SHIPPING DEFINITIONS · PLAN TIMING
DIRECT ANSWER
ERDs change because the published schedule reconciles continuously against operational reality. Previous-port slippage, vessel rotation changes, terminal yard capacity, labor, and manifest closure each translate into ERD revisions. The pattern is structural, not random.
A SINGLE VESSEL, FIVE ERD REVISIONS
A vessel scheduled for export-leg ERD of Tuesday morning has its previous port call delayed by 18 hours due to weather. The terminal pushes ERD to Tuesday afternoon. Yard capacity then constrains the receiving rate; ERD pushes again to Wednesday morning. The carrier re-sequences the rotation to recover transit time; ERD pulls forward to Tuesday evening. Berth assignments shift; ERD shifts back to Wednesday morning. Final shift to Wednesday at noon based on labor availability.
Five revisions on a single ERD before opening, each driven by a specific operational input. The shipper saw five different ERDs across one week. Each revision was rational; the cumulative effect is what feels chaotic.
EXPORTER
Each ERD revision pushes the production schedule. Fumigation re-books, lab certification re-times, equipment re-allocates. By the third revision, the sequence has no slack.
FREIGHT FORWARDER
Each revision is a customer call. The forwarder explains the change and confirms the new plan. By the fourth revision, the customer stops trusting the published date.
DRAYAGE OPERATOR
Equipment availability, driver scheduling, and yard appointments are all sequenced against ERD. Each revision is a re-plan. The cost lands on the dispatcher.
ERDs do not move randomly. They move for reasons. The reasons are operational, structural, and continuous.
OBSERVED ACROSS U.S. EXPORT VESSEL SCHEDULES
Based on aggregated shipment observations across major U.S. ports:
ERD revisions are predictable in the aggregate, even when individual changes feel sudden. The structural pattern is identifiable; the operational consequence depends on when in the cycle a given exporter happens to commit.
TradeLanes analysis of U.S. export vessel schedules. Observed schedule behavior based on published carrier and terminal data.
IN SIMPLE TERMS
ERDs do not change randomly. Each revision reflects a specific operational input: a slipped previous port, a re-sequenced rotation, a yard-capacity shift, a labor change, or manifest closure. The schedule is a snapshot of a moving system.
Caption: Each ERD revision corresponds to a specific operational input. The pattern is structural; the apparent randomness is a property of the operational network.
ERDs change because they are reconciled continuously against operational reality. Previous-port slippage, vessel rotation changes, terminal yard capacity, labor, and manifest closure each translate into ERD revisions.
No. Each revision corresponds to a specific operational input. The aggregate pattern is structural; what feels random is the timing relative to a single shipper. Revision frequency varies by carrier-port pair.
Notice varies. The carrier portal and the terminal portal often update independently and at different speeds. The trucker at the gate is sometimes first to see the executable ERD.
Yes. ERDs can pull forward when vessel arrival is earlier than expected or yard capacity opens up. Pull-forwards are operationally hazardous because they compress the receiving window unexpectedly.
Late-stage revisions inside the final 72 hours leave the least time to re-plan production, dispatch, and gate appointments. The same revision earlier in the cycle has lower operational cost.
No. Revision frequency varies by carrier and by port. Some carrier-port pairs are structurally more stable than others.
No. ERDs are not under shipper control. Shippers can plan against revision patterns, build slack, and re-check dates inside the final 72 hours, but they cannot prevent the underlying revisions.
TradeLanes is the system that determines whether a plan will hold before execution. Each booking is evaluated against observed ERD revision patterns on its specific carrier-port pair, and the call is delivered before the window closes.