JPRS ID: 9341 USSR REPORT TRANSPORTATION

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CIA-RDP82-00850R000300040021-1
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APPROVE~ FOR RELEASE: 2007/02/08: CIA-R~P82-00850R00030004002'1 -'1 i I ~ C~~T~~E~ ~ ~~U~ ~ ~ APPROVED FOR RELEASE: 2007/02/08: CIA-RDP82-00850R000300040021-1 APPROVED FOR RELEASE: 2047102108: CIA-RDP82-00850R000300040021-1 FOR OFFICIAL USE ONLY , JPRS L/9341 ~ 9 October 1:980 USSR Re ort p TRANSPORTATION tF0U0 4/80) FBIS FnREIGN ~ROADCAST INFORMATION SERVlCE FOR OFFICIAL USE ON'LY APPROVED FOR RELEASE: 2007/02/08: CIA-RDP82-00850R000300040021-1 APPROVED FOR RELEASE: 2047102108: CIA-RDP82-00850R000300040021-1 _ NOTE JPRS publications contain information primarily from foreign newspapers, periodica~s and books, but also from n~ws agency transmissions and broadcasts. Materials from foreign-language sources are translated; those from English-language sources are tran~,:ribed or reprinted, with the original phrasing and other characteristics retained. Headlines, editorial reports, and material enclosed in brackets [J are supplied by JPRS. Processing indicators such as [Text] or [Excerpt) in the First line of each item, or following the last line of a brief, indicate how the original informa.tion was processed. Where no processing indicator is given, the infor- eation was summarized or extracted. Unfamiliar names rendered phonetically or transliterated are enclosed in parentheses. Words or names preceded by a ques- tion mark and enclosed in parentheses were not clear in tli: , original b~it have been supplied as appropriate in context. Other unattributed parenthetical notes with in the body of an item originate with the source. Times with in items are as - given by source. The contents of this publication in no way represent the poli- cies, views or attitudes of the U.S. Government. _ / For f,irther :informati.on on report content call (703) 351-2938 (economicl; 346�3 (political, sociological, military); 2726 (life sciences); 2725 (physical sciences). - COPYRIGHT LAWS AND REGULt1TI0NS GOVERNING OWAIERSHIP OF MP.TERIALS REPRODUCED HEREIN REQUIRE THAT DISSEMINATION OF THIS PUBLICATION BE RESTRICTED FOR OFFICIAL USE O~ILY. APPROVED FOR RELEASE: 2007/02/08: CIA-RDP82-00850R000300040021-1 APPROVED FOR RELEASE: 2047102108: CIA-RDP82-00850R000300040021-1 FOR OFFICIAL USE ONLY JPRS L/9341 9 October 1980 USS R REPORT TRANSPOR7AiI0N (FOUO 4/80) ~ CONTENTS RAILROAD Advantages of Packaging Loose Commodities (P. Yakovlev; VOPROSY EKONOMIKI, Jul 80) 1 OCEAN AND RIVER Geography of Maritime Navigation (G. L. Nadtochiy; GEOGRAFIYA MO?tSKOGO SUDCKHODSTVA: UCHEBNIK DLYA SUDOVODITE'L'SKOY SPETSIAL'NOSTI MORSKIKH WZOV, 1979) 14 Sea Transport Statiatics (M. I. Bruakin; STATISTIKA MORSKOGO TRANSPORTA, ' 1979) 20 ~ - a - (III - USSR - 38d FOUO~ ~OR OFFICIAL USE ONLY APPROVED FOR RELEASE: 2007/02/08: CIA-RDP82-00850R000300040021-1 APPROVED FOR RELEASE: 2047102108: CIA-RDP82-00850R000300040021-1 FOR OFFICIAL USE ODTI.Y RAILROAD ADVANTAGES OF PACKAGING LOOSE COMMODITIES Moscow VOPROSY EKONOMIKI in Russian No 7, Jul 80 pp 50-59 /Article by P. Yakovlev: "Transport and Warehouse Integration and the Turnover of Means of Production"J /Text/ The achievement of the best interaction of the processes of storing - and moving products for production purposes is becoming an effective means of expediting their economic turnover. At present the need to examine these processes as a set is more and more obvious. The reduction of the expenditures of the total time of the storage and movement of ineans of production should be based on the consideration of the conditions of delivery and the peculiarities of the types of cargo (bulk, liquid, individually packaged). In rail transport, which continues to play a leading role in freight traffic, bulk and liquid cargo makes up four-fifths of the hauled amount of cargo, including coal and coke--more than 20 percent, petroleum cargo--in excess of 10 percent, ore--about 9 per- - cent and so on. These types of cargo as the most massive ones require the use of such a reserve for shortening the transportation time of the means of production as the establishment of efficient routes of their movement from the point of production (extraction) to the point of consumption. The handling of bulk and liquid cargo is notable for a high level of inechaniza-- tion of the loading and unloading operations, which, as a rule, reaches 90-100 percent. Individually packaged freight, while taking up a less significant proportion in the freight traffic, is characterized by a high labor-intensity of handling. For it the increase of the technical equip- ment of loading and unloading operations is the main reserve for shortening the hauling time af products for production purposes. The improvement of the turnover of the means of production by improving the pattern of economic ties, which act simultaneously as transport ties, is ~ based on the optimization of the attachment by supply and sales organiza- tion of the consumers of ineans of production to suppliers and is an impor- tant transportation economics problem. Its successful solution to a considerable extent depends on the cooperation of the transport and the supply and sales links of the national economy. In 1 FOR OFFICIAL USE ONLY APPROVED FOR RELEASE: 2007/02/08: CIA-RDP82-00850R000300040021-1 APPROVED FOR RELEASE: 2047102108: CIA-RDP82-00850R000300040021-1 FOR OFFICIAL USE ONLY particular, they elaborate and introduce so-called diagrams of normal fr~ight traffic, in conformity with which the hauling of 75 percent of the total amount of cargo is presently envisaged by rail. The ~oint rational- ization of the transportation of freight by rail made it passible to de- crease relatively its freight turnover during the Ninth Five-Year Plan by t 130 billion ton-kilometers. In 1978 the railroads in conformity with the diagrams of normal freight tr~zfEi.r_ eliminated from the plans of consigners about 20 million tons of irrational shipments, while the joint measures of USSR Gosplan, the USSR State Committee for Material and Technical Supply and the USSR Ministry of Railways in 1978 made it possible to redtice rail shipments by more than 35 billion ton-kilometers. Acco~-cling to the data of the Institute of Complex Transportation Problems aL-tached to USSR Gosplan, 25 percent of all the irrational shipments of fer- _ ro~is metals are caused by shortcomings in the placing of orders and the at- tucl~m~nt of consumers to suppliers. This enhances the role of sLlpply and sale:~ units in the organization of freight traffic, in the improvement of ~ahic'n there are considerable reserves. 'rne shortening of the average distance of shipments is a substantial re- - serve for expediting the economic turnover of ineans of production. At prr~sent the reshipments of coal, which are connected with its concentration, have reached significant volumes. Their amount annually exceeds 110 mil- lic~n tcns. At present 20 million tons of iron ore are shipped over a dis- tance of more than 2,000 km. Due to cross and long hauls of conversion metal ever.y ton of ferrous metals is hauled by rail transport on the aver- age 1.6 times. The irrational shipments of timber cargo make up over 10 billion ton-kilometers and those of cement, some construction materials and reinforced concrete items make up about 10 billion ton-kilometers. All this slows the turnover of ineans of production, by increasing the hauling time of freight. Central supply and sales organizations are taking part -:~n the improvement of _ the freight flow of products for production purposes. thus, 40 percent more = rol.lyng stock is required for the hauling of round timber than for the hauling of the same amount of lumber. Meanwhile, in Siberia and the Far East the production of lumber, splint-slab and wood-fiber board is not be- ing ensure in the necessary amounts. The USSR Stat~e Committee f Material and Technical Supply ~ointly with USSR Gosplan has substantiate~ the pro- posals on the construction in the eastern regions of the country of seven - new sawmil~s, the increase of the amounts of sawmill operation and the re- dtiction of the shipment of unprocessed timber. At the same time in the formation of a rational pattern of the freight flow ir, transport the supply and sales organizations for the pre~ent are still not fully utilizing tr.eir potentials. As a rule, 80-90 percent of the meas- ures on improving shipments, which are approved by Gosplan and the State - Comm:ittee for Material and Technical Supply, are based on pr.oposals of the transportation ministries and departments. 2 FOR OFFICIAL USE ONLY APPROVED FOR RELEASE: 2007/02/08: CIA-RDP82-00850R000300040021-1 APPROVED FOR RELEASE: 2047102108: CIA-RDP82-00850R000300040021-1 FOR OFFICIAL USE ONLY In this connection the experience of creating councils for the coordination _ of the operation of transport in the republic, and at ma~or industrial centers with the participation of regional supply and sales organizations _ merits attention. Such councils increase the cooperation of transport and material and technical supply in questions of rationalizing ~reight traffic. _ Joint measures on the routing of trafLic, which considerably shorten the hauling time of freight, are also conducive to the improvement of the co- operation of transport and material and technical supply. For example, in the't,rganizations of the USSR State Committee for Material and Technical Supply when hauling petroleum products plans of the routes are worked out monthly jointly with the administrations of the railroads and the petroleum - refineries. This is necessary especially as the planning of the shipment of freight by rail transport routes should take into account the capacities - of the cargo areas of the consignees. For the proportion of the consignor routes on gen.e~-al-purpose railroads on the whole increased in 1978 to 45.5 percent, while for raw material freight the level of traffic routing is even higher (for example, for petroleum and petroleum products it is 78.2 percent). However, the very subdivisions of material and technical supply, as well as of agricultural procurement were still inadequately pre- _ pared for the delivery of freight by unit trains. The USSR State Committee for Material and Technical Supply does not have at present large lumber , bases, the ma~ority of grain receiving stations have been adapted to receive grain only from one or a few cars, routes of trucks, agricultural machinery and a number of other loads are not being used. To increase the effectiveness of thP ~oint work of transport and material and technical supply it is necessary for the handling of frei~ht traffic, , including the transfer of freight from one type of transport to another, to be carried out with allowance made for the centralized delivery of small- batch pr.oducts to the consumer of a given region according to a coordinated schedule. Such a ~nethod of delivery reduces the amount of motor transport - which operates for haulin~ freight from warehouse facilities, im,proves the utilization of its carrying capacity, makes it possible to deliver prod- ucts directly by the time of their putting into production and by means of the reduction of the production stocks of enterprises decreases the total stocks of ineans of production in ttie region. Durinf; the 10~h Five-Year Plan the level of the centralized delivery of produ~~ts for production purposes by motor transport in the organizations of the USSR State Committee for Material and Technical Supply and the USSR State Committe for the Supply of Production Equipment for Agriculture was more than 80 percent. However, the main difficulties consist in the fact that the fleet of trucks for centralized delivery is inadequately efficient and is not completely suited for loading and unloadi~g operations with long, fragile and several other types of products. Therefcr.e small and medium- sized specialized and heavy trucks, interchangeable bodies, trailers and semitrailers should be extensively developed. 3 - FOR OFFICIAL USE ONLY APPROVED FOR RELEASE: 2007/02/08: CIA-RDP82-00850R000300040021-1 APPROVED FOR RELEASE: 2047102108: CIA-RDP82-00850R000300040021-1 I FOR OFFICTAL USF. ONLY Warehouse supply covers products which are received in small lots. The vol- ume of small-lot shipments, which should be performed by medium-sized and = even heavy trucks, as well as with the use of trailers, by organizing the delivery along circulai routes with stopa atseveral addresses, at this time is increasing. Interurban hauls by general-purpose motor transport a~ce a large reserve for the development of the delivery of products from supply bases. During the Ninth Five-Year Plan a m4~o~= transport service was created by the subdivisions of material and technical supply of agriculture by means cf the concentration of some of the vehicles employed in agricultural pro- duction. During this period the truck fleet in the organizations of Sel`- khoztekhnika increased twofold. 2`he concentration of the fleet iner~~s~ed by nearly one-fourth the labor productivity in transport operations. In 1978 the volume of operations of. the transport enterprises of Sel'khoztekh- _ nika was equal to 2.4 billion rubles. Taking into account that the cansumers served by the organizations of state- wide supply are using coumtion carrier more extensively, the volume of deliv- ery by their own motor transport here is considerably lesr~. In 1976 with the use of this type of services 36.5 million tons of freight were deliv- ered from the bases, warehouses and stor~~s of the organizations of the USSR State Committee for Material and Technical Supply. The development of services in the sphere af the circulation of the means - of production, including centralized Freight delivery, is largely governed by the condition of the warehousing services and by their technical equip- ment. Thus, in recent years in the subdivisions of Sel'khoztekhnika a num- ber of major warehouse facilities for mineral fertilizersl have been built, which are equipped with highly productive equipment for the mechanization of loading and unloading operations, including special machinery for un- - loading mineral fertil.izers from cars (in 1478 there were already about 3,000 such machines at the warehouses of Sel'khoztekhnika). In the sphere of circulation the ~.ntensivz construci.ion of mineral fertil- izer warehouses has been under way unly since the mid-1960's. At present there are mineral fertilizer storehouses with a capacity of about 10 mil- lion tons in the Sel'khoztekhnika system. However, many of them are in- tended for the storage of fertilizers in packaging and do not make it pos- sible to use specialized transport effectively. There is approximately the same total capacity of mineral fertilizer warehouses ~t kolkhozea and 1. These complexes, which are now a part of the Al1-Union Soyuzsel'khoz- khimiya Association, could become agrochemical centers, which would also take upon themselves the application of fertilizers to the soil without their sale to the ~arms. Such a procedure would promote their murual interests and woul~ considerably reduce the losaea of ~'ertil- izers during tlzeir storage and transportation. 4 FOR OFFICIAL USE ONLY APPROVED FOR RELEASE: 2007/02/08: CIA-RDP82-00850R000300040021-1 APPROVED FOR RELEASE: 2007/02148: CIA-RDP82-00850R040340040021-1 I FOR OFFICIAL t?SE ONLY sov~hozes, bat to a considQrable ext~nt these warehouses are little suited buildings, w~ich often are not ap~ropriate for tlie storage and mechanized ' handlir.g of fert~.lizers. ~ An ituportant factor of Lhe improve~ent of the turnover of products for production purposes is the integration of the equipment which servPS the movement of good~ fror~ t'z~ producer to the consumer, therefore it is inad- visable to regard the tPChnology of materials-handling, loading and unload- ing and warehousing operations in isolation. The mechanization, and then the automation of each of the indicated operations require that equipment of the~, in case of which the u,,3ximum standization, unification of the _ ec~uipment, which organizes the commodity flow of products for production purposes, would be achieved. Transport packaging, pallets an~ containers, which are nroduced with allowance made for standardization, have become the base, which has made it possible to ~oordinate their parameters with the dimensions of the working surfac~:s of vehicles, warehouse facilities and the means of inechanization of materials-handling, loading and unloading and warehousing operations. The bundle, parcel, package and confi ainer are a standardized sequence of fr.eight units. Their appearance is leading to the ~ ~ typification of freight traffic, materials-handling, loading and unloading and warehousing operati~ns, means of inechanization and automation. The ra- - tiunalization of the freight flow oi means of nroduction requires that ie be regardec? jointly wit:? the means of liauling and storage as a unified ob- ject of management and planning, as a transportation and warehouse complex, which includes the vehicles, warehouses, packaging, materials-handling equipment and other equipment for loading and unloading and warehousing operations. _ Since the warehousing services of industry, construction, transportation and material and technical supply are interconnected by the freight flow, _ the integration of tiie equipment involved in the process of storage and hauling creates the prerequisites for ttie assurance of the complex mechan- ization and automation of materials-handling, loading and unloading and = warehousing operations over the entire route of the movement of freight. From this there follows: first, the need for the purposes of increasing the efficiency of transportation and warehousing processes to intensify container and package shipments as the most highly productive shipments, which afford an opportunity to introduce the complete mechanization of materials-handling, loading and u.-~loading and warehousing operations at the producer, the transportation organizati~n and the consumer; second, the urgency of the reequipment of warehousing facilities, since only tt~e one- time and proportionate supply of advanced means of the mechanization of materials-handling, loading and unloading and warehousing operations to all the links along the path of the movement of freight to the consumer will _ provide the national economy with the greatest economic impact. So far it is still difficult to call the methods of carrying out materials- - handling, loading and unloading and warehousing operations completely in- dustrial methods, which conform to the level of basic production. To this 5 _ FOR OFFICIAL USE ONLY APPROVED FOR RELEASE: 2007/02/08: CIA-RDP82-00850R000300040021-1 APPROVED FOR RELEASE: 2007102/08: CIA-RDP82-00850R000300040021-1 I FOR OFFICIAL USE ONLY i time the crane equipment in the technology of materials-handling, loading and unloading and warehousing operations has been the most prevalenr_ materials-handling equipment. But too few modern cranes, which conform to ~ the best foreign and domestic models, are being used. This pertains first of all to the use in materials-handling, loading and unloading and ware- housing operations of gantry and overhead cranes, which are equipped with hoisting mechanisms, self-propelled gib cranes with a greater lifting capacity for work on open yards, stacker cranes for the equipment of tall warehouses with them and so on. The proportion of loaders, which do not conform to the present technical level, is large in the fleet of railless ground-type transport. As com- pared with the best Fureign machines they have a smaller lifting capacity, a lower rate of travel, as we11 as movement of the drive elements, they do not have the necessary set of interchangeable hoisting mechanisms, they - have a greater curb weight, turning radius and so on. Moreover, at the warehouses there are sti11 not enough of many advanced types of equipment for the performance of materials-handling, loading and unloadir~g and ware- - housing operations, in particular, such types as automatic hoisting devices, warehouse equipment, standard packaging and others. The need f.ur equipme:zt for the handling of individually packaged freight, such as storage racks, pallets and containers, without which it is difficult ~ to achieve a radical change in the technology of materials-handling, load- _ ing and unloading and warehousing operations, is not being met rapidly _ enough. The handling of individually packaged cargo, in contrast to liquid and bulk cargo, is especially labor-consuming. In the total expenditures on the performance of loading and unloading and warehousing operations the outlays for the handling of individually packaged cargo take up 75-80 per- cent. The proportion of this cargo in the total freight turnover is esti- mated at 2~-25 percent, but its loading and unloading account for 50 per- _ cent of those employed in materials-handling, Ioading and unloading and warehousing operations. There are great reserLes in the improvement of the - - technology of the process~s of handling individually packaged cargo. The development of package and container shipments of individually packaged cargo is transforming the technology of materials-handling, loading and un- loading and warehousing oper~tions, is increasing the capacity of cargo areas, is shortening the layovers of rolling stock for loading and unload- ing and is speeding up the travel time. Un the whole by the start of the lOth Five-Year Plan 55 million tons of = freight were hauled in containers, 170 million tons (primarily lumber, con- struction materials, rolled ferrous metal products, pipe) were hauled in packages, of them 25 million tons were individually packaged freight. _ Mcre than 1 million general-purpose containers, for the hauling of which general-purpose rolling stock is used and specialized rolling stock for transpcrting medium-weight and heavy containers is being built, are in use in the national economy. 6 FOR OFFICIAL USE ONLY APPROVED FOR RELEASE: 2007/02/08: CIA-RDP82-00850R000300040021-1 APPROVED FOR RELEASE: 2007102/08: CIA-RDP82-00850R000300040021-1 FOR OFFICIAL USE ONLY In 1977 36.1 million tons of freight were shipped in containers on the rail- roads (as against 26.4 million tons in 1970 and 35.4 million tons in 1975), while the freight turnover of the container fleet increased to 70.5 billion ton-kilometers (as against 41.4 billion ton-kilometers in 1970 and 65.6 bil- lion ton-kilometers in 1975). By the end of the lOth Five-Year Plan almost the entire medium-weight and heavy fleet will consist of inetal cont-3ir.Nrs. The national economic efficiency of container shipments, according to the - data of the USSR Ministry of Railways, is governed by the fact that the transportation costs when delivering individua.lly packaged cargo by con- - tainers as compared with their shipment iz pool cars are reduced by approxi- mately 20-22 million rubles per 1 million tons of cargo, including by 16-18 million rubles by the reduction of the expenditures on packaging and packirg and by approximately 4 million rubles as a result of the decrease - of the operating eh-penses of the railroads (in 1978 the cost of shipments of individually packaged freight in contsiners and boxcars was respectively 5.7 and 8.9 kopecks per 10 ton-kilometers). Here approximately 1,500 people, who are engage~3 in heavy manual work in transportation, and up to 4,000 people, who are engaged in the production and repair of packaging, packing and so for.~ch in industry, are released for every million tons of freight. Methods of transporting met~.~i products using specialized cars and contain- e~s are being developed. Thus, it is feasible to transport 65 percent of the cold-rolled sheet by specialized cars and 20 percent by specialized containers. Here the appraisal of the preferability of the use of a 10-ton or a 20-ton specialized container is made according to the cost of the use of 1 m2 of its area when similar type sizes of rolled products are being - loaded (the minimum cost of the use of 1 m2 of the area o� containers is 86 rubles/m2). If the consumers are located more than 5~0 km from the sup- - plier, it is more efficient to use in the case of sma11 shipments (up to 1,000 tons a year) disposable packaging. _ A sheet-carrying c~r, which makes it possible to shorten the time of load- ing and unloading operations from 2.5-3 hours to 10-15 minutes, has been ~ developed for the ha~l.ing of large sheet 5tee1. The annual economic impact . from the use of the sheet carrier for hauling the products of the Azovstal' - Plant is 200,000 rubles. . It is advisable to ship small-diameter pipe, small- and medium-section rolled products and some sheet stael in packets using disposable packaging, hardware in packs and boxes and rolls of steel on pallets. Primarily large-diameter pipe, plate and large-section steel (50 percent of the sec- tion and sheet rolled metal and 4~J percent of the steel pipe) are now de- livered without packaging. On the whole the process of packing and containerizing products is not proceeding rapidly enough. The development of package shipments is being checked by the fact that most consignors lack means of machine packaging, the production of which still laga considerably behind the demand. The _ 7 - FOR OFFICIAL USE ONLY APPROVED FOR RELEASE: 2007/02/08: CIA-RDP82-00850R000300040021-1 APPROVED FOR RELEASE: 2047102108: CIA-RDP82-00850R000300040021-1 FOR OFFICIAL :JSE ONLY str.ucture of the container fleet in general-purpose transportation is ir- rational. At gresent80 percent of the fleet is made up of small (up to 3 tons) containers, while in conformity with the pattern of the freight f?ow it should have 45 percent containers up to 3 tons, 25 percent--up to 5 tons and 30 percent--over 10 tons. There are not enough large and spe- - cialized, particularly flexible, containers in circulation. At present - package and container shipments take up approximately one-third of the freight, whicti it is advisable to deliver in packets and cor.tainers. An effective structural policy in the sphere of circulation should ensure both progress in the means of delivery and the simultaneous balanced de- velopment of the cargo areas at warehouse facilities. Unf~rtunately, far from all the warehouse facilities of industry, transportation and material and technical supply, including the general-purpose warehouse facilities, which have been newly put into operation, are ready for the compleCe mechan- ized handling of large containers. - On the route of products for production purposes from the producer to the consumer, as materials-handling, loading and unloading and warehousing operations are saturated with means of inechanization, the warehouses to a considerable extent become the organizing unit of the freight traffic. At warehouse facilities first of all *'~e technological comparability of the _ materials-handling equipment, the transportation ~quipment and the warehouse equipment is required, for which the latter should be regarded as components of a unified system, which wou14 correspond not only with each other, but also with the pattern of the freight flow and firat of all witln the struc- ture of the freig::t units of individually packaged products. In this connection, in addition to containers and packets, modern transporta- tion packaging is assuming great importance as a means of the mechanization of materials-handling, loading and unloading and warehousing operations. Such packaging is a necessary component of the advanced technology of load- ing and unloading, transportation and warehousing operations. Forming a consolidated or independent freight unit, whfch has been unified on the basis of a standard module, it creates the basis for the standardization of the processes of moving freight, being combined in the best manner with the parameters of the drive elements of materials-hand.ling and warehousing equipment and the working surfaces of the means of transportation. Here the improvement of the use of the rolling stock and the acceleration of the freight turnover are achieved. Modern transportation packaging for the shipment of products for industrial engineering purposes is an impor- ~ tant infrastructural component, which is capable of having a substantial influence on the improvement of the turnover of ineans of production (at the beginning of the lOth Five-Year Plan one-third of the transportation pack- aging was used for the shipment of products for production purposes). _ Loading, unloading and warehousing operations predominate at warehouses, � therefore the unitizing of materials-handling equipment with the hoisting mechanisms, with the storage racks, pallets and other equipment on the basis of the complete standardization and unification of the methods of - 8 FOR. OFFICIAL USE ONLY . APPROVED FOR RELEASE: 2007/02/08: CIA-RDP82-00850R000300040021-1 APPROVED FOR RELEASE: 2007102/08: CIA-RDP82-00850R000300040021-1 FOR OFFICTAI, iJSE OPlI,Y handling the freight, the technology of the procegses and the systems of mechanization will have an appreciable influence on the tectinology of materials-�handling, loading and unloadir..g 4nd ~rarehousing operations. The reequipment and n,odernization of warehousing services, the placetnent of modern w~,rehouse comp~.exes into operation, including in the sphere uf th~ circulation of ineans of production, should promote the iuiific :tj.or.. -;f t_~; ch�- nologic ~l pl ~ces~es and the intro~uction of highly prod~ictive equiptaent. Durir_g the lOth Five-Year Plan large supply arid sales complexes are being bui.lt at industrial centers to strengthen the material and technical base of warehouse supply. The warehousing services of the eastern regions of the country are being developed rapidly. Thus, of the total amount of ware- ~ house area put into operation during the Ninth Five-�Year P1an remote re- gions account for 31 percent, during the lOth Five-Year Plar~--42 percent. By the end of the lOth Five-Year Plan the cap acities of the statewide supply bases and warehouses will have increased from 44.5 million tons in 1970 and 51 million tons in 1975 to 65 million tons in 1R80, the warehouse area for enclosed ware~ouses--from 3.1 million m2 and 4.5 mil.Iion m2 to _ 7 million m2. It is necessary to examine this development of the warehouse network, whict~ serves the intersectorial indirect turnover, together with - the directians of the development of the dePartmental suppl.y and sales _ network. The problem is that the statewid~ supply system owns onl}� one-fourth of the fixed capital for supp~.y and sales purposes (excludin~ petroleum sup- ply), a fourth of the wareho use areas, which belong to the sector of mate- rial and technical supPly. This requires first oL a11 the coordinatian of the national economic, secto rial and regional programs of the constructlon of modern warehouse facilities for suppl�y and sales purposes in order to _ properly locate them in accordance s~_th uniform crite:-:~a ak indu.~trial centers and territorial production complexes, to choose snundly the special- ~Izatian and capacity oF the bases and warehouses, as wel~! as fio pursue a progressive technical policy in the area of materials-handl~tng, loading anu unloading and warehousing ope�rations. The correlation of the inves tments in the new construction and renovation, on the one hand, of the warehouse �acilities of supply and sales organiza- tions and, on tkte other, the warehousin~ services o� enterprises is an im- portant ~-~~oblem from the st~3ndpoint of ~he construction of the warehouse _ network. AC present the fixed capital in the warehousing services of all the se.ctors af the natioiial economy i.s valued at approxi~ately SQ-~55 bi].- l.ion rubles, of which unly slightly more than 15 parcent belongs to the sector of material and techniral ~upply, while the rem~inder is a par~ of the productive capital of industrial, construction and transportation en- - terprises. These proportions ar.e a consequence of the tradition of the "natur`1 economy" of the absolute majority of enter;~rises, as well as of the fact ttiat in regions of new construction, and nat only new construction, the usual pract9_ce is the dispersal, and therefore the increase of. the produceion stocks of m,aterial and technical resources amo:~g xlumeroiis sma11 ~ facilities of the~ war.ehouse network of construction subdivlsion:s. Th~ 9 FOR OFFICIAL tTSE ONLY APPROVED FOR RELEASE: 2007/02/08: CIA-RDP82-00850R000300040021-1 APPROVED FOR RELEASE: 2007/02148: CIA-RDP82-44850R000300044421-1 . ' FOR ~ FFICIAI. USE ONLY ~~c~pl_~ o:_ ccnstructiou pr~jects in accordance with their orders directly f~.;;n sl-.,s~ewide supply bases and warehouses is conducive to the shortening of p~oduct stora~e time. = Tl:c sources of the "natural eccnomy" must also be sought in the sphere of sup~~:Ly a.nd sales processes. The preservation of the traditions of the ~~ilul:ll3"1~L c~conomy" in many ways ~s exFlained by the low level of production cooperar.ion, the inadequate reliability and efficiency of supply and the oner.a~~.~~n of the transportation conveyor, which leads to the violation of _ tile opLiuiu[n ratio of investments in the warehouse facilities of enterprises ancl supply and sales organiza~ians. '.Che nroblem of developing the warehousing services of an enterprise is a complex one. And it can be solved nat only within the frameworic of the a.7_t~ernative: either to develop ra.pidly the warehousing services of enter- - prises, or the war.ehouse network of supply and sales organizations, but by searching for the most feasible supply system for this case. Here the - prele:.ability in all instances of the system of the State Committee for - Ma.terial and Technical Supply would hardly correspond to the diversity of Ch~> ;:pE:cific conditions of production or construction activity at an in- - dttstrial center or territorial production complex. Thus, if the amounts of I.ndustrial construction in a region are sufficiently stable and correspond ~o th~ turnover of goods and freight of a large warehouse facility, it makes iio basic difference whether this facility is in the system of a sup- p1y and sales organization of a construction ministry or statewide supply. Ttle main thing in increasing the effectiveness of the expenditures on the creai: ion and functioning of warehousing services is ~o invest capital in the construction of modern warehouse complexes, which are equipped with ad- vanced means of labor with allowance made for the properties of the com- modity flow of products for industrial engineering purposes and its pro- - vision with transportation, the advanced technology of_ materials-handling, lociding and unloading and warehousing operations.~ - With the further improvement of the organization of the commodity flows of indus~rial products for production purposes the opportunities for the re- equipmen.t of the sphere of material and technical supply increase substan- tially. The intensive saturation of this sphere with mea*~s of labor, which ensure - the improvement of the use of the volumes of the available network of ware- l~~ouse facilities primarily b,y means of increasing the height of storage 2. Specialists recommend that the construction process begin with the 'lay- ing of roads. To this it is also possible to add the suggestion that the construction of production facilities begin with the erection of caarehouse facilities, not temporary ones, but permanent ones, which are envisaged by the plan of the iacility being erected, so that after its _ placement into operation the warehouses would be changed over from the storage of construction materials and equipment to the storage of raw � materials (materials) and finished products. 10 FOR OFFICIAL USE ONLY I APPROVED FOR RELEASE: 2007/02/08: CIA-RDP82-00850R000300040021-1 APPROVED FOR RELEASE: 2047102108: CIA-RDP82-00850R000300040021-1 - FOR OFFICIAJ. ?JSE ONLY took place during the Eighlh and Ninth Five~Year Plans. Thus, during the Ninth Five-Year Plan at the bases and warehouses of the USSR State Commit- - tee for Material and Technical Supply the introduction of advanced ware- house technology and means oF mechanization on 3.3 million m2 of operating warehouse areas made it possible to obtain an impact equal to the placer~ient iuto operation oF 1 million :n2 of new areas. The presenC period is c~~ar- acterized by the elaboration and introduction of complex technological de- cisions at large war~house facilities, which are being renovated and newly placed into operation, where particular importance is assigned to the use - of the packi~g and containerization of cargo. _ Considerable renovation of waret~ousing services is also being carried out during the lOth Five-Year Plan in the system of the USSR State Committee �or - the S~ipply of Production Equipment for Agriculture. Operating warehouse facilities are being supplied with new equipment, an improved freight han- dling technology is being introduced. As a result the capacity of ware- house buildings is increasing 1.5- to 2-fold, the level of inechanization of loading, unloading and warehousi.ng operations is increasing by 15-20 per- cent, the cost of handling 1 ton of freight is decrea.sing by 20-25 percent. Ttie construction of new warehousing facilities, including large highly mechsnized facilities, is being continued. The height of the existing warehouse buildings in most cases is from 3.b to 6 m, while, according to - ' the data of Promtrar.sNllproyekt, with an increase of the height of the facilities of multiproduct rack storage warehouses from 6 to 12.6 m ~he cost of 1 m3 of the building is reduced by 40 percent, which yields a sav- ing of up to 360 tons of inetal and about 600,000 rubles at each such facil- ity. A neight of the rooms of 9.6 m is envisaged by the standard plans of spe;.ialized warehouses, the estimated cost of the construction of 1 m2 of the work area of which ranges from 80 to 120 rubles. This height of the warehause at pr~sent is used as the base height, although due to the lack of the appropriate means of inechanization even these comparatively low facilities are only 75 percent utilized. The development of the warehouse network in transport and first of all rail transport is a great reserve for improving the turnover of ineans of produc- _ tion. Despite the fact that brick and reinforced concrete buildings make up more than 50 percent of the enclosed warehouse area in rail transport, the bulk of the warehouse fa~ilities are prewar buildings with a low stor- age height, which complicate th~ use of modern means of the mechanization of loading, unloading, transportation and warehousing operations. It is also possible to group with the shortcomings of old warehouse facilities rhe presence at the ma~ority of them of narrow ramps, as well as the misaline- - ment of the level of the floor of the warehouses and the cars, which com- plicates the work of the loaders. The situation is gradually improving. The provision of the material warehouses of the ra~lroads with materials- handling equipment with a lifting capacity of up to 10 tons and more was - required in connection with the delivery by industrial enterprises and statewide supply bases of inetal in packets (7.5-10 t~ns each) and in con- tainers, primarily medium-sized unes. Warehouses with a storage height of 6-8 m, which are being newly built, are being equipped with stacker cranes. Warehouses of the hangar type now make up approximately 15 percent of the 11 ' FOR OFFICIAL USE ONLY APPROVED FOR RELEASE: 2007/02/08: CIA-RDP82-00850R000300040021-1 APPROVED FOR RELEASE: 2047102108: CIA-RDP82-00850R000300040021-1 FOR OFFICIAL USE ONLY warehouse areas. Th~ use of gantry cranes with ar. automatic grab for the tiandling of heavy containers is being expanded. Pallets, containers and the new technical solutions of maCerials-handling, loading and unloading and warehousing operatlons, which are connected urith their introduction, - are becoming more and more widespread. And yet the radical change in the structure of the material and technical base of the sphere of circulation, which hacks the ac~vanced t~chnology of freight handling and the present amounts of the realization of the means of production, is still not occurring rapidly enough. The amount of capi- tal investments allocated during the lOth Five-Year Plan will also not make it possible to e~iminate the formed disproportions. The considerable ex- pansion of the construction of modern warehouse, elevator and refrigerator capacities, of the output of specialized transportation equipment for the haul.ing of bulk, perishable and other cargo and of the production of ad- vanced means of the mechanization and automation of materials-hand].ing, loading and unloading and warehousing operations, which back the technical base of the process of integrati�_; the transportation and warehouse network, is necessary. The formed situation requires the further centralization of the management - of the sphere of circulation of the means of production, the intensifica- - tion of the concentration of warehousing services, the acceleration of the _ _ rate and the increase of the quality of its reequipment. The introduction in the sphere of the realization of the means of production of the achieve- ~ ments of scientific and technical progress on the level of the programs of - the national economic complexes is making it possible to overcome the ex- istin~ lag behind social needs in the level of its development at the pres- ent stage. At this time this sphere is at the stage of the transition from the techni- cal equipment with means of labor, which ensure the storage and movement of stocks of products for industrial engineering purposes without a change of ~ the use value of the latter and without a radical change in the technology of materials-handling, loading and unloading and warehousing operaticns, to - ~ the gradual saturation with means of labor, which change the adopted tech- nology of materials-handling, loading and unloading and warehousing opera- tions and promote the greatest preparednesa of the use values of the products being delivered for the interests of production. The launched construction of powerful completely mechanized warehouse facilities is also an important aspect of the present stage of the introduction of sci~entific and technical progress in the sphere of circulation. Such warehouses, as units of in- tensive freight handling, form as if the key centers of the transportation and warehouse infrastructure. They promote the improvement of the trans- portation process and the use of modern types of packaging, containers and ~ means of packaging along the entire route of the movement of inea~~s of pro- duction from the producer to the consumer. In connection with the increase of the leveZ ~f cooperation and the scale - of production the extensive introduction of standardized transportation 12 FOR OFFICIAL USE ONLY APPROVED FOR RELEASE: 2007/02/08: CIA-RDP82-00850R000300040021-1 APPROVED FOR RELEASE: 2047102108: CIA-RDP82-00850R000300040021-1 rOR CFI'ICIAL USE ONLY _ packaging and pallets, cargo packages and cont~~iner~, especially special- ized and heavy ones, is revealing means for the considerable acceleration of the turnover of. means of production. This will be promoted by the - stepped-ug development of the production of container carriers: ships, trucks and so on, including those equipped wit.h their own drive elementy which makes lt possible to grab a load without the assistance oL z~:I.~~nger; of container reloaders with a large lifting capdcity and an automatic grab; of highly productive cranes and loaders; of package~making machines and so forth. _ Further advances in the development of the technical base ot ~.he processes , of stozing and transporting means of production, which would ensure the optimization of the entire cycle of their economic turnover in physica~ production, are necessary. The urgency of these tasks stems from the n~ed to J.ncrease production efficiency and work quality, tY:e importance of whicti - was emphasized by L. I. Brezhnev at the June (198~) CPS[J Central Commi.ttee Plenum. - COPYRIGHT: Izdatel'stvo "Pravda", "Voprosy ekonomiki", 1980 7807 ~ CSO: 1829 13 FOR OFFICIAL USE ONLX APPROVED FOR RELEASE: 2007/02/08: CIA-RDP82-00850R000300040021-1 APPROVED FOR RELEASE: 2047102108: CIA-RDP82-00850R000300040021-1 FOR OFFICIAL USE ONLY OCEAN AND RIVER GEOGRAPHY OF MARITIME NAVIGATION Moscow GEOGRAFIYA MORSKOGO SUDOKHODSTVA: UCHEBNIK DLYA 3UDOVODITEL'SKOY SPETSIAL'NOSTI MORSKIKH WZOV in Russian 1979 pp 2, 291-295 ~ [Annotation and Tal : of Contents from the book "Geografiya morskoqo sudo- khodstva: uchebnix dlya sudovoditel'skoy spetsial'nosti morskikh vuzov" by G. L. Nadtochiy, Izdatel'stvo"Transport,"295 pages] [Text] The general fundamentals of the geography of maritime shipping are outlined in thP tzxtbook and the.characteristics of the main shipping routes _ in the world ocean are given. The role and significance of maritime trans- port in support of shipments and;'foreign trade ties of different countries is pointed out. The book is intended for students of ship navigation faculties of higher n?aritime engineering schools of the Ministry of the Maz~itime Fleet and for students of the operational and economic faculties of the Institute of Mari- time Fleet Engineers. It is also of interest to specialists of the maritime fleet and may also be used by workers in other types of transpork. _ Contents . . Page Introduction SECTION 1. FUNDAMENTALS OF THE GEOGRAPFiY OF MARITIME NAVIG?.TION Chapter 1. The World Ocean and Its Transport Regionalization 6 ~1. The world ocean 6 ~2. Navigation conditions in the world ocean and their.effect on navi~ation ~ 11 Chapter 2. Characteristics of Maritime Transport 26 ~3. Transport as a sector of material production 26 �4. The physi.cal essence of the maritime transport process 27 g5. The trRnsport characteristics of s'~~ips and their classification 28 g6. The transport characteristics and classification of maritime ports. Ship repair enterprises 30 14 FOR OFFICIAL USE ONLY APPROVED FOR RELEASE: 2007/02/08: CIA-RDP82-00850R000300040021-1 APPROVED FOR RELEASE: 2047102108: CIA-RDP82-00850R000300040021-1 FOR OFFICIAL USE ONLY Chapter 3. Maritime Routes and 5election of Them 34 �7. Classification of maritime routes 34 �8. Selection of routes with regard to mean statistical perennial data of the hydrometeorological situation 37 g9. Calculation of optimum routes by usinq "Atlases of Hydrometeorological Conditions for Ship Navigation of the Maritime Fleet" gg �10. Determining the optimum routes by sea-state forecast charts 41 ~11. Selecting methods of d.~termining optimum routes 46 Chapter 4. Navigation on Maritime and Ocean Routes 49 - ~12. Economic and geographic factors in formation of maritime - shipments 49 ~13. Regions favorable to maritime communications 51 ~ ~14. Cargo traffic volumes and their classification 52 _ _ �15. Maritime navigation 53 _ SECTION 2. THE GEOGRAPHY OF MARITIME ROUTES AND THE NAVIGATION OF THE SOVIET UNION Chapter 5. 7.'he Maritime Transport of the USSR and Its Disposition 55 ~16. The Soviet Union--a great maritime power 55 ~17. The main steps in dev~lopment of the maritime transport of � - the U~SR 56 ~18. T:~e specitic weight and position of maritime transport in the coux~try's unified transport system 61 ~19. The mariicime basins and their significance in the country's cargo shipments 63 �20. Problems of developing the Soviet Union's unified water- transport system 64 Chapter 6. The Black Sea-Azov Basin ~'66 ~21. The geographic locaticn and transport-economic significance of the basin 66 �22. The physical-geographical and navigation characteristics _ of the basin 67 _ ~23. The re].ationship of the Black Sea-Azov Basin to other basins and the world Qcean 69 ~24. Maritime ports _ ~25. The economic character~stics of regions of the USSR attracted to the basin and cargo and passenger traffic - volumes 74 �26. The fleet and shi re sir ~ P p yards, their disposition and organization of management of maritime transport in tlie basin 76 �27. Maritime routes and the characteristics of navigation in individual sections of the basin 78 _ 15 FOR OFFICIAL USE ONLY _ APPROVED FOR RELEASE: 2007/02/08: CIA-RDP82-00850R000300040021-1 APPROVED FOR RELEASE: 2047102108: CIA-RDP82-00850R000300040021-1 - FOR OFFICIAL USE ONLY ~28. The geography of shipmen~s and navigation on maritime routes. Prospects for development 79 Chapter 7. The :.aspian Basin 81 ~29. The geographic location and transport-economic signifi- cance of the baGin 81 ~30. The physical-geographical and navigation characteristics of the basin 81 ~31. Maritime ports 84 ~32. The economic charac~eristics Qf regions of the USSR attra~tive to the basin and cargo and passenger - flows~ gg - ~33. The fleet and ship repair yards, their disposition and organization of management of maritime transport in the basin 87 534. Maritime routes and the characteristics of navigation in individual sections of the basin 88 �35. The geography of shipments and navigation on maritime routes 88 Chapter 8. The Baltic Basin 89 g36. The geographic location a,.3 transport-economic signifi- cance of the basin 89 �37, The physical-geographical and navigation characteristics of the basin 91 ~38. The relationship of the Baltic Basin to other basins and to the world ocean 93 �39. Maritime ports 93 ~40. The e~onomic characteristf.cs of regions of the USSR attractive to the basin and cargo and passenger flowsi 96 �41. The fleet and ship repair yards, their disposition and organization of management of maritime transport in the basin 98 ~42. Maritime routes anci the characteristics of navigation ~ in individual sectj.ons of the b~:sin 99 ~43. The gec~raphy of shipments and navigation on maritime routes gg = Chapter 9. The Arctic Basin 101 �44. Z'he geographic location and transport-economic siqnif- icance of the basin 101 ~45. The physical-geographical and navigation ~haracteristics of the basin 101 ~46. Maritime ports 104 _ ~47. The economic~characteristics of regions of the USSR - attractiue t,o the basin and cargo and passenger ~ f].ows~ 105 16 FOR GFFICIAL USE ONLY APPROVED FOR RELEASE: 2007/02/08: CIA-RDP82-00850R000300040021-1 APPROVED FOR RELEASE: 2007102/08: CIA-RDP82-00850R000300040021-1 FOR OFFICIAL USE ONLY - �48. The fleet and ship repair yards, their disposition and organization of management of maritime transport in the basin 106 ~49. Maritime routes and the characteristics of navigation in individual sections of the basin 107 ~50. The geography of shipments and navigation on maritime routes 107 Chapter 1G. The Far Eastern Basin 108 - �51. The g~ographic location and transport-economic signifi- cance of the basin 108 ~52. The physical-geographical and navigation characteristics of the basin 109 ` �53. The relationship of ~he Far Eastern Basin to other basins and the wcrld ocean 112 g54. Maritime ports 113 g55. The economic characteristics of regions of the USSR attraCtive to the basin and cargo and passenger flowsr li7 ~56. The fleet and ship repair yasds, their disposition and organization of management of maritime transport in the basin 12t~ ~57. Mariti.me routes and the characteristics of navigation in individual sections of the basin 121 _ �58. The geography of shipments and navigation on maritime r routes 122 Chapter 11. The Arctic Seas and the Northern Sea Route 124 �59. The physical-geographical and navigation charactexistics of seas in the Soviet Arctic 124 ~60. The economic characteristics of regions of attraction and maritime ports 125 ~61. The Northern Sea Route 127 ~62. The concept of selecting the route under ice conditions 127 ~63. The role of Siberian rivers in development of navigation along the Northern Sea Route 129 ~64. Western and Eastern Arctic imports and transit shipments of cargo along the Northern Sea Route 130 �65. Prospects for development of navigation along the Northern Sea Route , 131 SECTION 3. THE GEOGRAPHY OF MARITIME ROU~ES AND NAVIGATION ' IN SOCIALIST COUNTRIES Chapter 12. The General Characteristics of Economic Development of a Worldwide Socialist System 132 �66. Formation of a worldwide socialist system 132 �67. 7.'he worldwide socialist market and economic cooperation of the socialist countries 134 17 FOR OFFICIAL USE ONLY APPROVED FOR RELEASE: 2007/02/08: CIA-RDP82-00850R000300040021-1 APPROVED FOR RELEASE: 2007102/08: CIA-RDP82-00850R000300040021-1 FOR OFFTCIAL USE ONLY ~68. The Council for Mutual Economic Assistance and its significance to development of maritime transport 135 ~69. The role of maritime transport in accomplishing economic ties of the worldwide socialist market 137 Chap~er 13. Maritime Routes and Navigation of the European Socialist Countries 138 �70. The Polish Peoples Republic 138 ~71. The German Democratic Republic 142 - �72. The Peoples Republic of Bulgaria 143 �73. The Socialist Republic of Rumania 145 ~74. The Peoples Socialist Republic of Albania 147 �75. The Socialist Federated Republic of Yugoslavia 148 _ �76. The Czechoslovakian Socialist Republic 151 g77. The Hungarian Penples Republic 152 �78. The role of the Danube, Oder and Visla Rivers in direct water shipments of the European socialist countries and the USSR 153 - Chapte~ 14. Maritime Routes and Navigation of the Socialist Countries of Asia and the Republic of Cuba 155 ~79. The Chinese Peoples Republic 155 �80. The Korean Peoples Democratic Republic 161 �31. The Socialist Republic of Vietnam 162 ~82. The Republic of Cuba 163 SECTION 4. THE GEOGRAPHY OF MARITIME ROUTES AND NAVIGA'~ION IN CAPITALIST COUNTRIES Chapter 15. General Characteristics of Capitalist Maritime r Transport 165 583. Econ~mic ties in the worldwide capitalist economy after World War II 165 �84. The European economic comm}anity (the "Common Market") 167 g85. The strugqle of United States impezialists for world- wide dominance in maritime navigation 168 ~86. The role of the ocean basins in international navigation 169 �87. Capitalist maritime transport as a constituent part of the naval forces of the imperialist powers 170 Chapter 16. The Major Marit~me Ports of the Deve?oped Capitalist Countries 171 ~88. General data 171 ~89. European ports �171 �90. North American ports 189 ~91. 5outh American ports 196 - ~92. Asian an~ African ports 203 g93. Ports of Australia and Oceania 209 18 FOR OFFICIAL USE ONLY APPROVED FOR RELEASE: 2007/02/08: CIA-RDP82-00850R000300040021-1 APPROVED FOR RELEASE: 2047102108: CIA-RDP82-00850R000300040021-1 I FOR UFFICIAL USE ONLY Cnur~ L-~r. 1"/. Z4ie t~kirit~me Ports of the Developing Countries of Psia, Africa and Latin Ame.rica 213 f 9~?. Th~ col:i.a,~~~e oF the colonial system and formation of indep~n~er.t states 213 Economic assistance of socialiet countries to developi.ng countries 214 ~~a6~ The poits of the developing countries of Africa 215 g97, The pqrt~s of the developing countries of Asia 226 ~g8, The por�ts of ttie developing countries of Central ~.nd Sou~h America 236 ,fi9�. l~lain trends in development of ports 238 Chaptaz� 18. The riaritime Fleet of Capitalist Countries 239 ~ 100. '~he ciurren~t state and nonuniform distribution of th~ _ mari.time fleet by countries 239 ~101.~ ~Q national fleet of the develc~ping countries of Asia, Africa and Latin America 242 _ ~1C2~ False flags 246 �103~ l~onopolies and competiti.on in maritime navigation 247 ~:~04. Main trends in ctevelopment of the capitalist maritime fleet 249 SEC'.?'TOD1 5. THE GEUGRAPHY OF NAVIGATI~N AND PASSENGER TRANSPORT ON INTERNATIONAL MAR.ITIME ROUTES C}?c'i~tP,.L ? 9. The Geography of Cargo and passenger Flow of the Capitalist Countries on Worldwide and Maritime Routes 251 ~105. The general characteristics of ~axgo flow ~ - in the w~orld ocean 251 �106. Pptroleum cargo 253 ~107. Sgan ore 258 ~108. Pit coal 260 ~109. Timber cargo 263 5 ].10, Grain � 264 ~ J.11., Genera.l cargo 268 4].7.2, The passenger transport of capitalist countries 270 C:ha~te.r 20. The Main Maritime and Ocean Routes Used in World zVavigation 272 ~:~t3~ N~tj~igation on the main lines of international routes in the At].antic Ocean 272 41_].4, Z'.he Panama and Suez Canals 279 ~ 1:1.5. 1~lavigation on the main lines of international routes in the Indian ncean 282 ~1.J.6, Navigation on the main lines of international routes in the Pacific Ocean 284 ~J..J.'7. Ma.ritime routes and the characteristics of navigation in the Antarctic 287 COFYRI:GIIT: I~datel'stvo "Transport", 1979 6521 19 - CSO: ~3.144 FOR OFFICIAL USE ONLY ~ APPROVED FOR RELEASE: 2007/02/08: CIA-RDP82-00850R000300040021-1 APPROVED FOR RELEASE: 2007/02148: CIA-RDP82-44850R000300044421-1 FOR OFFICIAL USE ONLY " ~ OCEAN AND RIVER SEA TRANSPORT STATISTICS Moscow STATISTIKA MORSKOGO TRANSPORTA in Ruseian 1979 aigned ' to press 22 Nov 79 pp 2, 232 /Annotation and tabl~ of contents from book by M.I. Bruskin, Izdatel'stvo "Transport", 3,000 copies~ 232 pages7 ~ [Text] Annotation This book describes the basics of the common theory of statistics and outlines in detail the methodolo gy and practice ot aea transport statistics. Particular attention is given to questions having to do with calculating the system of indica- tors and evaluating the operation of the fleet and ports. Ex- amples are cited which characterize the theory and practice of sea transport statistics, the role and importance of the auto- mated control system. This edition outlines all changes in the practice of statistical accounting t~:at have occurred since publication of the preceding edition in 1971. The book is to be used by studenta of higher maritime institu- _ tions of learning; it can also be used by workers in aea transport in practice. The book containa four illustrations _ and 75 tables. - Table of Contenta Section One. The Basics of the Common Theory of Statistics Chapter 1. The Object and Method of Statistics 3 Chapter 2. The Organization of Statistics in the USSR 7 Chapter 3. Statistical Observation 12 Chapter 4. Summary and Grouping of Statistical. Data 18 20 FOR OFFICIAL USE ONLY APPROVED FOR RELEASE: 2007/02/08: CIA-RDP82-00850R000300040021-1 APPROVED FOR RELEASE: 2007102/08: CIA-RDP82-00850R000300040021-1 FOR OFFICIAL USE ONLY Chapter 5. Absolute, Average and Relative Valuea in Sta[iatica 25 Absolute Values 26 Average Values 26 Relative Values 34 Chapter 6. Indexes and Dynamic Series 38 Tndexes 38 ' Dynamic Series 42 Chapter 7. Graphic Representation of Statistical Data 48 Section Two~ Se3 Transport Statistics Chapter 8. Shipping Statistics 52 Tasks and OrganizaCion of Shipment Account- ing 52 Quantitative Indicators df Cargo Shipments 53 Factor of Accounting in Shipment Accounting 55 ~rouping of Statistical Indicators of Ship- ments 56 Statistical and Operational Accountability for Cargo Shipments and Passengers 64 Statistical Indicators for Containerized and Pack aged Shipments 87 Chapter 9. Statistics on the Availability and Opera- tion of the Merchant Fleet 91 Statistics on Availability of Merchant Fleet 92 - Statistics on the Use of the Merchant Trans- port Fleet 99 Accounting for the Distribution of Time of Transport Ships at Anchor in Ports 132 ' Chapter 10. Statistics on the Technical Rigging and Operation of Sea Ports 140 Accounting for the Availability and Actual Use of Reloading Complexes (PK), Moorings and Warehouses 140 _ Estimating the Availability and Use of Port Reloading Equipment 144 Accounting of the Work of Reloading Equip- ment 148 21 FOR OFFICIAL USE ONLY APPROVED FOR RELEASE: 2007/02/08: CIA-RDP82-00850R000300040021-1 APPROVED FOR RELEASE: 2007/02148: CIA-RDP82-44850R000300044421-1 FOR OFFICIAL USE ONLY Freight T:ansport 150 Port Ship Handling Statistics 152 Loading and Unloading Statistics 155 Stati.stics on Processing of Ships in Port 165 Chapter 11. Dispatch and Operations Accounting of the Use of the Fleet and Ports 169 - Chapter l2. Labor aud Wage Statistics in Sea Transport 176 Organization of Labor Statistics 176 Statistics on the Number of Workers, Their Composition and Movement 179 _ Grouping of SJorkers According to Type of Activity 183 Accounting for the Turnover and Fluctua- tion of Workers ..............e... 187 Wage Statistics 190 Labor Productivity Statistics 194 Chapter 13. Financial Statistics on the Basic Llork of Ships and Ports 196 Chapter 14. Statistics for Other Kinds of Activity of Sea Transport 2~3 Statistics on the Work of Industrial Enter- prises 203 Statistics on Material-Technical Supply 208 , Fuel Expenditure Statistics 209 Capital Investment Statistics 211 Chapter 15. Statistics and the Automated Control System of Sea Transport ......o..�������.�������� 214 _ Chapter 16. The Economic Analysis ot Statistical Data 226 COPYRIGHT: Izdatel'stvo "Transport", 1979. 8927 CSO: 1829 E~ 22 FOR OFFICIAL U5E ONLY APPROVED FOR RELEASE: 2007/02/08: CIA-RDP82-00850R000300040021-1