Posted - July 13, 2012 - Green4Sea
There is no shortfall in governance so far as the international
regulation of shipping is concerned, which responsibly utilises the
excellent facility that the sea provides for international transport -
about 90% of world trade is carried by sea. This is the view of the
International Chamber of Shipping (ICS) whose Secretary General, Peter
Hinchliffe, took part in a major debate about oceans governance in New
York on 13 July.
The ICS Secretary General was addressing an international academic
conference on "Developing a New International Architecture for Maritime
Policy" organised by the Dräger Foundation and the Earth Institute at
Columbia University. He praised the virtues of the comprehensive
regulatory framework developed by the International Maritime
Organization (IMO) within the umbrella for oceans governance provided
by the United Nations Convention on the Law of the Sea (UNCLOS).
ICS reported that the number of significant oil spills had decreased
from about 23 per year in the 1970s to just three per year during the
past 10 years, while the volume of maritime trade had more than tripled
during the same period.
"In part this is because IMO environmental regulations are genuinely
implemented and enforced on a global basis through a combination of
flag state and port state control" said Mr Hinchliffe.
IMO has also developed binding rules to address damage to local
ecosystems potentially caused by ship's ballast water, as well as
mandatory international rules to reduce sulphur and CO2 emissions.
He explained that shipping is a global industry requiring a global
regulatory framework, not a patchwork of national rules which would
bring about chaos, inefficiency and have a negative impact on the
smooth flow of world trade, as well as being detrimental to the
protection of the oceans.
Speaking just before the New York event, Mr Hinchliffe remarked that
because of the delicate balance of rights and responsibilities that
exists between flag states, port states and coastal states, the
shipping industry is very reluctant to support a fundamental revision
of UNCLOS - as has been proposed by sections of the European Commission
and some environmentalist NGOs.
Apart from enshrining the principle of global maritime rules, which
are vital to the industry, UNCLOS also establishes the right of all
nations to freedom of navigation on the high seas and the right of
innocent passage in territorial waters. It also deals with delicate
issues such as the rights of all ships to use international straits
which are of great strategic importance.
However, because UNCLOS addresses a number of other sensitive
issues, not just affecting shipping, ICS believes it is very unlikely
that governments would be willing to reopen what is a delicately
balanced package.
"Shipping has a hundred years' experience of international governance
of its activities, and we would question any suggestion that UNCLOS is
no longer fit for purpose, at least so far as the regulation of
shipping is concerned," he said.
Mr Hinchliffe suggested that if there were concerns about other
areas of oceans governance, lessons could be learned by other sectors
from the shipping industry's global regulator, IMO, whose successful
MARPOL Convention is enforced and implemented by 150 Flag States
covering 99% of the world fleet.
He pointed out: "Unlike many other activities involving the oceans,
shipping is probably unique in having a specialist UN agency to regulate
our activities - the International Maritime Organization. We have
experience of many intergovernmental organisations that impact on our
industry. But through ICS's participation at every IMO Committee
meeting, we know that IMO is actually a model of efficiency, made up of
experts from virtually every government in the world, who develop and
adopt very complex regulations directly relevant to the protection of
the marine environment."
Post to be found at:
http://www.green4sea.com/page/12368/3/shipping-s--environmental-impact-is-well-regulated--by-imo-and-unclos-should-be-
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