The 2024 Los Angeles Port incident involving unauthorized key duplication by contractors exposed physical key management vulnerabilities, resulting in $500K+ in direct losses.
Compliance Gaps
U.S. Customs and Border Protection (CBP) requires 5-year key usage records, but paper logs fail to meet TSA 1544-2025 audit standards.
II. Core Features
Feature
Technical Implementation
Compliance Standards
Multi-Factor Auth
Fingerprint + IC card + OTP (NIST SP 800-63B compliant)
Meets FAA Part 139.317 aviation safety requirements
Real-Time Tracking
UHF RFID tags (±0.3m accuracy)
CBP-compatible electronic seal management
Smart Alerts
Auto-notification to TMS for overdue returns
OSHA 1910.147 lockout/tagout compliance
III. Application Scenarios
1. Terminal Operations
Managed Items: Quay crane control keys, reefer container power keys
Local Integration: Syncs with Navis N4 for key-job plan coordination
2. Customs Zones
Managed Items: Bonded warehouse keys, electronic seal cabinets
Regulatory Compliance: Direct CBP ACE system integration for automated customs reporting
IV. Competitive Advantages
Local Certifications
First port key cabinet certified under TAPA TSR 3.0 (UL 291 Level 1 physical attack resistance)
Emergency Support
U.S.-based spare parts inventory ensures 4-hour response, meeting ISM Code Chapter 12 maintenance requirements
V. Summary
This solution aligns with the American Port Association’s (APA) 2025 Smart Management Initiative, boosting key management efficiency by 70% while meeting TSA, CBP, and FAA regulations through biometrics and IoT technology.