Lobster Cold Chain Packaging Guide for Seafood Delivery
Cold chain packaging guide for lobster shipments, covering live lobster cooling, humidity, ventilation, no-freeze protection, pressure control, route duration, common losses, and Tempk packout selection.
Why lobster need a specific seafood packout
Live lobster is not packed like a frozen seafood parcel. The packout must stay cool and humid while preventing freezing, standing water, crushing, and delayed receiving. Seafood packaging has to protect temperature and visible receiving quality together. A parcel can arrive cold but still fail if it leaks, smells warm, crushes delicate product, or wets the outer carton.
The packout should start from a cold product, use a seafood-safe inner liner, keep coolant separated from the seafood pack, and include receiving checks for temperature, odor, drip, texture, and carton condition.
Packout requirement table
| Cold chain factor | Lobster requirement |
|---|---|
| Target temperature | Cool chilled handling for live lobster, typically kept above freezing and away from direct coolant contact |
| Humidity and condensation | High humidity is needed for live lobster, but cartons should avoid standing water and leakage |
| Pre-cooling | Cool the lobster and packing materials before loading; avoid warm staging |
| Packaging pressure | High. Shells, claws, and antennae need rigid support and stable orientation |
| Coolant position | Use gel packs outside the live product chamber with a separator to prevent freeze burn or shock |
| Transit duration | Short express routes preferred; validate any next-day route against survival and receiving condition |
| Common losses | Temperature stress, dry gills, direct coolant shock, shell breakage, odor, wet cartons, and receiver rejection |
| Tempk packaging response | Tempk insulated live seafood shipper with breathable or moisture-managed inner pack, separated gel packs, absorbent pad, rigid support, and receiver instructions |
Route design notes
Map each warm point in the route: packing bench time, carrier handoff, sort-center dwell, delivery vehicle dwell, and receiver delay. Seafood with high moisture or small pack size can warm and leak faster than dense fillets, so the inner layout should be approved with the real retail pack.
Use sealed liners, absorbent layers, tray support, and separated gel packs where needed. For live seafood, avoid freezing contact and standing water. For chilled processed seafood, focus on product temperature, drip control, odor control, and package dryness.
Tempk recommendation
A typical Tempk seafood packout uses an insulated shipper, conditioned gel packs or seafood ice packs, leak-proof liner, absorbent pad, product divider, coolant separator, and a product-level logger. Approve the packout after checking temperature, odor, drip, texture, shell or tray damage, and carton dryness after the actual route.