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Maersk Formalizes Seal Replacement Procedure at Indonesia Depots

By MGN Maritime JournalistApril 7, 2026 at 10:02 AM

Maersk has introduced standardized seal replacement guidelines for its dedicated depots across Indonesia, requiring customers to submit documentation and pay IDR 160,000 per container.

Maersk has formalized seal replacement procedures at its dedicated depots throughout Indonesia, establishing new documentation and payment requirements for containerized shipments. Under the revised guidelines, customers seeking seal replacements must submit a Letter of Intent (LOI) and present the original seal to Maersk depot facilities. If the seal cannot be located, customers may proceed with LOI submission alone, provided they include written explanation of the seal's absence. Each seal replacement carries an additional service charge of IDR 160,000 (approximately $10 USD) per container. Invoices for these services will be processed through Maersk's MyFinance portal, with settlement handled through regular payment procedures rather than direct payment at depot locations. This centralized billing approach aligns with Maersk's broader digital container management systems. The procedure applies to both import and export operations at Maersk's Indonesia facilities, affecting shippers across the archipelago's primary trade routes. Indonesia remains a critical transshipment hub and manufacturing export center for Southeast Asian supply chains, particularly for electronics, textiles, and agricultural products destined for global markets. Seal integrity is fundamental to container security throughout international supply chains. Damaged, missing, or compromised seals can trigger compliance reviews, customs delays, and increased inspection protocols at destination ports—issues that seals replacement procedures are designed to prevent. The formalization of these guidelines suggests Maersk is standardizing practices that may have previously been handled inconsistently across its Indonesia depot network. For freight forwarders and shippers operating in Indonesia, the primary operational impact involves advance documentation preparation. The LOI requirement means containers cannot be expedited through seal replacement without proper paperwork submission, potentially affecting time-sensitive shipments. However, the process accommodates missing seals through explanatory documentation, providing flexibility for containers that arrive at depot without original seals intact. Customers requiring clarification on procedures can contact Maersk's Indonesia office through dedicated email channels: id.export@maersk.com for export-related inquiries and id.import@maersk.com for import questions. General sales support is available through sales.support@maersk.com or live chat via the company's website. This procedural update reflects broader industry trends toward standardized, digitally tracked container management. As supply chain security requirements tighten globally and customs agencies increase scrutiny of container documentation, major carriers are centralizing documentation and billing for operations that previously operated through localized depot discretion.

Source: Maersk

#Maersk#Indonesia#containers#shipping#seal replacement#procedures#documentation

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