Globally, ship
owners continued to profit from dangerous and dirty shipbreaking practices on
South Asian beaches in 2015, according to new data released today by the NGO
Shipbreaking Platform.
The organisation
said despite calls from industry leaders and human rights and environmental
organisations, of the 768 large ocean-going vessels scrapped last year, 469
were broken on the beaches of India, Pakistan and Bangladesh where shipbreaking
yards do not provide fundamental labour rights, ignore international waste
trade law, and fail to respect international environmental protection
standards.
The NGO highlighted
one of many accidents that killed or maimed shipbreaking workers last year - a
major gas explosion at Shitol Enterprise, a shipbreaking yard in Bangladesh. A
gas cylinder was said to have burst and killed four workers immediately and severely
injured another four.
The vessel in which
the incident occurred was said to have been sold to Shitol Enterprise by the
Greek shipping company Universal Ship Management Corporation, and sailed under
the flag of St. Kitts and Nevis, a typical low-cost, end-of-life flag of
convenience.
According to
Shipbreaking Platform, Greek owners by far outstripped ship owners of other
nationalities by having sold the most end-of-life vessels to dirty and
dangerous shipbreaking sites in South Asia, and for the first time in many
years, Bangladesh was the world’s number one destination for scrap ships.
Worst
of the Worst
The NGO said that
the “worst dumper prize” for 2015 goes to Idan Ofer, son of shipping magnate
Sammy Ofer. Idan Ofer owns QUANTUM PACIFIC GROUP and has a controlling stake in
Israel’s largest publicly traded company, ISRAEL CORPORATION.
Combined, these
shipping companies were said to have sold the highest number of vessels into
substandard breaking operations in 2015: nine in total, with six of them going
to Bangladesh, where conditions are known to be worst.
Greek ship owners
were found to have sold the most ships to South Asian shipbreaking yards in
2015, with 87 ships in total. Since the NGO started to compile data on
world-wide ship dismantling practices in 2009, it said that Greek shipping
companies have unceasingly topped the list of owners that opt for dirty and
dangerous shipbreaking.
Backed by the Greek
government, the NGO said that these companies continue to refuse liability for
the damage done to workers and the environment in South Asia.
But according to
Shipbreaking Platform while Greece may be the worst offending country, it is
far from alone. Despite being part of several sustainable shipping initiatives
and boosting environmentally friendly technologies on-board operational ships,
well-known South Korean shipping companies such as HYUNDAI and HANJIN;
Taiwanese container giant EVERGREEN; and Japanese companies including MOL,
K-LINE and the TOYOTA owned TOYOFUJI were all reported to have sold vessels for
breaking in Bangladesh in clear contradiction of their own company values and
standards.
According to the
data South Korean firms sold 27 ships exclusively to South Asia, mostly to
Bangladesh. Japanese owners where also said to have sold exclusively to South
Asia, many to Bangladesh.
The NGO also called
out German shipping company NORDDEUTSCHE VERMÖGEN, which it said sold three
vessels to the beaches of India and Bangladesh – the Northern Glance, the
Northern Diversity and the Northern Vitality. The latter had been arrested in
the port of Wilhelmshaven in Germany in 2012 to prevent an imminent illegal
export to India.
Despite awareness
of the poor conditions at the South Asian shipbreaking yards, Shipbreaking
Platform claimed that NORDDEUTSCHE VERMÖGEN did not care about their vessels
hitting the beaches, one of which went to Bangladesh – no lesson learnt.
Polish
government-owned POLSTEAM also drew the wrath for selling ships to Bangladesh
and Pakistan – and refusing to take responsibility for its own actions
following an alert sent by the NGO Shipbreaking Platform. Worse, the Polish
government has likewise not acted.
A
Leopard and its Spots?
“Despite a lot of
international attention on the problems of shipbreaking on the beaches of South
Asia, the statistics for 2015 show that the vast majority of ship owners have
not changed their practice for the better. On the contrary, most have opted for
one of the worst shipbreaking destination in the world – Bangladesh, where
children are still illegally exploited to break ships manually on tidal
mudflats”, said Patrizia Heidegger, NGO Shipbreaking Platform Director.
According to the
organisation ship owners sell their vessels to South Asian yards via
cash-buyers, companies that specialise in the trade of end-of-life tonnage.
Cash-buyers promise
ship owners not only the highest price, but also to rid them of their
responsibility to properly deal with the end-of-life management of their ships.
The NGO explained
that ships contain large amounts of toxic materials such as oil sludge,
asbestos and paints laden with heavy metals and would yield less profit at
end-of-life if sold to a recycling facility that firmly follows environmental
and occupational health and safety standards.
Hope
for the future
According to
Shipbreaking Platform one sign of hope, is a group of leading ship owners that
have vowed to take responsibility for clean and safe end-of-life management and
demonstrate that alternatives are available.
It also noted that
the European Union is expected to publish a list of approved ship recycling
facilities worldwide by the end of 2016. This will satisfy the call from those
that demand better practices, including investors such as ABN-Amro and cargo
owners such as H&M, Stora Enso and Phillips – none of whom wish to be
associated with polluting and harmful end-of-life management of old ships.
While, only vessels
sailing under an EU flag will be legally obliged to use an EU approved
recycling facility, any ship owner can nevertheless opt for an EU approved
facility for its non-EU flagged ships on a voluntary basis.
Shipbreaking
Platform therefore demanded that shipping companies and their investors only
allow their vessels to go to yards listed on the EU list.
Moreover, it called
on governments of the world’s leading maritime nations, such as Greece and
Germany, to likewise take steps to ensure national use of the EU list.
According to the NGO,
introducing a financial incentive based on the polluter pays principle would go
a far way in pushing irresponsible ship owners towards sustainable ship
recycling.
Source: waste-management-world.
12 February 2016
http://waste-management-world.com/a/ship-owners-still-opting-for-cut-price-recycling-on-south-asian-beaches
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