Danish law inadequate
when it comes to responsible ship breaking
According to ship scrapping watch dog website
offthebeach.org, 11 Danish shipping companies and subsidiaries have sent 18
ships to be scrapped at the notorious scrap yards in India, Pakistan and
Bangladesh over the past four years.
The ships are being scrapped by impoverished migrant
workers in dangerous conditions for pay as little as 2.5 kroner an hour, at
ship breaking yards such as in Alang, India, where at least 470 fatal accidents
have occurred since 1983, according to the Brussels-based NGO Shipbreaking
Platform.
”The shipyards down there, including those can call
themselves ’environmental’, are miles from the standards seen at facilities
such as in Denmark,” Patrizia Heidegger, the head of the NGO Shipbreaking
Platform, told Ekstra Bladet tabloid.
“The workers’ security equipment is not in order and
there are often accidents where they are crushed by bits of iron falling from
the ships, killed in explosions and many become ill after being exposed to
toxic substances like asbestos and mercury.”
Registration loophole
Since 2006 it has been forbidden to sail ships under
Danish flags to the ship yards in India, but the Danish companies own many
ships that are not registered in Denmark.
The Hong Kong International Convention for the Safe
and Environmentally Sound Recycling of Ships, which was drafted back in 2009
and will toughen the regulation of ship recycling, has yet to be ratified, and
so far only Norway has signed on.
And it is unlikely that the new more stringent EU
rules which are going into effect in a few years will have much of an effect as
few European shipping companies register their ships in EU nations.
Fact Box
Here are the Danish companies and subsidiaries whose
ships have been scrapped in India, Pakistan and Bangladesh since 2009:
- Blue Line International, BLI Management sent the
two ships Split 1700 in 2010 and Ancona in 2011 to be scrapped in Alang, India
- Container Leasing A/S sent the two ships CS
Christine in 2012 and CS Giotte in 2013 to be scrapped in Alang, India
- CS Partners A/S sent SEA Corona to be scrapped in
Alang, India in 2009
- Dania Marine ApS sent Sujin to be scrapped in
Alang, India in 2013 and Philip to be scrapped in Mumbai, India in 2012
- Dannebrog Rederi sent Naesborg (2011), Marienborg
(2012) and SIAM Project (2011) and Aalborg (2013) to be all scrapped in Alang,
India
- Nordana Line A/S sent NORD Scan Mumbai to be
scrapped in 2011 in Alang, India
- Dansk Investeringsfond DIFKO dispatched Power II to
Aland India and Amberjack to Gadani, Pakistan for scrapping in 2012
- Nina Shipping K/S sent Nina to be scrapped in
Cittagong, Bangladesh in 2010
- Hansen og Lange I/S sent Selma to be scrapped in
Alang, India in 2013
- Seaflex A/S sent Burgos to be scrapped in Alang,
India in 2010
- Transland Invest ApS sent ACE IV to be scrapped in
Alang, India in 2012
Source: the copenhagen
post. 22 December 2014
http://cphpost.dk/news/danish-companies-sending-ships-to-notorious-scrapping-sites.12097.html
No comments:
Post a Comment