The NGO Shipbreaking Platform, a global
coalition of 19 environmental, human rights and labour rights organisations
working to prevent dangerous and polluting shipbreaking worldwide, is calling
on Singapore-based ship owners to stop selling their end-of-life ships filled
with hazardous wastes to beach-breaking yards in developing countries, but
rather demand clean and safe ship recycling.
“It is now time for South East Asian ship
owners to join the front-runners of the maritime industry mainly based in
Europe and say no to a practice that is harming the environment and people,”
says Patrizia Heidegger, Executive Director of the NGO Shipbreaking Platform,
who just spoke at the TradeWinds Ship Recycling Forum held in Singapore. “There
are various opportunities to choose clean and safe ship recycling, and it’s
time for responsible South East Asian ship owners to seize these.”
Shipbreaking as practiced today on the
beaches in India, Bangladesh and Pakistan is a cause for pollution of the
coastal ecosystems next to the yards. This also includes erosion and an
increased risks of floods when the coastal green belt of mangrove trees is cut
down in Bangladesh. Not only are workers exposed to dangerous waste in the
yards and downstream scrap yards, but the industry also effects surrounding
communities, including fishermen who have lost their livelihoods. By selling
their ships to such yards, Singapore shipping companies are effectively
encouraging substandard shipbreaking that continue to harm the local
environment and communities.
“Singapore as an industrialised state and
a major shipping hub must make sure it does not externalise costs for hazardous
waste management to developing countries when scrapping its ships”, says Jim
Puckett, Executive Director of US-based Basel Action Network (BAN). “What is
more, ship owners need to develop ship recycling policies that take into
account the real costs for responsible recycling”.
In a list published in February [1], the
Platform counted that out of 39 Singapore-owned ships sent for dismantling last
year, almost all were sent to the South Asian beach-breaking yards: 17 ships
were sent to India, 9 to Bangladesh and 5 to Pakistan. Containership owner
Neptune Orient Lines (NOL) sold 6 end-of-life ships for dismantling in 2013,
all of them to either Alang, India or Chittagong, Bangladesh [2].
“Shipbreaking yards in South Asia do not
operate according to international environmental standards. Ship owners should
make sure their end-of-life ships are recycled in accordance with those
standards,” says Ritwick Dutta, environmental lawyer from India, who also spoke
in the conference. “Ship owners should not just rely on certificates presented
to them, but must verify under which conditions their old ships are really
demolished”.
The European Union has effectively
disqualified beaching for EU-flagged ships by issuing a new EU Ship Recycling
Regulation in December 2013. The regulation requires recycling facilities to
operate from “built structures” and asks for full containment of all
pollutants, leakage control and impermeable floors. European ship owners that
have chosen an anti-beaching position including Dutch ship owner Boskalis, as
well as Norwegian companies Grieg Shipping, Wilhelmsen and Höegh Autoliners. In
North America, Canadian Steamship Lines (CSL) has declared not to beach any of
its ships anymore, and leading international oil and gas companies chose
cleaner and safer recycling for their tankers.
NOTES:
[1] The 2013 lists are available here:
http://bit.ly/LHuOTn
[2] See our complete list in the
appendix.
CONTACT:
Patrizia Heidegger
Executive Director
NGO Shipbreaking Platform
In Singapore: 0065 8331 9468
Jim Puckett
Executive Director
Basel Action Network
Ritwick Dutta
Lawyer
Legal Initiative for Forest and
Environment (LIFE)
Source:
NGO shipbreaking platform. 6 March 2014
http://www.shipbreakingplatform.org/press-release-ngos-call-on-singapore-ship-owners-to-end-dangerous-shipbreaking-practices-and-embrace-modern-ship-recycling/
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