When it comes to cross-border
trade in Africa, South African
companies need to appreciate
the various jurisdictions,
insurance legislation and
regulations that are at play.
This was the cautionary
advice from Norton Rose
Fulbright director Peter Lamb
when he addressed a joint
FTW/JCCI business breakfast
on Logistics in Africa in
Johannesburg recently.
He said many African states
were imposing their own
conditions on traders, such as
having to insure goods locally
with a local underwriter/
broker.
“Different international
conventions also work
differently in different
African jurisdictions. Some
international conventions
have not been ratified, while
some African states have made
local amendments to these
conventions,” he said.
African jurisdictions can
also be highly formalistic,
meaning one has to provide
originals of every document
being relied upon.
South African companies
looking to do business in
Africa should furthermore
familiarise
themselves
with the
continent’s
unique
geography.
“Plan ahead
and know the
route. Bridge
strikes on
the continent
are all too
common,
because route
surveyors
are not being
appointed,” he
cautioned.
Parties also needed to
understand what types of
transport modes were being
used, as each form of carriage
had its own risks and could
be governed by its own
international liability regime.
“When developing a risk
matrix, consider it from each
angle ie, from the seller, the
buyer, the banks and the
underwriters. Also, consider
the nature of the cargo, be it
containerised, bulk, breakbulk,
dangerous
goods,
abnormal,
perishable or
frozen goods.”
Two ways to
manage risk
from a legal
perspective
are through
contracts
and through
insurance.
There are four
main issues
to consider;
the contract
of sale; the logistics contracts;
the banking and finance
arrangements and the
insurance policies.
“When considering your
contract of sale, you need
to understand and focus
on when the risk is passing
between the purchaser and
the seller. Whenever anyone
talks about risk, they need
to have a theoretical and
practical understanding of the
incoterms.”
He added that the passing
of risk did not mean the
passing of ownership. “Identify
exactly who is obliged to do
what in terms of liabilities
between the parties. Each
party in the logistics chain
should be governed
by a contractual
relationship.
Understand whose
obligation it is to
do what, what the
risks are, and who
bears them,” he
added.
All parties need
to understand who
makes payment, if
someone is using a
Letter of Credit and
whether or not that
payment is linked
to the logistics
arrangements.
He says many
companies are also
entering into contracts
with little attention paid to
Arbitration, Choice of Bill and
Jurisdiction clauses.
“Don’t just rely on
logistics service
providers as there
are too many roleplayers
in the
chain,” he added
INSERT & CAPTION
Whenever anyone talks
about risk, they need
to have a theoretical
and practical
understanding of the
incoterms.
– Peter Lamb
Traders must play by Africa’s rules when managing risk
13 Oct 2017 - by Tristan Wiggill
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FTW 13 October 2017

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