Posted - May 15, 2013 - Hellenic Shipping News Worldwide
Before I address some of the most
important items on your agenda this week, I wish to
update you on some general matters of importance to the work of the
Organization relevant to the Committee’s work. This year, our World
Maritime Day theme is “IMO’s contribution to sustainable development
beyond Rio+20”. We have commenced discussions with industry partners
and other stakeholders on sustainable maritime development with the aim
of developing a clear concept of sustainability of the maritime
transportation system that would provide a framework and springboard for
our work meeting the challenges of the 21st century. I hope to
present, in good time for our World Maritime Day celebration later this
year, a concept of sustainability for the maritime sector, together with
a related agenda to move forward the roles for IMO, for Member
Governments and for industry.
Meanwhile, I look forward to inaugurating, on Thursday after close of
business, the permanent display on Particularly Sensitive Sea Areas,
which, as I announced at your last session, will showcase the success of
IMO in protecting sensitive marine areas.
Setting up and populating the interactive displays demanded very hard
work from the dedicated staff of the Marine Environment Division and
would not have been possible without the crucial support of a number of
Member Governments. My special thanks go to the Governments of
Australia, Finland, Germany, the Netherlands, the Republic of Korea and
Sweden, who provided substantial financial support. I also wish to
thank all those Members who provided materials on PSSAs in their
respective areas.
Please do take the opportunity of your coffee and lunch breaks to visit
the display, which is located on the second floor, just outside the
Committee rooms. To date, 14 PSSAs have been established by means of
MEPC resolutions, the Saba Bank in the north-eastern Caribbean being the
latest addition, which was formally designated by MEPC 64 last October.
Mr. Chairman,
In June of last year, I reported to the Council (108th session) on my
Review and Reform initiative aimed at improving IMO's delivery mechanism
to handle the ever-increasing workload as the Organization seeks to
address newly-emerging priorities under increasingly restrictive
financial circumstances following the unprecedented economic contraction
and financial crises and tight budgetary control. At its subsequent
session, in November last year, the Council considered my report of a
study on the Organization’s long-term financial sustainability. Among
other issues involving the review and reform initiative, my report
addressed matters related to the restructuring of the sub-committees. A
framework document has already been released for detailed consideration
by your Committee and by the MSC. I am looking forward to further
development on this important issue, with the aim to reach a rational
and well-balanced decision at the Council in July of this year.
Distinguished delegates,
Turning now to the main tasks set for your Committee at this session, I
will start with the status of implementation of the Ballast Water
Management Convention. With 36 contracting parties to date and with the
only outstanding entry into force condition of 35% of the world’s
merchant tonnage now being close to fulfilment, a little under 6% is all
that is still required. We ought to be optimistic that the Convention
will enter into force soon. However, the industry continues to have
major concerns over the cost of compliance.
I would strongly suggest that now is the time to move towards
implementation. The problem associated with ballast water is inherently
connected to the expansion of world trade and, therefore, an issue from
which the shipping industry cannot escape.
Ever since the matter was raised by Member Governments in the late
1980s, IMO has been actively working on the ballast water management
issue, adopting voluntary guidelines in 1991, with updated versions in
1993 and 1997, and adopting the Convention in 2004. Scientists agree
that the ballast water management issue affects ocean health and marine
biodiversity in a major way, with thousands of species being transported
around the world at any given moment and shipping transferring
approximately 3 to 5 billion tonnes of ballast water each year, and this
volume will increase further with the growth in world trade. IMO quite
rightly led the way with adopting ground-breaking requirements, with
global scope, for countering the invasive – and possibly irreversible –
harm caused by ships’ ballast water and sediment discharges. It is also
for this reason that our Globallast partnership projects assist a
growing number of countries in regions around the world to strengthen
their capacity, including a strengthened legal framework, to implement
measures addressing the problem of bio-invasions of local marine and
coastal environments and ecosystems.
It is recognized that there is a substantive cost required for
installing and operating a ballast water management system – some 1-2
million US dollars per ship, depending on size and type, plus
operational costs. However, the estimated costs for society to deal
with problems caused by alien aquatic species are comparatively very
high, in fact astronomical. Just, for example, in the United States,
the invasive Zebra Mussel has infested over 40% of inland waterways, and
management and control costs for facilities such as power plants are
calculated in billions of dollars. In the Caspian Sea, the costs
related to one single alien species – the American comb jelly – are
estimated to be 500 million dollars annually due to the drastic decline
in fisheries, and the costs for alien aquatic species in Europe have
been estimated to be some 2.9 billion dollars per year.
Shipowners understandably are concerned about incurring additional costs
and costs of compliance, especially in the current difficult economic
climate and as the costs of other environmental regulations such as
sulphur restriction requirements and energy efficiency standards must
also be absorbed. It is also inevitable that the development of new
technologies required for regulatory compliance takes time, which has
caused many owners to hold back from applying them on board recently
constructed ships. However, these concerns should not stop us from
activating the implementation of the Convention and I would strongly
encourage IMO Member Governments, and the major flag States in
particular, to co operate and establish meaningful measures which would
ease the burden for the shipping industry of introducing the necessary
ballast water management technologies, within the framework of the
Ballast Water Management Convention. We must move to entry into force
and implementation of the BWM Convention.
I am pleased that very positive steps have been taken since your
previous session to address outstanding concerns related to the
effective implementation of the Convention.
A correspondence group has worked hard (under the coordination of Japan)
to produce a draft Assembly resolution to ease and facilitate the
process of implementation. I therefore urge the Committee to engage in
further discussions to narrow down the options provided by the group,
with a view to approving at this session a draft resolution for adoption
by the Assembly at its twenty-eighth session in November. By
proceeding in this way, IMO will have an authoritative and operationally
practicable agreement, your gentleman’s agreement, in place on how to
start effective implementation of the Convention. And, as I have said
several times before, once the Convention has entered into force, its
formal amendment procedure should be invoked to accommodate your
agreement in legal terms for implementation under the active Convention
in force.
Another IMO Convention on my radar of concern with respect to the need
for speedy ratification and implementation is the Hong Kong
International Convention for the Safe and Environmentally Sound
Recycling of Ships. Having been adopted almost four years ago, on 15
May 2009, the Convention has yet to attract even its first accession or
ratification. This is despite the fact that the whole package is
complete, including all six guidelines identified by the Hong Kong
Conference and required under the Convention.
The Hong Kong Convention is the currently available best and only
workable instrument for international shipping and, having been adopted
by consensus by an IMO international conference – it is truly global in
scope. Therefore, we must accelerate the process of ratification and
ensure its early entry into force in order to ensure the safety of
workers and the protection of the environment. It is encouraging that
leading international associations of shipowners have agreed to support
voluntary adherence to the requirements of the Convention during the
interim period, prior to its entry into force, such as having ships
carry on board the (to-be-mandatory) Inventory of Hazardous Materials
and, in fact, many shipowners have been preparing the Inventory of
hazardous materials for their ships to facilitate ship recycling at the
end of ships’ operating life. In this regard, your Committee is expected
to expedite further, at this session, the practical matter of the
“threshold values and exemptions for hazardous materials” to be listed
in the shipboard Inventory of Hazardous Materials.
Not only does this confirm that the Convention is indeed workable for
the shipping industry, it also puts into motion a process of gradual,
pragmatic and realistic safety and environmental improvements, which
will benefit especially those ship recycling yards where such
improvements are needed most.
I particularly request ship recycling countries, including Bangladesh,
China, India, Pakistan and Turkey, to accelerate the process of
ratification. At the same time, I would like to encourage all other
Member Governments to pay respect to the provisions of the Convention by
supporting it through early ratification as well and by making every
possible effort towards its implementation through the IMO process. A
slow pace of ratification and a prolonged state of non-fulfilment of the
entry into force conditions only risk creating a situation that may
compel some authorities to take action to try to enforce measures that
would go beyond IMO regulations or impose additional requirements, even
before such IMO regulations enter into force. This is against the
spirit of co-operation at IMO and damages the credibility of the
Organization. Therefore, anything related to the implementation of the
Hong Kong Convention should be discussed here at IMO and not elsewhere.
The Committee’s work on matters related to air pollution under the
revised MARPOL Annex VI (agenda item 4) will, once again, continue on
various fronts and include consideration of the recommendations of the
review of technological developments to implement the Tier III NOx
emission standard; and the need for further measures to address Volatile
Organic Compounds.
You will also be invited to consider sulphur emissions averaging as an
equivalent approach to comply with the sulphur limits under the Annex. I
trust that you will carefully weigh the benefits of such an approach,
and be always mindful of the need to ensure both a robust and workable
approach to the full and effective implementation of the sulphur
reduction requirements.
Distinguished delegates,
The entry into force, on 1 January of this year, of mandatory technical
and operational measures for ships’ energy efficiency signalled a new
era for international shipping.
Several proposals have been submitted for consideration at this session,
all of which confirm that enhancing the energy efficiency of ships
remains paramount. As you may recall, energy efficiency is one of the
pillars I believe should underpin Sustainable Development Goals for
shipping and the maritime industries. Specifically, at this session you
will be asked to consider requirements for collecting and verifying
data on ship emissions to encourage further energy efficient
improvements.
A phased implementation is proposed which will enable review and
refinement in order to build confidence in the process. I will be very
interested in the outcome of your deliberations as the technical issues
will once again demonstrate IMO’s competence as the global forum for
deliberating measures to enhance the sustainability of international
shipping.
With this in mind, I welcome the proposal by IACS to collate and provide
to the Committee information pursuant to the implementation of the
Energy Efficiency Design Index. Here again, in short, IMO will have a
good story to tell the outside world that IMO is making progress in the
field of energy efficiency.
As regards the reduction of greenhouse gas emissions from international
shipping (agenda item 5), I am encouraged by the outcome of the Expert
Workshop that was endorsed by the Committee at MEPC 64. Held at IMO
Headquarters earlier this year, this workshop identified draft Terms of
Reference for an update of the estimate of greenhouse gas emissions from
international shipping, which you will be invited to consider. An
updated emissions estimate would provide a robust baseline to assess the
impact of the technical and operational energy efficiency measures for
international shipping that entered into force on 1 January.
Last, but definitely not least, is the finalization of the draft MEPC
resolution on promotion of technical co-operation and transfer of
technology. This has been on the agenda of the Committee since MEPC
62. The resolution, once adopted, will give confidence to all parties
that their capacity building needs are appropriately recognized. I
acknowledge that delegations have worked very hard to achieve a
compromise, and I therefore encourage all parties to again work together
to finalize the work at this session.
Distinguished delegates,
Substantial progress was made with the development of the draft Code for
ships operating in polar waters by the DE Sub-Committee, which prepared
draft provisions concerning environmental protection for the Code at
its March session. It will be your Committee’s task this week to review
those draft provisions and to work towards achieving consensus on
outstanding issues that could not be resolved by the DE Sub-Committee.
In this regard, I would urge you to focus your attention on matters of
principle as this would help to expedite the work that remains to be
done. I am now confident that it will be possible to complete the work
on the Code by next year, which is the target date we set ourselves.
The DE Sub-Committee’s request to your Committee and to the Maritime
Safety Committee to authorize an intersessional meeting of the Polar
Code Working Group later this year (in autumn) should help significantly
in this regard.
Distinguished delegates,
In the interest of time I have chosen only a few selected items on your
agenda and there are several more, all important and calling for careful
consideration.
Once again, you have a very busy week ahead of you. I am confident
that, with the usual IMO spirit of co-operation and guided by your able
chairman, Mr. Andreas Chrysostomou of Cyprus, for whom this will be the
last MEPC session as your Chairman, you will have another successful
meeting, demonstrating to the outside world that the commitment of this
Organization and of the shipping industry to the protection of the
environment is undiminished. We have a good story to tell indeed, and
we also have cause for celebration, because this year marks 40 years
since the adoption of MARPOL in 1973 and 30 years since the
establishment of the World Maritime University in Malmö.
It is also 30 years ago, on 17 May 1983, that Her Majesty Queen
Elisabeth II officially opened our IMO Headquarters building. I shall,
therefore, be privileged to host the presentation by the Government of
Chile of a commemorative plaque in the form of the IMO emblem, made from
Chilean copper, which will be placed on the wall behind the podium in
the Main Hall, after which I shall be pleased to welcome you all to the
usual, opening day drinks reception after close of business this
evening.
Before concluding, I would like to touch upon the maritime casualty in
Genoa, last week. I express my and the Organization’s condolences to
the victims and families of those who lost their lives at the casualty
where ro-ro containership Jolly Nero collided with the Control Tower.
This is another tragedy for Italy and I offer my deepest sympathy to
Italy and the Italian Coast Guard in having encountered another maritime
tragedy, while they are finalizing the Casualty Investigation Report of
Costa Concordia.
With these words, I wish you every success in your deliberations and the
best of luck. The Secretariat will, as always, support the meeting to
the best of its abilities.
Source: IMO
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