Industry profile · NAICS 483111

Deep sea freight transportation to or from foreign ports

Workplace injury rates across 9 OSHA-reporting establishments in this industry, 2016–2024.

9
Employers
4.0
Avg TCR
4.5
BLS benchmark
167
Injuries

The industry picture

Employers in Deep sea freight transportation to or from foreign ports average 4.0 recordable injuries per 100 workers, below the BLS national benchmark of 4.5.

4.0
avg TCR · reporting employers
4.5
BLS national benchmark
9
employers reporting
167
recordable injuries

OSHA-reporting establishments skew toward larger, higher-hazard sites, so the reporting average runs above the BLS all-establishment benchmark.

What Deep sea freight transportation to or from foreign ports Safety Data Reveals

The Deep sea freight transportation to or from foreign ports sector (NAICS 483111) encompasses 9 distinct employer establishments currently reporting to OSHA's Injury Tracking Application. Across this cohort, workers have logged 167 recordable injuries during the 2016–2024 reporting window, producing an industry-weighted average Total Case Rate (TCR) of 4.0 injuries per 100 full-time workers per year. Because OSHA's ITA mandates submission from establishments with 250+ employees plus all high-hazard industries at 20+ employees, this dataset represents a structural slice of U.S. workplace risk rather than a voluntary sample.

The Bureau of Labor Statistics publishes a separate national benchmark TCR of 4.5 for this NAICS code, derived from the BLS Survey of Occupational Injuries and Illnesses. Comparing the two, the ITA-reported rate of 4.0 is below the BLS benchmark, a gap that typically widens when the industry contains many large, high-exposure establishments required to file ITA reports. Employers in the table below are sorted so you can see how far individual establishments deviate from both the industry average and the national benchmark.

The practical value of industry-level safety data is threefold. First, jobseekers can gauge whether a prospective employer is better or worse than its industry peers, not just absolute injury counts, which tilt toward larger payrolls. Second, insurers and workers' compensation carriers use sector TCR as a baseline for experience-modification adjustments. Third, safety professionals benchmark their own programs against the cohort median. Use the grade-sorted employer list below to identify specific establishments within Deep sea freight transportation to or from foreign ports that outperform or underperform the sector average, and click through to each record for year-by-year injury, illness, and fatality breakdowns.

Employers in this industry, by injury rate

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Employer LocationGradeAvg TCR
Red Hook Container Terminal BROOKLYN, NY F 13.0
Red Hook Terminal Newark NEWARK, NJ C 5.4
Seaboard Marine, LTD, Inc MIAMI, FL C 4.9
Seaboard Marine of Florida, LTD MEDLEY, FL C 4.8
Priority RoRo MAYAGUEZ, PR B 2.6
Seaboard Marine LTD MEDLEY, FL A 1.7
Trailer Bridge JACKSONVILLE, FL A 1.6
Marine Express Inc. MAYAGUEZ, PR A 1.5
Harvey Gulf International Marine, LLC PORT FOURCHON, LA A 0.0
Data sourced from official public datasets. See our methodology for details. Retrieved and formatted by PlainSafetyScore Editorial

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Working in Deep sea freight transportation to or from foreign ports?

This sector averages 4.0 against a BLS benchmark of 4.5 - but individual employers span the full A-to-F range.

Sector figures use the credible-subset mean across reporting employers; a benchmark is not any single establishment's measured rate.