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Your equipment, our logistics: nothing left to chance.
Moving Heavy Equipment Without Disrupting Your Operations
From excavators to cranes and mining equipment, heavy machinery transport requires more than capacity, it requires coordination, planning, and execution across every stage of the move.
Heavy equipment logistics involves oversized cargo (OOG), permit management, route planning, and precise delivery timing to ensure equipment arrives ready for use, without delays or damage.
From origin to job site, every step must be structured to protect timelines, costs, and operations.
EMAD
Project Cargo Expert
Every challenge is understood:
Oversized and overweight cargo restrictions, permit approvals and route limitations, limited access to job sites, tight project timelines & high-value cargo exposure
Heavy equipment transport insurance expertise, handled in-house.
Dedicated support during shutdowns, jobsite deliveries, urgent parts movements, and critical production timelines.
North America and international lanes. Oversized machinery, construction equipment, mining units, and industrial freight handled with precision.
From factory to final positioning:
transport, permits, customs clearance, crane coordination, rigging, and site delivery management.
Specialized handling for oversized and overweight cargo.
Route surveys, escort coordination, compliance management, and cross-border heavy haul solutions.
Excavators, cranes, transformers, CNC machines, agricultural and mining equipment.
Multimodal solutions built for complex freight requirements.
Real-time tracking, clear timelines, no hidden costs.
Heavy Equipment Logistics? Leave the Stress to Us
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Heavy equipment is transported using ocean freight (RoRo, flat rack, or containers), specialized trucking, and sometimes air freight for urgent parts. The method depends on size, weight, urgency, and destination.
Cargo is considered oversized or overweight when it exceeds standard transport limits for height, width, length, or weight. This typically requires permits, specialized trailers, and route planning.
Most oversized shipments require permits issued by local or national authorities. Additional requirements may include escort vehicles, route surveys, and compliance with infrastructure limitations.
Costs vary based on dimensions, weight, distance, transport mode, permits, and handling requirements. Oversized shipments generally involve higher costs due to specialized coordination.
Common risks include delays, damage, regulatory issues, and coordination failures. These are often linked to poor planning, inaccurate documentation, or lack of visibility.
Transit times depend on route, transport mode, and shipment complexity. Oversized cargo often requires additional time for permits and planning.
Typical documents include commercial invoice, packing list, bill of lading, and customs declarations. Accuracy is critical to avoid delays.