World Trade - August 2008 - (Page 54) Great Moments IN WORLD TRADE Around the World in 80 Days— Hours—Minutes BY JEREMY N. SMITH N Nellie Bly in her traveling clothes. ellie Bly won a bet between men who didn’t exist. Bly, a 25-year-old journalist, made her professional reputation feigning insanity to study a mental institution. The “men” were members of the Reform Club of London. Over a game of whist, one bet the other 20 thousand pounds he could circumnavigate the globe in 80 days. So began Jules Verne’s bestselling 1873 novel, Around the World in Eighty Days. Bly, employed by the New York World newspaper, began her own journey on November 14, 1889, departing by steamship from Hoboken, New Jersey. Travels took her through England, France, Egypt, Sri Lanka, Hong Kong, and Japan. To sustain her, Bly brought one 16-by-7-inch suitcase and some £200 cash (American newspapers having tighter budgets than British gentlemen’s clubs). The facts were these: 25,000 miles is the circumference of the earth; 1,920 is the number of hours in 80 days. To beat the fictional Fogg, Bly would have to average just over 13 miles per hour for more than two months. She did. January 25, 1890—“seventy-two days, six hours, eleven minutes and fourteen seconds after her Hoboken departure”— the young female journalist arrived by transcontinental railroad in New York a world celebrity. Nellie Bly’s success spoke to a world suddenly obsessed with speed and the new-found mechanical ability to transcend time and space as never before. A fad in pocket watches—in Germany, in the last decade of the nineteenth century, sales reached 12 million for a population of 52 million—led ordinary citizens to discuss their days in eversmaller increments: “five-minute interviews, minute-long telephone conversations, and five-second exchanges on bicycles,” wrote Karl Lamprecht. The bicycle, first fitted with pneumatic tires in 1890, was four times faster than walking. While early automobiles, at least in England, faced fines if exceeding 4 miles per hour on public roads, by 1906 the land-speed record was set at 125 miles Library of Congress per hour. Simultaneously, passenger steamers competed for the fastest crossing of the Atlantic Ocean, reaching upwards of 25 knots—approximately 29 miles per hour—before the sinking of the Titanic brought mass condemnation for the “mania for speed and smashing records.” Still, of course, engineering advancements continued. In 1902, European and Asian officials met to discuss a planned railroad journey from Paris to Peking. Afterward they announced, bettering by half Jules Verne’s hero, they had “resolved the problem of traveling around the world in forty days.” Five years later, a popular German travel guide cited a new piece of jargon: the term “globetrotter.” The first circumnavigation by air took U.S. Army airplanes thirty-five days in 1924. On March 3, 2005, American adventurer Steve Fossett made the trip in 67 hours. Space shuttles, meanwhile, can repeat the feat every 90 minutes. As in the case of the Titanic, however, tragedy has attended some airborne record pursuers. The most famous attempt to travel around the world, Amelia Earhart’s 1937 transoceanic solo flight, ended in her disappearance and presumed death. On a daily basis, the greatest change new developments in circumnavigation have brought humanity are not in taking people far from home but in delivering distant goods—be they ripe bananas or the latest laptop. World trade, far more than world travel, depends on otherwise-minor differences in speed to make a profit. While passenger airliner service ceased five years ago on Concorde supersonic transport craft, for example, last year the $130-million-plus Port of Prince Rupert opened in British Columbia, Canada on the promise shippers would save 68 hours sailing there from Shanghai than to Los Angeles. Still, speed for its own sake has its fans, and wagerers should know better than to bet against Nelly Bly’s successors. When, earlier this year, Danica Patrick made headlines as the first-ever female formula racecar champion, one could say Bly had all but predicted the victory a century earlier. “Oh, I don’t know,” she had said, responding to a reporter’s comments that her record-breaking travel time was, given her gender, ‘remarkable.’ “It’s not so very much for a woman to do who has the pluck, energy and independence, which characterize many women in this day of push and get-there.” WT 54 WORLD TRADE AUGUST 2008
Table of Contents Feed for the Digital Edition of World Trade - August 2008 World Trade - August 2008 Contents Weathering the Storm Helping the World’s Poorest Nations Benefit from Global Trade Supply Chain Watch Tradewinds World Trade’s Top U.S. Trading Partners LTL Shipping ‘On the Fly’ Air Cargo Flies a New Heading Getting More from China Sourcing Why 3PLs Need a Seat at the C-TPAT Table Performance-based Supply Chains Drive Total Lifecycle Value SmartWay Navigates Sustainable Transportation Around the World in 80 Days—Hours—Minutes World Trade - August 2008 World Trade - August 2008 - (Page Intro) World Trade - August 2008 - World Trade - August 2008 (Page 1) World Trade - August 2008 - World Trade - August 2008 (Page 2) World Trade - August 2008 - World Trade - August 2008 (Page 3) World Trade - August 2008 - World Trade - August 2008 (Page 4) World Trade - August 2008 - Contents (Page 5) World Trade - August 2008 - Contents (Page 6) World Trade - August 2008 - Weathering the Storm (Page 7) World Trade - August 2008 - Helping the World’s Poorest Nations Benefit from Global Trade (Page 8) World Trade - August 2008 - Helping the World’s Poorest Nations Benefit from Global Trade (Page 9) World Trade - August 2008 - Supply Chain Watch (Page 10) World Trade - August 2008 - Supply Chain Watch (Page 11) World Trade - August 2008 - Tradewinds (Page 12) World Trade - August 2008 - Tradewinds (Page 13) World Trade - August 2008 - Tradewinds (Page 14) World Trade - August 2008 - Tradewinds (Page 15) World Trade - August 2008 - World Trade’s Top U.S. Trading Partners (Page 16) World Trade - August 2008 - World Trade’s Top U.S. Trading Partners (Page 17) World Trade - August 2008 - World Trade’s Top U.S. Trading Partners (Page 18) World Trade - August 2008 - World Trade’s Top U.S. Trading Partners (Page 19) World Trade - August 2008 - World Trade’s Top U.S. Trading Partners (Page 20) World Trade - August 2008 - World Trade’s Top U.S. Trading Partners (Page 21) World Trade - August 2008 - World Trade’s Top U.S. Trading Partners (Page 22) World Trade - August 2008 - World Trade’s Top U.S. Trading Partners (Page 23) World Trade - August 2008 - World Trade’s Top U.S. Trading Partners (Page 24) World Trade - August 2008 - World Trade’s Top U.S. Trading Partners (Page 25) World Trade - August 2008 - World Trade’s Top U.S. Trading Partners (Page 26) World Trade - August 2008 - World Trade’s Top U.S. Trading Partners (Page 27) World Trade - August 2008 - LTL Shipping ‘On the Fly’ (Page 28) World Trade - August 2008 - LTL Shipping ‘On the Fly’ (Page 29) World Trade - August 2008 - LTL Shipping ‘On the Fly’ (Page 30) World Trade - August 2008 - LTL Shipping ‘On the Fly’ (Page 31) World Trade - August 2008 - LTL Shipping ‘On the Fly’ (Page 32) World Trade - August 2008 - LTL Shipping ‘On the Fly’ (Page 33) World Trade - August 2008 - Air Cargo Flies a New Heading (Page 34) World Trade - August 2008 - Air Cargo Flies a New Heading (Page 35) World Trade - August 2008 - Air Cargo Flies a New Heading (Page 36) World Trade - August 2008 - Air Cargo Flies a New Heading (Page 37) World Trade - August 2008 - Getting More from China Sourcing (Page 38) World Trade - August 2008 - Getting More from China Sourcing (Page 39) World Trade - August 2008 - Getting More from China Sourcing (Page 40) World Trade - August 2008 - Getting More from China Sourcing (Page 41) World Trade - August 2008 - Getting More from China Sourcing (Page 42) World Trade - August 2008 - Getting More from China Sourcing (Page 43) World Trade - August 2008 - Why 3PLs Need a Seat at the C-TPAT Table (Page 44) World Trade - August 2008 - Why 3PLs Need a Seat at the C-TPAT Table (Page 45) World Trade - August 2008 - Why 3PLs Need a Seat at the C-TPAT Table (Page 46) World Trade - August 2008 - Why 3PLs Need a Seat at the C-TPAT Table (Page 47) World Trade - August 2008 - Performance-based Supply Chains Drive Total Lifecycle Value (Page 48) World Trade - August 2008 - Performance-based Supply Chains Drive Total Lifecycle Value (Page 49) World Trade - August 2008 - Performance-based Supply Chains Drive Total Lifecycle Value (Page 50) World Trade - August 2008 - SmartWay Navigates Sustainable Transportation (Page 51) World Trade - August 2008 - SmartWay Navigates Sustainable Transportation (Page 52) World Trade - August 2008 - SmartWay Navigates Sustainable Transportation (Page 53) World Trade - August 2008 - Around the World in 80 Days—Hours—Minutes (Page 54) World Trade - August 2008 - Around the World in 80 Days—Hours—Minutes (Page 55) World Trade - August 2008 - Around the World in 80 Days—Hours—Minutes (Page 56) World Trade - August 2008 - Around the World in 80 Days—Hours—Minutes (Page Map1) World Trade - August 2008 - Around the World in 80 Days—Hours—Minutes (Page Map2)
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