Telex Release
In some instances a shipper or exporter may surrender one or all of the original bills of lading that have been issued to them at the load port.
Based on this surrender,
they will instruct the load port agent to advise the discharge port agent that
the cargo covered under the surrendered bills of lading may be released to the
consignee shown on the bill of lading without presentation of any original
bills of lading.
A telex release is simply
a message conveying this instruction from the load port agent to the discharge
port agent.
The shipper or exporter
would request a telex release under below circumstances:
- The consignee at destination is a counterpart office of the shipper – example – if say DHL Global Forwarding is the shipper shown on the bill of lading and they are consigning some cargo to their office overseas, as there is no negotiation involved, they don’t require an original bill of lading at destination.
- The shipper did not process his documentation in time and the ship that is carrying his cargo has already reached or reaching the destination and the original bills will not reach the consignee in time for them to clear before the expiry of free days.
- Some cases, an NVOCC operator might request for a telex release from the line so that they can issue their house bill of lading to their customer.
Technically
a Telex Release can only be actioned when the bill of lading is issued as a
Straight Bill of Lading and not as a Negotiable/Order Bill or Seaway Bill.
However,
there are some lines that allow telex release on Negotiable/Order Bill of
Lading based on surrender of the full set of Original Bills of Lading after
verifying the endorsements on the bill of lading.
The name TELEX is the
acronym for TELegraph EXchange service.
The machine shown in the
picture is a Telex Machine, which is a teleprinter which can send and receive
text based messages using the telegraph service.
A message sent using the
Telex machine is known as a Telex message.
A telex service could be
used for real time one-on-one communication with someone on the other side of
the world, or could be used to send a previously drafted message.
Telex was one of the most
popular methods for communicating with ships while at sea and maybe considered
as the precursor to email communication.
The release instruction
from the POL to POD is called a Telex Release because in the past, such release
instructions to the discharge port used to be sent using a Telex Machine.
In its heydays, a Telex
machine was used to transmit more than just cargo release instructions. Many
people (like myself) may remember having used a telex machine for the
transmission of regular messages to the ships, preparing and sending reports before,
during and after a ship’s operation (Example : Arrival reports, Container Load
Lists, Cargo operations progress reports, and TDRs (Terminal Departure
Reports))..
Although nowadays such
OBL surrender information and release instructions are sent by email or updated
in the shipping line’s online system, the name telex release stuck due to the
long period that the telex machine was used for such purposes and the quick
communication that was possible using Telex.
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