Citpl Vessel Berthing Report ●
The CITPL Vessel Berthing Report was more than a form. It was a promise between the land and the sea—a careful, human note in the chaos of tides and steel. Manish signed his name, placed the report in the pneumatic tube, and listened as it whooshed toward the main office.
Manish glanced at the berthing report pinned to his corkboard—a neatly typed document titled . It listed every scheduled ship, cargo type, mooring plan, and risk assessment. The Indus Fortune was marked in red ink: “High Priority / Maneuvering Caution.” Citpl Vessel Berthing Report
He flipped open a fresh page. If he filed this report correctly, the terminal manager would authorize two tugs instead of one, and clear the adjacent berth for safety. But if he made a single error in the coordinates or wind allowance, the vessel could scrape the fender system—or worse, collide with the fuel pier. The CITPL Vessel Berthing Report was more than a form
CITPL (Coastal Integrated Terminal & Port Logistics) ran a tight operation. Delays meant demurrage fees, unhappy clients, and a cascade of paperwork that could bury a man alive. But Manish had been a harbor pilot for twenty-three years before a bad knee grounded him behind a desk. He knew the sea’s rhythms better than the algorithms in the new berthing software. Manish glanced at the berthing report pinned to
He poured himself a cold cup of tea and waited for the next blip on the radar.
