Question 57 GLI05 - Master or Mate of LT 200 GRT

What is a wet cargo?

A A canned or bottled liquid such as beer
B A cargo particularly susceptible to damage by moisture
C A liquid cargo carried in the deep tanks
D A cargo that contains hygroscopic moisture
AI Explanation

The Correct Answer is A. **Explanation for A (Correct Option):** In maritime logistics and shipping terminology, "wet cargo" generally refers to packaged liquids—specifically liquids that are contained in sealed packaging like bottles, cans, drums, or other consumer-ready containers, and are typically shipped as general cargo or containerized freight. Examples include beverages (like beer, soda, wine), packaged oils, and household liquids. While liquid bulk cargo (like crude oil or chemicals) is also "wet," the term "wet cargo," when used distinctly in general cargo contexts, usually specifies these packaged goods, making "A canned or bottled liquid such as beer" a classic and accurate definition. **Explanation for why other options are incorrect:** * **B) A cargo particularly susceptible to damage by moisture:** This describes **moisture-sensitive cargo** (e.g., flour, cement, steel coils), not the cargo type itself being liquid. * **C) A liquid cargo carried in the deep tanks:** This describes **liquid bulk cargo** (or sometimes specialized tank cargo), which is typically handled entirely differently from general "wet cargo" (A). While technically wet, the term "wet cargo" often distinguishes packaged goods from deep-tank bulk liquids. * **D) A cargo that contains hygroscopic moisture:** This describes **hygroscopic cargo** (e.g., grains, cotton, timber) which naturally absorbs and retains moisture from the air. This characteristic relates to its handling needs, not its definition as a packaged liquid commodity.

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