The issue isn’t missing data. It’s that the data is static, fragmented, and interpreted differently across stakeholders.
Each participant in the port call ecosystem works with their own version of reality.
Schedules shift, vessel conditions evolve, and operational constraints change – but the data exchanged early in the process rarely reflects this dynamic context. As a result, planners build buffers like extra time in berth windows, conservative yard allocation, or contingency-heavy labor planning into their plans. These buffers protect operations – but reduce efficiency and mask underlying coordination gaps.
The problem becomes even more visible during a vessel’s first call at a terminal. Critical vessel-specific insights – such as crane productivity, the special cargo mix, or weight and placement of hatch covers – are missing or incomplete. These gaps only become evident during execution.
By then, any adjustment is reactive, not strategic.
Port call planning does not fail due to lack of data. It fails because data is not aligned into a shared, actionable planning context. Each stakeholder sees only a partial picture – filtered through their own systems and assumptions. Without a unified context, even complete information cannot produce reliable plans.
To move from assumption-driven planning to precision execution, the industry needs more than incremental improvements—it needs a shared digital foundation.
This is where the Kaleris Cargo Data Exchange Hub comes in.
The Cargo Data Exchange Hub creates a shared digital environment around each port call- turning fragmented data into coordinated action. At its core, it provides a central data space where all stakeholders – carriers, terminals, and vessels – can retrieve exchange information, collaborate, and make decisions in real time.
Instead of disconnected data flows and siloed systems, the Hub establishes:
By integrating onboard systems, stowage planning tools, and terminal platforms, it removes the fragmentation that drives uncertainty.
The Cargo Data Exchange Hub acts as both a data exchange platform and workflow engine, enabling centralized data management across vessel, terminal, and carrier systems, time-critical updates throughout planning and execution, workflow-driven collaboration, including approvals for stowage plans and secure, permission-based data sharing. It connects seamlessly to tools such as the loading computer and stowage planning systems, allowing stakeholders to work within their existing environments, while sharing a unified data context.
By replacing fragmented communication with shared context, the Hub delivers measurable results:
- Improved planning efficiency and execution reliability
- Faster, data-driven decision-making
- Reduced operational disruption
- Better view on the seaworthiness of the ship
- Better coordination across stakeholders
Ultimately, it shortens turnaround times and improves overall network performance.
And the Cargo Data Exchange Hub is more than a tool – it’s an enabler of a connected cargo ecosystem. By linking vessels, carriers, and terminals in a unified digital network, it supports key industry trends like increased collaboration across alliances, standardized digital workflows and end-to-end visibility and coordination. It transforms port call execution from a fragmented process into a coordinated, data-driven operation.
Today, port calls start with assumptions because planning lacks shared context. But it doesn’t have to stay that way. By creating a single, collaborative data environment, the Cargo Data Exchange Hub shifts the industry from fragmentation to alignment, from buffers to precision and from late validation to early confidence.
The result: fewer surprises, better decisions, higher level of safety and more predictable port call execution.