Two Turkish Yards Axed By EU From The Shipbreaking List

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Credits: CHUTTERSNAP/ Unsplash
  • Simsekler, another ship recycling facility located in Türkiye, was also removed due to safety concerns which lead to fatal accidents in 2021 and 2022.
  • European shipowners possess around 40% of the world fleet. Many of these ships are being dismantled outside the EU.
  • The move is aimed at curbing the practice of European shipowners of dismantling their ships on beaches in South Asia. 

Two yards from Turkey have been removed from the EU List of Ship Recycling facilities as they failed to meet the requirements of the union’s ship recycling regulation, reported by Offshore Energy.

Ship recycling facility

The European Commission said that one yard failed to sufficiently protect its employees’ working conditions, and the other was delisted due to a lack of transparency on ship dismantling operations. 

Specifically, Işıksan, a ship recycling facility located in Türkiye, has been removed from the list, due to, among other things, the inability of the shipyard to confirm that ships flying the flag of EU member states destined to be recycled at Işıksan were finally dismantled in that facility. 

It has been indicated that they were instead transferred to nearby facilities which are not included on the European List.

Simsekler, another ship recycling facility located in Türkiye, was also removed due to safety concerns which lead to fatal accidents in 2021 and 2022.

Recycling capacity

The commission has added a yard located in Bulgaria, Ship and Industrial Service Ltd., to the list and extended the date of expiry of the inclusion of two listed yards located in France and Lithuania, namely UAB Armar and Démonaval Recycling.

The European List now contains 45 ship-recycling facilities, including 38 yards in Europe (EU, Norway and UK), 6 yards in Türkiye, and 1 yard in the USA.

“Overall, the recycling capacity of the yards on the EU List is still multiple times higher than the demand and several yards on the European List are also capable of recycling large vessels,” the commission said.

Recycling regulation

European shipowners possess around 40% of the world fleet. Many of these ships are being dismantled outside the EU, mainly in South Asia, under conditions that are often harmful to workers’ health and the environment.

As of December 31, 2018, the EU Ship Recycling Regulation requires all large sea-going vessels sailing under an EU member state flag to use an approved ship recycling facility included in the list.

The move is aimed at curbing the practice of European shipowners of dismantling their ships on beaches in South Asia. 

In order to evade the regulations, certain EU shipowners tend to reflag their end-of-life vessels to countries outside of the EU and sell them for dismantling.

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Source: Offshore Energy