International Federation of Freight Forwarders Associations

FIATA International Federation of Freight Forwarders Associations is a non-governmental organization representing freight forwarders worldwide. FIATA's membership includes over 105 National Associations and more than 5,500 logistics and freight forwarding companies.

FIATA International Federation of Freight Forwarders Associations
AbbreviationFIATA
Formation1926 (1926) (in Vienna, Austria)
TypeNon-governmental organization
Location
President
Basil Pietersen
Websitefiata.com

History and organization

FIATA was founded in Vienna, Austria, on 1926 and owes its name to its acronym French: Fédération Internationale des Associations de Transitaires et Assimilés. Also known as the ‘Architects of Transport’, FIATA has Association Members and Individual Members in some 150 countries.

FIATA has consultative status with the United Nations Economic and Social Council (inter alia ECE, ESCAP, ESCWA), the United Nations Conference on Trade and Development, and the UN Commission on International Trade Law. FIATA is recognized as representing the freight forwarding industry by many other governmental organizations, governmental authorities, and private international organizations in the field of transport such as the International Chamber of Commerce, the International Air Transport Association, the International Union of Railways, the International Road Transport Union, the World Customs Organization, the World Trade Organization, etc.

FIATA is headquartered in Geneva, Switzerland.

Documents

FIATA has created several documents and forms to establish a uniform standard for use by freight forwarders worldwide. The documents are easily distinguishable as each has a distinctive colour and carries the FIATA logo which can be seen at the head of this page.

  • FCR: Forwarders Certificate of Receipt
  • FCT: Forwarders Certificate of Transport
  • FWR: FIATA Warehouse Receipt
  • FBL: FIATA Bill of Lading (negotiable Multimodal Transport)
  • FWB: FIATA Waybill (non-negotiable Multimodal Transport)
  • SDT: Shippers Declaration for the Transport (of Dangerous Goods)
  • SIC: Shippers Intermodal Weight Certificate
  • FFI: FIATA Forwarding Instructions
gollark: Look, it says there, > By design, the POST request method requests that a web server accepts the data enclosed in the body of the request message, most likely for storing it.
gollark: The urlencoded MIME type/format doesn't mean it's sent in the URL, just that it uses similar encoding to query strings.
gollark: POST data isn't in the URL though, it's sent as the body.
gollark: The reason they *do* is probably just consistency with other methods (it would be very annoying if they worked very differently to GET routing-wise) and so requests can be routed to the right handler more easily.
gollark: <@498244879894315027> Why wouldn't (shouldn't?) they have a URL?

See also

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