Cement Clinker

Key data

Deadweight cargo
Stowage factor0.55–0.75 m³/t (typical 0.65)19.4–26.5 ft³/t (typical 23.0)
FormBulk
IMSBC groupC Cargoes that neither liquefy nor carry a chemical hazard.
Angle of repose~30
BCSNCEMENT CLINKERS

ft³/t values are per metric tonne (1 m³/t ≈ 35.31 ft³/t). Stowage factors are indicative — see note below.

Description

Cement clinker is the kiln-fired nodular intermediate that is ground into cement, shipped in bulk between plants. At around 0.65 m3/t it is a dense, deadweight cargo. Its handling differs from inert minerals in two ways: it is often loaded warm, and it reacts with water, while being hard and abrasive.

Stowage & loading

Holds are presented clean and dry, and the clinker is loaded by grab or conveyor and trimmed level. The temperature of the clinker is noted, as it can be loaded warm from the kiln, and combustible material and coatings are protected from the heat, while moisture is kept away.

Hazards & handling

Clinker can be loaded hot, posing a heat hazard to coatings, combustibles and the structure, and it reacts with water to generate heat and a caustic, setting mass, so it is kept dry. It is hard, abrasive and dusty, the dust being a caustic irritant, so dust control and protection apply.

Carriage & discharge

The cargo is kept dry to prevent reaction and setting, and any residual heat is monitored. Discharge is by grab; set or caked material is broken out, the caustic dust is controlled with protection for personnel, and the abrasive residue is cleaned thoroughly on completion.

Key hazards

  • Often loaded warm, posing a heat hazard to coatings and combustibles
  • Reacts with water, generating heat and a caustic, setting mass
  • Hard, abrasive, caustic-irritant dust

Loading precautions

  • Note clinker temperature and protect coatings and combustibles from heat
  • Present dry holds and keep the cargo away from water
  • Control caustic dust and protect personnel and equipment

Stowage factors are indicative and vary with grade, origin, moisture and packing. Always verify against the shipper's cargo declaration and the applicable IMSBC Code schedule before fixing or loading. This is general information, not professional or safety advice.

Scroll to Top