Posted - Thursday, 26 July 2012 13:46 - Pacific News Center | Sorenson Media Grou
Honolulu, Hawaii - The Hawaii Shippers Council is advising that shipping
lines are expected to adjust their bunker surcharges in coming weeks to
account for the higher cost of low sulfur fuel that they are required
to use in the "emission control area" (ECA) within 200 miles of the
U.S. and Canada coasts.
The Coast Guard will begin enforcing a requirement that ships burn 1 percent sulfur fuel on Aug. 1.
Worldwide, ships can burn fuel with as much as 3.5 percent sulfur,
though there is also an ECA off the coast in the Baltic and North Sea.
READ the news letter from the Hawaii Shippers Council below:
[The Hawaii Shippers Council (HSC) is a business league organization
incorporated in 1997 to represent cargo interests – known as “shippers”
– who tender goods for shipment in the Hawaii trade]
New Bunker Surcharge for Low Sulfur Fuel
Dear Friends,
Shippers
get ready for a brand new bunker surcharge on ocean freight to cover
the additional costs to be incurred by carriers switching to low sulfur
ship fuels as required by an international convention, which the United
States Senate has not ratified but is being imposed anyway by President
Obama’s administration beginning on August 1, 2012.
The American
Shipper Magazine reports that one of the world’s largest container
shipping companies, Mediterranean Shipping Company (MSC), has announced
it will impose a low sulfur surcharge on all international shipments in
and out of U.S. ports. MSC’s new low sulfur bunker surcharge will be an
additional $12 per 20-foot container and $24 per 40-foot container for
cargo moving through Canadian and U.S. West Coast ports.
That’s
probably a very good guide to the level of new bunker fuel charges that
will inevitably be levied in the domestic Alaska, Guam and Hawaii trades
by the Jones Act container carriers operating therein.
The
American Shipper further reported that The International Chamber of
Shipping has been “expressing concern for some time about whether
sufficient fuel will be available to allow ships to comply with strict
International Maritime Organization regulations aimed at reducing sulfur
emissions and whether, as result of insufficient supply, the costs for
those ships which are able to obtain the required fuels might be
prohibitively expensive."
In response to imposition of this
impending new requirement, the State of Alaska under the leadership of
Governor Sean R. Parnell (R) sued the federal government in the person
of Secretary of State Hillary R. Clinton in federal district court on
July 13, 2012, asserting that enforcement of the North American
Emissions Control Area (ECA) lowering the allowed maximum sulfur content
for bunker fuel from 3.5% to 1% within the 200 mile Exclusive Economic
Zone (EEZ) limits is unconstitutional. (See North American ECA
http://www.epa.gov/nonroad/marine/ci/420f10015.htm )
The 1%
sulfur requirement means that the shipowners will have to switch from
lower cost and higher energy content residual intermediate fuel oils
(IFO) to much higher cost distillate fuels – which are akin to diesel
road fuel and called marine diesel oil (MDO) – for the typical modern
motor ship.
The Alaska lawsuit alleges “low-sulfur fuel is more
expensive, and more difficult to obtain, than the fuel currently used by
many marine vessels operating in the waters off the coast of Alaska . .
. . . requiring the use of low-sulfur fuel in the ECA will greatly
increase operating costs for vessels that supply Alaska’s residents with
basic necessities, and for cruise ships that facilitate Alaska’s
tourism industry. Enforcement of the ECA will therefore have an
immediate and adverse effect on Alaska’s citizens and economy.”
Alaska
further claims “the extension of the ECA to Alaska was unlawful because
two-thirds of the U.S. Senate did not consent to that extension as
required by the U.S. Constitution. Under the Constitution’s Treaty
Clause, a treaty cannot bind the U.S., and is not enforceable as
domestic law, unless two-thirds of the Senate give advice and consent to
the treaty.”
The treaty in question is Annex Vi of the
International Convention to Prevent Pollution by Ships (MARPOL) which is
administered by the International Maritime Organization (IMO), a
specialist agency of the United Nations based in London, U.K. The
Protocol of 1997 (MARPOL Annex VI) was adopted in 1997 and entered into
force on May 19, 2005. (See
http://www.imo.org/ourwork/environment/pollutionprevention/airpollution/pages/the-protocol-of-1997-(marpol-annex-vi).aspx)
U.S.
implementation of MARPOL Annex VI is through the U.S. Act to Prevent
Pollution from Ships, 33 U.S.C. §§ 1901 et seq. The U.S. Environmental
Protection Agency (EPA) and the U.S. Coast Guard (USCG) through a
Memorandum of Understanding (MOU) of June 27, 2011 will jointly enforce
U.S. and international air pollution requirements for vessels operating
in U.S. waters. These requirements establish limits on nitrogen oxides
(NOx) emissions and require the use of fuel with lower sulfur content
with the most stringent requirements applying to ships operating within
200 nautical miles of the coast of North America. (See
http://www.epa.gov/oecaerth/civil/caa/annexvi-mou.html )
Former
USCG Captain and maritime attorney Dennis L. Bryant in his Bryant’s
Maritime Consulting blog wrote on July 17, 2012, “the MARPOL Convention
(as approved by a two-thirds majority of the Senate) includes a tacit
or presumptive consent provision whereby amendments to Annexes to the
Convention are presumed to be approved by the party states unless a
party state affirmatively objects. For example, the United States
affirmatively objected to Regulations 13F and 13G of MARPOL Annex I
(relating to alternatives to double hulls on oil tankers) when those
regulations were proposed. Therefore, those regulations did not come
into force for the United States. It would appear that the
constitutionality claim in the Alaska complaint will fail based on tacit
consent.” ( See http://brymar-consulting.com/?p=22884 )
That is
because the Obama Administration chose not to submit MARPOL Annex VI to
the U.S. Senate for ratification, the governing treaty provisions
presume that without a Senate vote that actually defeats the new
Protocol of 1997, it becomes effective under U.S. law.
Given
Hawaii’s tradewind climate in the middle of the Pacific Ocean it’s not
clear that the new low sulfur fuel requirements for ships will benefit
the Islands’ environment any more than Alaskans think it will theirs, so
perhaps a new U.S. administration would chose to submit MARPOL Annex VI
to the U.S. Senate for ratification, and that future Senate would see
fit to reject it.
Best regards.
Michael N. Hansen
President
Hawaii Shippers Council
Post at:
http://www.pacificnewscenter.com/index.php?option=com_content&view=article&id=25804:hawaii-shippers-council-new-bunker-surcharge-for-low-sulfur-fuel&catid=45:guam-news&Itemid=156
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