Title: Latin American Panel
1Latin American Panel
- 25 April 2006
- Rio de Janeiro
2Latin America Panel
- INTERTANKO Today
- Challenges for the Tanker Industry
- Criminalisation
3INTERTANKO Today
- Strong Voice for the Tanker Industry
- Strong Nucleus of Competence and Knowledge
- Strong Support to membership providing services
and information -
4INTERTANKO Today
- Clear Vision for the Industry
- A responsible and respected industry
- Committed to lead continuous improvement
- Able to influence its own destiny
- Clear Statement of Goals
- Clear Purpose for the Association
-
5INTERTANKO Today
- Strengthened membership base
- (Members and Associate Members)
- Strengthening financial base
- Strengthening governance structure
- Strengthened secretariat
-
6INTERTANKO Today
- Strong Committees and Panels
- Strengthened Regional Presence
-
7INTERTANKO Today
- Expanded engagement with the European
Institutions - Consolidated our strong position in North and
Latin America - Strengthened our involvement and membership
across Asia - With active and engaged Regional Panels
-
8INTERTANKO Today
- FOCUSED WORK PROGRAMME
- Maintaining existing liability regimes
encouraging adoption of further compensation
regimes - Seeking to maintain supremacy of international
and federal laws - Working for good class, robust ships
- Overviewing developments for new and existing
double hull tankers and chemical carriers - Solution-driven activities for technical,
environmental, operational and navigational
challenges - Arguing for fair terms of trade
- Developing and maintaining industry databases
- Enhancing internal and external communications
9INTERTANKO Today
- FOCUSED WORK PROGRAMME
- REGULAR ENGAGEMENT
- At IMO and IOPC ( respective work groups)
- With EU Commission, Parliament and Council
- With capitals / national governments
- With USCG and other national administrations
- With Round Table colleagues (BIMCO, ICS,
Intercargo) and national shipowner associations - With other industry associations IACS, OCIMF,
IG (PI), IBIA, ISU, IMPA, IAPH, etc. and
partners in chain of responsibility - With oil companies
- With international shipping and non-shipping
media - With researchers, brokers and analysts
10Latin America Panel
- Challenges for the Tanker Industry
11INTERTANKOS VISION FOR THE TANKER INDUSTRY
- A responsible, sustainable and respected Tanker
Industry, committed to continuous improvement and
constructively influencing its future.
12Realising the Vision
- Challenge 1
- To be recognised as being responsible and to be
respected.
13Responsible and Respected means meeting
societys expectationsof the tanker shipping
industry
- Safe and secure
- Environmentally responsible
- Reliable
- Efficient (Low cost)
14Development of oil spills
Source ITOPF. Number of spills above 700 tonnes.
15Continuing Improvement
Tanker accidental pollution rate tonnes spilt
per bn tonne miles trade
-38
Source ITOPF spills, Fearnleys Tonne miles
16Reported tanker incidents (1978 2005)
17Learning from Tanker incidents 2005
Total 161
Hull Machinery
dwt range Total
Below 10,000 69
10-29,999 34
30-99,999 40
100,000 18
Total 161
Age Total
Built 1970s 25
Built 1980s 51
Built 1990s 56
Built 2000s 29
Total 161
29 engine, 3 hull
Misc.
Fire Exp.
Grounding
Collision
includes contact
18Reliable regularity of supply
19Oil price and tanker freight rate1970-2006
Freight rate and oil price (USD/bbl) deflated by
the US consumer price indexOil price 2006 is
approx price end April and not average price for
the year.
20Societys Expectations
- ZERO tolerance of
- Accidents
- Pollution (to Sea and Atmosphere)
- Other (e.g. unsafe, unhealthy demolition)
21INTERTANKOs goals to meet Societys Expectations
- INTERTANKO MEMBERS will
- lead the continuous improvement of the Tanker
Industrys performance in striving to achieve the
goals of - - Zero fatalities
- - Zero pollution
- - Zero detentions
22Challenges for the Tanker Industry Ballast
Water Management
23Challenges for the Tanker IndustryAir Emissions
- Engine and Cargo (VOCs)
24Challenges for the Tanker Industry Ship
Demolition Industry Code to IMO Convention
25Challenges for the Tanker Industry The Human
Element - Our weakest link ?
- Supporting IMO Task Force
- Participating in ISM STCW Reviews at IMO
- Established Human Element task force as outcome
of inter-industry group investigation of chemical
carrier accidents - Established new INTERTANKO Working Group
- Concentration away from hardware issues to, inter
alia - Man-machine interfaces (design operation)
- Measures to promote compliance
- Reviewing industry guides procedures
- Encouraging confidential and near-miss reporting
- Gathering incident statistics
- Recruitment and retention issues
26Challenges for the Tanker IndustryImproving
communication
- Heightening awareness
- Increasing transparency
- Providing information
- Widening dialogue
- www.shippingfacts.com
- Maritime Industry Foundation
27 The image ? Perception vs Reality
28Tanker Industry
Image - In the dictionary between ignorance and
information
29(No Transcript)
30Realising the Vision
- Challenge 2
- Commitment to Continuous Improvement
31Commitment to Continuous Improvement by all
stakeholders in the maritime businesses
Designers
Shipbuilders
Class
Equipment Suppliers
Financiers / Guarantors
Charterers
Operator/Manager
Owner
PI
Hull insurers
Cargo Owners
Brokers
Flag states
Coastal States
Waterways authorities
Ports Terminals
Labour providers
Tug operators
Bunker suppliers
Pilots
Agents
Salvers
Repairers
Paint Suppliers
Spill Response
Ship Breakers
32(No Transcript)
33POSEIDON CHALLENGESingapore (31 March 2006)
- POSEIDON CHALLENGE
- - STRIVING FOR
ZERO -
- The Poseidon Challenge is an invitation to all
participants in the Chain of Responsibility to
join INTERTANKO members in a sustained commitment
to CONTINUOUS IMPROVEMENT. It is founded upon
the principle that the shared goals of zero
accidents, cleaner seas and the elimination of
the sub-standard can best be achieved by
voluntary, cooperative and self motivated
efforts.
34Realising the Vision
- Challenge 3
- Constructively influencing own future
35- Challenges for the Tanker Industry
- Uniform high standards globally
- Uniform international governance structures
- To engage with others
- At IMO and with states to develop and implement
effective regulation - With flags support for flag state audits,
industry performance guide - With class development of Common Structural
Rules - With builders tripartite discussions
- With insurers following up on OECD report, IOPC
WG - With PSC through EQUASIS and individual MoUs
- And much more..
36Challenges for the Tanker Industry Regulation
versus Self-Regulation
- The challenges are to achieve
- effective regulations and
- the right balance between regulation and
self-regulation
37Challenges for the Tanker Industry Encouraging
Effective Regulation
- Fit for purpose (provides solutions)
- Properly considered (stakeholders involved)
- Impact(s) assessed
- If adopted, implemented uniformly and promptly
- Engaging with legislators, regulators,
politicians and the media
38Challenges for the Tanker Industry Developing
and Promoting Self Regulation
- Adoption of best practices
- Production of industry guidelines
- Development of awareness guides
- Engaging with partners, legislators, regulators,
politicians, media and public
39Regulation and/or Self-Regulation Example
actions on illegal discharges
- Reception facilities Industry-government forum
(Industry, IMO and EMSA) - Industry Guidance on Use of Oily Water Separators
and Completion of Oil Record Book - Preparing Guide for treatment of engine room
wastes including means to limit generation of
waste, better management of waste, better design
and sizing of equipment, (revisions to Marpol),
and additional training
40Latin America Panel
- Unfair treatment of seafarers
-
- Unjustifiable criminalisation
41Unfair treatment of seafarers violation of
human rights
- Too many cases of unlawful
- detentions after shipping
- accidents (Orapin Global,
- Evoikos, Nissos Amorgos, Prestige, Tasman
Spirit et al) - Welcome for the joint IMO/ILO Group on Fair
Treatment of Seafarers - Too many other unjust practices unjustified
fines, denial of shore leave, prohibition of
terminal access and more
42Unjustifiable criminalisation
- Criminal sanctions for ship-sourced pollution
- INTERTANKO condemns illegal discharges
- INTERTANKO objects to criminalising accidental
pollution - Need clarity in law AND consistency with
international law - Penalties should be proportionate AND have parity
with other similar offences (ashore) - Suspects must be treated fairly AND in accordance
with basic human rights - States should comply with their obligations to
provide reception facilities AND Places of Refuge
43Unjustifiable criminalisation
- Counterproductive consequences not recognised
- Destroys no blame cultures
- Discourages openness and frank reporting
- Curtails surveyors reports detracts from good
practice - Deters salvors in circumstances when we need them
most - Deflects focus for proper casualty investigation
and denies benefits of same - Destroys and damages morale of seafarers and
others - Dissuades new recruits and accelerates departure
of experienced staff - Drives responsible people and companies from the
business - Is this what the legislators and society are
seeking ?
44Unjustifiable criminalisation
- EU Action in the High Court in London to test
the validity of the 2005 EU Directive on Criminal
Sanctions for Ship-Source Pollution and seeking a
reference to the European Court of Justice
criminalises accidental pollution, conflicts with
existing treaty law obligations under Marpol and
UNCLOS, and fails to satisfy the principle of
legal certainty - CANADA Monitoring of Amendments to Migratory
Birds and Environmental Protection Acts
conflicts with Marpol and UNCLOS obligations, is
vicarious and includes a presumption of guilt
before trial for accidental pollution
45Unjustifiable criminalisation
- EU Action
- Coalition partners Intercargo, Greek Shipping
Cooperation Committee, Lloyds Register and
International Salvage Union with financial and
moral support from many others. - Seeking referral to the European Court of Justice
for a ruling - 1 March 2007 enactment in EU states
46Unfair treatment of seafarers Unjustifiable
criminalisation
- Conclusions
- We are not perfect AND are not complacent
- Unjustifiable criminalisation concerns us all AND
is NOT THE SOLUTION - Fair treatment (especially after an accident) AND
the detrimental consequences of unjustifiable
criminalisation MUST be spelled out clearly - This is NOT about confrontation but about
reality !
47THANK YOU www.intertanko.com www.shippingfacts.co
m www.themaritimefoundation.com