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Shipping Dangerous Goods: A Starter Guide to IMDG & IATA DGR

GDS Freight Team May 17, 2026 8 λεπτά ανάγνωσης
Shipping Dangerous Goods: A Starter Guide to IMDG & IATA DGR

Batteries, chemicals, aerosols and more are "dangerous goods" with strict rules. Learn UN numbers, hazard classes, packing groups, and what the IMDG Code and IATA DGR require.

Plenty of everyday products are legally dangerous goods: lithium batteries, aerosols, paint, perfumes, lighters, many chemicals. Shipping them is perfectly possible — but only under strict, well-defined rules.

The Two Rulebooks

  • IMDG Code (International Maritime Dangerous Goods) governs dangerous goods by sea, under the IMO.
  • IATA DGR (Dangerous Goods Regulations) governs them by air, aligned with ICAO Technical Instructions.

Both build on the UN "Orange Book" model regulations, so the core concepts — UN numbers, classes, packing groups — are shared.

The Four Things That Define a Dangerous Good

  • UN Number — a four-digit ID (e.g. UN3480 for lithium-ion batteries).
  • Hazard Class — one of nine classes (1 explosives, 2 gases, 3 flammable liquids, … 8 corrosives, 9 miscellaneous incl. lithium batteries).
  • Packing Group — I (high danger), II (medium), III (low), for many classes.
  • Proper Shipping Name — the official description, not your marketing name.

What You Must Provide

A compliant DG shipment needs: correct classification, UN-approved packaging, hazard labels and placards, and a Dangerous Goods Declaration (DGD) signed by a trained person. Air shipments have tighter quantity limits and additional paperwork than sea. Misdeclaration is a serious offence — it endangers lives and can bring heavy penalties.

Lithium Batteries: the Modern Headache

Batteries (UN3480/3481) are the most common DG most shippers meet, with their own state-of-charge limits, marks and, by air, strict rules. Even "battery in equipment" shipments have requirements. When in doubt, treat batteries as dangerous goods and ask a DG-certified forwarder.

Practical Advice

Always use a forwarder with DG capability, obtain the product's Safety Data Sheet (SDS), and declare honestly. The cost of compliance is tiny next to the cost of a rejected, fined or — worst case — burning shipment.

Sources & Further Reading

  • IMO — International Maritime Dangerous Goods (IMDG) Code.
  • IATA — Dangerous Goods Regulations (DGR); ICAO Technical Instructions.
  • UN Recommendations on the Transport of Dangerous Goods (Model Regulations).

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Ετικέτες: #dangerous goods #imdg #iata dgr #un number #hazard class #hazmat

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