Here are 5 best practices for protecting temperature-sensitive cargo throughout the cold chain journey.
1. Pre-Condition Your Cargo
The most common mistake: loading warm cargo into a cold container. If your frozen goods enter the container at -15°C instead of -25°C, the insulation system — whether active or passive — has to work much harder from the start.
Pre-chill or pre-freeze all cargo to the target temperature before loading. Use temperature probes to verify, not just assume. Document starting temperatures for your records.
2. Layer Your Protection
Relying on a single insulation method is risky. The most effective approach uses multiple layers:
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Primary: Pallet covers that wrap individual pallets
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Secondary: Container thermal liner for the entire container
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Tertiary: Reefer unit set to a moderate backup temperature
Each layer buys you time if the one above it fails. A pallet cover might protect cargo for 4-6 hours if the reefer fails. A container liner extends that to 12-24 hours. Together, they provide overlapping protection.
3. Minimize Door Openings
Every time container doors open, temperature-controlled air escapes and ambient air rushes in. For ocean freight, this happens at origin loading, potential transshipment inspections, and destination unloading.
Best practices:
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Pre-stage cargo so loading takes minutes, not hours
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Use insulated door curtains (included in all Insulax container liner kits)
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Schedule inspections during cooler hours when possible
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Train loading crews on cold chain awareness
4. Monitor and Document
You can’t manage what you don’t measure. Place temperature data loggers at multiple points inside the container — near the doors (hottest spot), in the center, and deep inside the cargo stack. Modern loggers provide real-time data via cellular networks, alerting you to temperature excursions while there’s still time to act.
For pharmaceutical shipments, this documentation is often required for regulatory compliance (GDP, IATA CEIV). Even for food shipments, temperature logs can help resolve disputes with buyers and insurance claims.
5. Plan for the Last Mile
The cold chain doesn’t end at the destination port. Last-mile delivery — from port to warehouse, from warehouse to retail — often involves the weakest temperature control. Pallet covers that protect cargo through these final stages can be the difference between a satisfied customer and a rejected shipment.
Consider providing reusable pallet covers to your logistics partners for the last-mile leg. They’re inexpensive insurance against the most vulnerable part of the journey.
Conclusion