Maritime Questions › Vetting — RISQ Cargo (Solid Bulk)

Vetting — RISQ Cargo (Solid Bulk) Practice Questions

7 questions — multiple choice, sourced from real maritime incident reports and MCA oral exam syllabi. Browse all topics →

1. RISQ Q8.2-8.3 (Solid Bulk Cargo) requires the IMSBC Code's Group A/B/C cargo classification, and a signed certificate of moisture content, Transportable Moisture Limit (TML), and density before loading any cargo that may liquefy. Why is the comparison between actual moisture content and TML the single most safety-critical figure in this whole certificate?
A. Liquefaction can only occur with Group B cargoes, never Group A
B. TML is a a commercial quality specification with no bearing on stability or safety
C. A Group A cargo loaded with moisture content above its TML can liquefy under the ship's motion at sea — the cargo effectively becomes a fluid that can shift suddenly to one side, and this shift has caused real bulk carrier capsizes; everything else on the certificate (density, general description) supports planning, but moisture-vs-TML is the line between safe and potentially fatal
D. Moisture content only affects cargo weight calculations for billing purposes, not vessel safety
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2. RISQ's guidance describes the "can test" — half-filling a small container with cargo sample, striking it sharply on a hard surface 25 times, and checking for free moisture — as a method the Master can use at the dockside. What is the correct interpretation of a "dry" result from this test?
A. The can test is only valid for grain cargoes, not other solid bulk commodities
B. The can test replaces the need for any shipper-provided TML certificate
C. A dry-appearing result is a useful indicator but does NOT prove the moisture content is below the TML — RISQ's own guidance explicitly warns that material can still exceed the TML even if it remains dry-looking after the can test, so a clear can test is not a substitute for proper laboratory moisture testing
D. A dry result conclusively proves the cargo is safe to load regardless of any other certificate or test
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3. RISQ Q8.7 requires that "if a significant deviation from the agreed loading/unloading plan is detected, all cargo and ballast operations must STOP," with synchronisation between cargo loading rate and ballast pumping capacity specifically flagged as a risk area. Why can a mismatch between loading rate and ballast pumping capacity become dangerous, rather than just inefficient?
A. Ballast pumping capacity is irrelevant once the loading plan has been approved by the terminal
B. This risk only applies to vessels without a Class-approved loading computer fitted
C. A pumping rate mismatch only affects how long the port call takes, with no effect on hull stress or stability
D. If cargo is loaded faster than the ballast system can de-ballast to compensate, the still-water shear forces and bending moments on the hull can exceed the vessel's designed limits before the loading plan's calculated checkpoints catch up — this is a real structural overstress risk, not merely a scheduling inconvenience
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