Brussels,
20 March 2019 - Last week the Council on Ethics of the Norwegian oil pension
fund (Government Pension Fund Global) announced that it will turn its attention
towards Indian shipbreaking practices. This may well result in further
divestments from shipping companies with poor shipbreaking records.
In
2018, the Council on Ethics had already advised the fund to divest from
companies, including container line Evergreen, selling their end-of-life
vessels to shipbreaking yards located in Pakistan and Bangladesh “due to an
unacceptable risk that the companies are contributing to serious environmental
damage and gross violations of human rights”.
KLP,
Norway’s largest private pension fund, followed suit and blacklisted the same
companies. In January, KLP also blacklisted Nordic American Tankers (NAT)
following the sale of ten oil tankers for dirty and dangerous scrapping on
beaching yards in South Asia. The Bermuda-registered company, controlled from
Norway by Herbjørn Hanson, was firstly confronted by KLP and criticised by
Norwegian press for having sold eight ships for scrapping to South Asia in
2018, ensuring NAT a 80 million dollar scrapping revenue. Five vessels ended up
in Chittagong, Bangladesh; three ended up in Alang, India. The sale of two
additional vessels to Bangladeshi yards with terrible accident records prompted
KLP to blacklist NAT earlier this year.
“KLP’s
goal is that no ship ends up on a beach where irresponsible scrapping practices
take place. It is the ship owners’ responsibility to identify which standards,
routines and processes they need to comply with to ensure safe and responsible
ship recycling”, said Håvard Gulbrandsen, CEO of KLP.
The
European Commission recently announced that two Indian yards (i.e. Priya Blue
Industries Pvt. Ltd, Shree Ram Vessel Scrap Pvt. Ltd) that applied for
inclusion in the European List of ship recycling facilities do not comply with
the EU Ship Recycling Regulation. The site inspections and technical
assessments, done by the classification society DNV GL, identified several
areas where the yards do not meet the requirements for clean and safe ship
recycling.
Source: NGO Shipbreaking Platform
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