Significant rules to clean up pollution in the shipping industry are just a couple of days from taking effect, but there are signs that enforcing the same will prove tricky, says an article published in Bloomberg.
Sulphur oxide curb
- The International Maritime Organization, part of the UN, is trying to curb the release of sulfur oxides that it says are bad for human health and contribute to acid rain.
- Shipowners and oil companies have spent billions of dollars getting ready.
- However, countries home to around 15% of the world’s oil-refining capacity have so far failed to sign up to the pact designed to slash sulphur emissions.
Even among the nations that back the rules, some important ones don’t look likely to start with an aggressive implementation.
- South Africa, which sits on shipping lanes connecting the east and western hemispheres, doesn’t have the domestic laws in place to enforce the rules.
- The United Arab Emirates, home to the biggest vessel-refueling center in the Middle East, intends to avoid a draconian start to enforcement.
Clea Henrichsen, a special adviser at the Ministry of Environment and Food for Denmark said, “It will be devastating if not everyone complies.”
Laying Down the Law
For its part, the IMO says that any country that ratified the rules made a commitment to implement them from Jan. 1.
While the IMO sets the regulations, it’s down to individual states to put them into practice, inspecting vessels and having a legal framework in place to punish those that aren’t compliant. But what that will look like in reality is still unclear in several locations.
Lack of transparency
“Most states are keeping their cards really close to their chest,” said Alessio Sbraga, a partner in the shipping team at Holman Fenwick Willan LLP in London. “There’s a general lack of transparency. That’s concerning because, in the first place, robust and consistent enforcement will be important for a level playing field.”
South Africa
Will legislations be ready on time?
South Africa has agreed along with 95 other IMO member states to enforce the rules in its waters. But legislation to make that possible won’t be ready in time. “That bill is not going to see the light of day until sometime next year,” said Edmund Greiner, a maritime lawyer for Shepstone & Wylie’s Cape Town office, who advises the South African Maritime Safety Authority on issues relating to marine pollution.
“Without that bill coming into force of law as an act of parliament, we can’t do anything in South Africa to enforce the provisions.”
Sobantu Tilayi, the acting chief executive officer at SAMSA, said he hopes to see the laws passed by the first half of 2020.
Domestic law not in place
Jamaica
Jamaica doesn’t have the domestic laws in place either. The suggested legislation has been before parliament for some time but is yet to be passed, said a spokeswoman for the National Maritime Authority.
It is not alone: fewer than half of the 20 member states of the Caribbean Memorandum of Understanding have laws to enforce IMO 2020, according to the organization’s Secretary General Jodi Barrow.
Cheat due to lax of enforcement
Shipping companies fear that lax enforcement might tempt some to cheat. That’s crucial because fuel is normally the industry’s single biggest cost, so non-compliant firms could glean a competitive edge.
The legislation is supposed to mean that ships either consume fuel with 0.5% sulfur — down from a 3.5% limit in most parts of the world today — or that they need on-board equipment called scrubbers to prevent the sulfur from being released into the atmosphere.
Strict implementation
Strict implementation is “extremely important, because if you use high sulfur fuel oil you can save immensely on costs and there is a very high potential for fraud,” said a spokesman of Hapag-Lloyd AG, a Hamburg-based container shipping giant.
UAE will not penalize
Other countries are simply heeding calls from the shipping industry to take a pragmatic stance on enforcement, at least to start with. The United Arab Emirates, for example, is anticipating that it won’t begin by penalizing non-compliant ships, according to the head of the nation’s Federal Transport Authority. That’s a potentially vital stance given the country is home to the port of Fujairah, which provides fuel for thousands of ships each year as they come and go from the Persian Gulf.
Fine Disparities
As well as questions about how the regulations will be enforced, there are also significant differences in terms of fines and penalties that companies can expect to pay if they breach the rules, according to Carol Holness, a Durban-based transport lawyer for Norton Rose Fulbright LLP who has looked into the largest maximum fines in countries’ legislation.
South Africa
If South Africa’s bill from September passes into law unchanged, rule-breakers would risk a fine of 3.2 million rand ($220,000), or five years’ imprisonment, or both.
Belgium
In Belgium, penalties for burning overly sulfurous fuel rise to more than $8.9 million. That doubles for re-offenders.
Holness said, “There’s just such a wide variation in terms of what countries are doing.”
Searching Ships
When South Africa’s laws do come into play, SAMSA may also struggle to check ships enough to manage cheating.
- In 2018, around 2% of the ships that called at its ports were inspected, according to data from the Abuja MOU, a port-state control organization.
- Tilayi says regional rules mean a maximum of around 5% can be inspected.
- A more common figure for inspections in Europe and Asia is roughly 20%, according to Chris Cote, an analyst at ESAI Energy LLC.
- Singapore, one of the most important maritime hubs globally, inspected 7% of vessels in 2018, according to the Tokyo MOU.
- In practice, sulfur checks may differ from other inspections.
- Some ports are deploying drones that can identify those vessels that need a closer look.
Non-signatories
Even if all the countries that have ratified the rules do their best to enforce them, though, some regions around the world will have to play catch up. Many nations have years of experience enforcing sulfur caps, but around 100 haven’t signed up to the IMO agreement yet.
These countries include Argentina, Colombia, Ecuador, Israel, Iraq, Mexico, Pakistan and Egypt, according to the latest IMO data available. The Suez Canal, a trade artery between Europe and Asia, passes through the latter country.
All together, the combined oil-refining capacity of the non-signatories is 15 million barrels a day, according to a report by OPEC.
Non-signatories need to comply
While non-signatories won’t be able to enforce the rules, most ships will have to pass through countries that are participating in the regulations, an IMO spokeswoman said.
“So on a practical level, they would need to comply — since they would not want to be emptying tanks out and cleaning them were they to be contaminated with non-compliant fuel oil,” she said.
Support from IMO
“IMO member states, the shipping industry and fuel oil suppliers have been working tirelessly to prepare for this major change in the sulfur content of ships’ fuel oil,” IMO Secretary-General Kitack Lim said on the organization’s website on Wednesday.
“I am confident that the benefits will soon be felt and that implementation will be smooth.”
The IMO said it had set up an email hotline to deal with queries from member states and the shipping industry.
So-called flag states, the locations where most of the world’s ships are registered, have also signed up to the agreement and those that ratified represent 97% of the fleet, according to the IMO.
20% would break the rule
When the standards do kick in, up to 20% of vessels could initially be breaking the rules, said Richard Chatterton, an oil analyst for BloombergNEF in Singapore. But the international pressure to comply means that “it would be folly for a shipping company to ignore the reality of the markets.”
“Because everyone who’s invested in a scrubber, everyone who invested in updating a refinery, everyone who’s invested in rejigging their supply infrastructure, it’s just going to be an absolute mockery if they don’t enforce compliance of the rules that have precipitated billions of dollars of investment,” he said.
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Source: Bloomberg