Lloyd’s Register is helping spearhead a new industry initiative designed to standardise how container stowage and lashing data is exchanged across the maritime sector.
The initiative, known as the Lashing Exchange Format (LXF) Consortium, brings together classification societies and software developers to create a shared digital standard for transferring data used in container securing arrangements and lashing calculations.
At present, stowage planning and lashing software systems operate in parallel but disconnected workflows. Because there is no common format, the industry relies on multiple separate datasets that are not easily interoperable.
This fragmentation means container securing designers, lashing software providers and classification societies each work from their own inputs when assessing and approving securing arrangements, often without a unified structure.
As a result, the industry frequently faces duplicated work, inconsistent data inputs and delays in approval cycles challenges that are becoming more significant as container ships grow in size and securing calculations become more complex.
The LXF initiative aims to address this by introducing a standardised digital format for exchanging container stowage and lashing data, ensuring all stakeholders operate from a consistent dataset throughout the approval process.
Building on experience from Lloyd’s Register’s own LashRight software, the new format is being developed as an open, cross industry standard rather than a proprietary system tied to a single classification society.
Most major classification societies have already joined the consortium, alongside developers of lashing-calculation software used to model forces on container stacks. Together, the group represents more than half of the global market for container vessel design, lashing systems and stowage arrangement tools.
This broad participation gives the LXF standard a strong foundation as it moves toward wider industry adoption.
Nick Gross, global containerships segment director at Lloyd’s Register, said the initiative comes at a time when the sector is under growing pressure to streamline approval processes.
He noted that shipyards, software providers and classification societies are all facing increasing operational demands, driven by larger vessels, tighter schedules and more complex technical requirements.
According to him, standardising data is a key step in reducing friction across the approval chain and ensuring that container securing systems can keep pace with modern fleet scale and complexity.





















