Posted Tuesday June 26, 2012 - MarineLink.com
The U.S. Environmental Protection Agency released interim guidance for
ship owners and operators clarifying how the U.S. government will
implement fuel availability provisions when ships are unable to obtain
fuel that meets standards protecting against sulfur pollution along the
coast. Sulfur pollution has been linked to respiratory illnesses,
particularly in at-risk populations including children, the elderly, and
asthmatics. The International Maritime Organization (IMO) has
officially designated waters off of the coast of North America, known as
the North American Emission Control Area (North American ECA), as areas
where stringent international pollution standards apply for ships,
including fuel sulfur limits. The guidance provides background
information on the North American ECA fuel sulfur standards, explains
how owners and operators of vessels can establish compliance with these
requirements, and describes how an owner or operator of a vessel who
cannot obtain compliant fuel oil can make a fuel oil non-availability
claim.
The IMO is a United Nations agency that deals with marine safety,
security, and the prevention of marine pollution from ships. The
International Convention for the Prevention of Pollution from Ships
(MARPOL) is a treaty designed to minimize pollution on the seas
including dumping waste, oil, and exhaust pollution. MARPOL Annex VI
sets out air emissions standards, including fuel sulfur limits, for
ships. The United States implemented Annex VI in 2008 when Congress
amended the Act to Prevent Pollution from Ships (APPS).
Annex VI requires ships operating in designated geographical areas, the
ECAs, to meet the most advanced standards for fuel sulfur and other
pollutants. The North American ECA will come into force on August 1,
2012. At that time, the maximum sulfur content of fuel oil used by ships
in the ECA will be limited to 1.00 percent m/m (10,000 ppm). This
standard will change on January 1, 2015, to 0.10 percent m/m (1,000
ppm).
Compliance with both the Annex VI air emissions standards for ships and
the Clean Air Act standards applicable to U.S. ships are expected to
reduce the annual emissions of sulfur oxides by 1.3 million tons by
2030.
Read the interim guidance:
http://www.epa.gov/compliance/civil/caa/caaenfprog.html
Post to be found at:
http://www.marinelink.com/news/availability-guidance345796.aspx
Wednesday, June 27, 2012
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