Safety is not a checklist: Why Total Cargo Management must stay alert

Dangerous goods safety requires more than regulatory compliance, with TCE arguing that effective risk management depends on verifying documentation against the physical shipment, maintaining end-to-end oversight and empowering staff to stop shipments when issues arise. Through its Total Cargo Management (TCM) model, TCE provides continuous operational supervision across acceptance, handling, customs, loading and security, helping airlines identify risks early, improve compliance and strengthen accountability throughout the cargo chain. TCE says combining experienced human oversight with digital monitoring improves safety, security and operational performance, citing a more than 95 percent reduction in customs-related non-compliances for one airline customer through ongoing supervision and monitoring. Dangerous goods safety is presented as a compliance exercise: complete the documentation, follow the checklist and release the shipment. That may satisfy a process, but it does not necessarily control risk. In air cargo, where one mistake can affect an aircraft, its crew and a supply chain, safety must be more than forms. Safety and security must be built into cargo management from booking through to delivery. At TCE, that principle sits at the heart of our Total Cargo Management service. TCM combines decision-making with end-to-end operational control. Acting as an extension of an airline’s organisation, TCE coordinates activities across the cargo chain, maintains visibility over performance and intervenes when standards are not met. Safety, security, compliance and commercial success are not competing priorities. Compliance is the starting point, not the finish line. “At TCE, we do not assume that a shipment is safe simply because the paperwork looks correct. If something does not add up, it does not move.” Pre-checks, approvals and document verification must correspond with the physical shipment. The description, packaging, labels, condition and supporting evidence must tell the same story. Where there is a mismatch, the correct response is to stop, investigate and resolve it. Total Cargo Management gives airlines the oversight needed to apply that discipline consistently across customs, sensitive cargo, supervision, training and audits. Effective TCM connects the commercial promise with operational reality. Lithium batteries demonstrate why this matters. A damaged, defective, incorrectly packed or misdeclared battery can create a serious fire risk. Professionally prepared documents do not prove that the contents match the declaration. The UN 38.3 test summary is therefore important evidence, not a minor attachment. At TCE, we check that it is present, valid and relevant to the shipment. “A test summary must match the battery being transported. A certificate for a different model, manufacturer or configuration is not reassurance. It is a warning sign.” Rules only achieve their purpose when they are correctly understood and consistently applied. This is where the operational dimension of TCM becomes critical. TCE remains involved during acceptance, build-up, transfer and loading, providing airlines with 24/7 support remotely or on-site at hub stations. Most incidents do not suddenly appear once an aircraft is airborne. Their origins can often be traced to acceptance, ULD build-up, warehouse handling or ramp transfer. “Errors typically begin with documentation gaps, segregation failures or decisions made under time pressure. If supervision is weak, routine processes such as ULD build quality, ramp exposure time and segregation discipline can become significant risks. On-site supervision allows an immediate correction before the error reaches the aircraft.” This active supervision creates a direct link between safety, security and accountability. Trained operations coordinators can challenge a deviation, require corrective action and ensure that the agreed airline standard is followed. That visibility is equally important for security. Frameworks such as ACC3 and RA3 support the secure supply chain for cargo entering the European Union from third countries. Yet validation does not remove the need for daily vigilance. Procedures can be approved while still being applied inconsistently. Training may have expired and familiarity can turn into complacency. “Security is not achieved on the day of an audit. It is achieved in the warehouse, on the ramp and at the point of acceptance, every shipment and every time.” TCE’s TCM model looks beyond whether a procedure exists. We examine whether it is understood, followed correctly and effective under real operating conditions. We monitor performance, identify gaps and work with airlines, handlers and other partners to introduce improvements. This oversight extends to customs compliance. For one airline partner, TCE assumed responsibility for full customs reporting. Through continuous supervision and monitoring, we reduced customs-related non-compliances by more than 95 per