The Marine Transportation System National
Advisory Committee (MTSNAC) advises the U.S. Department of Transportation on
strengthening maritime capabilities essential to economic and national
security. Economic security equals jobs, and we have plenty of them in
Brownsville, Texas – and as a newly appointed member of MTSNAC, it is my goal
to ensure that the department understands the needs of our industry.
Hundreds of people are employed by
Brownsville ship recycling facilities to dismantle obsolete Navy carriers and
MARAD vessels. We also take apart commercial vessels and oil rigs. Nothing goes
to waste. The metal that Brownsville facilities recycle is reused to build
vital infrastructure – bridges, buildings, even bathroom fixtures. Ship
recyclers want to make sure that MTSNAC and the Secretary understand our
contributions to the economy. We also want to make sure that the Secretary
understands the economic importance of the Port of Brownsville: every year,
millions of tons of steel products including slabs, coils, beams, and iron ore
move into and out of the port. It is also a major entry/exit point for windmill
components, breakbulk cargo, and liquid cargos.
International Shipbreaking Limited is also
seeking the department’s support to help us gain certification as an EU
approved ship recycling facility. The latest European Commission proposal would
require all vessels calling in European ports to purchase a ship recycling
license; shipowners would get their money back later if they recycle the
vessels in an EU approved facility. We support the new EU requirement, as our
facilities can meet the EU certification standard and have the capacity and
capability to dismantle more commercial vessels. International Shipbreaking
Limited has already applied to be an EU certified facility and we have asked
the Secretary of Transportation to advocate on our behalf with his European
counterparts.
My third goal as a newly appointed member of
MTSNAC is to work with members regarding the dismantlement of U.S. flag
vessels. Many in the U.S. maritime
industry are strong supporters of the Jones Act's U.S.-built and U.S.-crewed
requirements, but they sell their ships to Chinese, Indian, Pakistani or
Bangladeshi recycling facilities. When U.S. vessel owners dismantle their
vessels overseas, Brownsville, Texas workers suffer. They lose out on work, and that doesn't
happen at the major shipyards in California, Connecticut, and Virginia. U.S.
shipbuilders demand that their workers be protected and we want the same
treatment. It's time to stop outsourcing
Texas jobs.
U.S. ship recyclers don't expect MTSNAC
members to be able to solve all of the maritime industry's problems. But we do believe that we can provide
valuable input to the Secretary of Transportation and the Maritime
Administration as they develop new administration policies. Promoting growth in the domestic ship recycling
industry should be part of these policies, and I look forward to working with
MTSNAC to implement them.
Source: maritime-executive. 15 July 2016
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