriers in digitalising the release process. Getting started with the new process is easy for carriers, forwarders, transport companies and terminals alike.

Dirk Gladiator, authorised officer of DAKOSY, explains: “Our solution for the digitalised release process is based on existing platforms and processes that are already being extensively used by the stakeholders in German seaports.”

The application will be available in both the Hamburg and Bremen Port Community Systems. In Hamburg, this will be integrated into the Import Message Platform (IMP), and in the ports of Bremen and Wilhelmshaven, as a part of the Business Integration Platform (BIP).

“Parallel to the proven IMP and BIP platforms, we are building the framework for blockchain in order to make it available as a hybrid alternative in the next step. We are already preparing the test phase,” says Holger Hübner, head of port solutions at dbh, outlining the concept and assuring that “digitalised releases meet all requirements for security and verification of identities.”

Until now, release orders have generally not been communicated digitally, but exchanged between parties in the traditional ways via fax, e-mail or telephone.

“The manual process causes a lot of extra work for everyone, as the players have to engage in bilateral dialog for each individual container to organise authorisations and empty container returns,” concur Hübner and Gladiator.

With the use of the established IMP and BIP platforms and the optional addition of blockchain, the strict requirements for access authorisations and secure IT processes have now been met. Release is a sensitive process, as the release order entitles the holder to release the container, which often contains goods of considerable value.

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