Interferry has praised a decision at last week’s meeting of the IMO Marine Environment Protection Committee (MEPC) that could exempt certain ferry operators from fitting equipment required by the impending Ballast Water Management Convention to reduce the spread of invasive species.
In a joint submission with Denmark, the trade association argued that ballast water management systems were irrelevant for ships continuously operating in the same body of water, such as between the UK and Ireland. The MEPC responded by agreeing that one of its sub-committees should further consider the issue – including how appropriate operators could obtain an exemption certificate.
Interferry’s director of regulatory affairs Johan Roos comments: “This is a very welcome step in the light of mounting concerns by short sea operators in general and ferry operators in particular. We recognise the need to act on the movement of invasive species between geographical areas where natural spread does not occur, but in our view there is no added value to the environment by destroying organisms that may spread naturally.”
The case for exemptions has mainly been voiced by North Sea and Baltic countries, but last week the governments of Croatia and Singapore also raised their concerns with the MEPC. Mr Roos said this demonstrated that short sea operators around the world needed to see a workable exemption solution to avoid having to fit ‘meaningless and energy-consuming equipment’ on all ships.
A week before the MEPC meeting, he flagged the problem at Interferry’s annual conference in Vancouver, warning: “We may end up in a situation where you have a three mile crossing between Denmark and Sweden and have to invest half a million Euros on equipment to kill off organisms in the same water.”
In the start, I was frank with you propecia before and after has changed my essence. It has become much more fun, and now I have to run. Just as it is improbable to sit.