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PRIVACY
Manufacturing

Jobs promise with E-Containerlock cargo lock launch

Birmingham-based Guardfreight International launched E-Containerlock – which aims to prevent £70 billion worth of cargo going missing every year – at the Subcon conference in the city this week.

Matt Harwood, from Barkley Plastics, Andrew Harrison from Guardfreight and Steve Gaston from MAN, who are working on the new E-Containerlock

The company behind a new satellite-tracked lock for cargo shipments which is designed and manufactured in the West Midlands are promising to deliver dozens of jobs to the region.

Birmingham-based Guardfreight International launched E-Containerlock – which aims to prevent £70 billion worth of cargo going missing every year – at the Subcon conference in the city this week.

The new locking mechanism can be fitted to shipping containers and provides an in-built satellite tracking system that provides location updates and immediate alerts if entry is forced.

The company is projecting a £16 million turnover by 2018 in its business plan, and believes it can create up to 50 jobs directly and in the supply chain.

It is working alongside the Midlands Assembly Network (MAN), a collective of 10 manufacturers from the region, to bring the lock to market, and inventor Andrew Harrison said he expects to start selling within six months.

The product uses GSM – global system for mobile communications – and GPS – global positioning system – technology, and Mr Harrison told the Post the marketplace was expected to grow strongly.

He said: “There are 20 million shipping containers doing 300 million different movements per year. In the first year we are talking about doing 350 movements in the marketplace, so we have been conservative.“If you look at the expected growth of the cargo tracking industry, it is supposed to be worth $1 billion by 2016.”

He added: “The marketplace has been there for quite a long time, but the problem has been that the technology to service the market – GSM for communications and GPS for positioning – have only reached maturity for technology and affordability in the last few years.“Prior to that there was only radio-frequency identification, which could only be read using readers, but now we can use cell phone networks to track cargo.”