By using this site, you agree to the Privacy Policy and Terms of Use.
Accept
OOLP Maritime World NewsOOLP Maritime World News
  • Home
  • Maritime News
    • Top stories
    • Global Maritime
    • International Shipping
    • Cruise
    • Ports
    • Security & Piracy
  • Live Marine Traffic
  • Events
  • Company
    • About OOLP
    • Contact us
  • Blog
Reading: Supporting ballast water management in the Mediterranean Sea
Share
Notification Show More
Aa
OOLP Maritime World NewsOOLP Maritime World News
Aa
Search
  • Home
  • Maritime News
    • Top stories
    • Global Maritime
    • International Shipping
    • Cruise
    • Ports
    • Security & Piracy
  • Live Marine Traffic
  • Events
  • Company
    • About OOLP
    • Contact us
  • Blog
Follow US
Ā© 2022 - All Rights Reserved. OOLP News.
OOLP Maritime World News > Shipping news > Supporting ballast water management in the Mediterranean Sea
Shipping news

Supporting ballast water management in the Mediterranean Sea

Last updated: 2023/03/27 at 8:15 AM
94 Views
Share
4 Min Read
SHARE


Promoting the development of coordinated action throughout the Mediterranean Sea region to prevent and control marine biological invasions through ships’ ballast water was the focus of a regional workshop (20-21 March) and meeting (22-23 March) in Kappara, Malta.

Delivered within the framework of the Ballast Water Management (BWM) Strategy for the Mediterranean Sea (2022-2027), 28 government officials* from across the Mediterranean region learnt about actions each country in the region should take to ratify, implement and enforce the International Convention for the Control and Management of Ships’ Ballast Water and Sediments, 2004 (BWM Convention). The Mediterranean BWM Strategy was adopted by the Contracting Parties to the Convention for the Protection of the Marine Environment and the Coastal Region of the Mediterranean (Barcelona Convention).

The Convention, which entered into force in 2017, aims to prevent the spread of harmful aquatic organisms in ships’ ballast water from one region to another. It does so by requiring all ships in international traffic to manage their ballast water and sediments to a certain standard, according to a ship-specific management plan. All ships must also carry a ballast water record book and an international ballast water management certificate.

- Promotional Ads -

The main focus of the workshop and meeting was a review by the countries present, supported by IMO’s Theofanis Karayannis and Megan Jensen, of the draft harmonized procedures for ballast water management in the Mediterranean region.description

Draft regional harmonized procedures for the uniform implementation of the BWM Convention in the Mediterranean Sea region were reviewed. They will be updated to reflect the outcome of discussions in Malta before being submitted to a REMPEC Focal Points meeting due to be held in June. These are procedures which reflect IMO guidelines, namely the BWM Convention, and would be implemented by Contracting Parties to the Barcelona Convention.

Other activities covered an introduction to ballast water management and the BWM Convention; understanding the obligations of Parties under the BWM Convention; compliance monitoring and enforcement for port State control; and risk mitigation.

Key outcomes from the workshop were increased awareness and understanding of the ratification, implementation and enforcement process of the BWM Convention, its compliance monitoring and enforcement elements, as well as a bigger network of trained experts in ballast water management and control.

The workshop was jointly organized and co-financed by IMO, through its Integrated Technical Cooperation Programme (ITCP), and the Regional Marine Pollution Emergency Response Centre for the Mediterranean Sea (REMPEC) within the framework of the United Nations Environment Programme Mediterranean Action Plan (MAP).
Source: IMO



You Might Also Like

ABS Grants Approval in Principle to SHI for Cyber Resilience

ā€˜Dark’ ships are faking their locations to move oil around the world — and it’s likely worth billions of dollars

Iron ore clouded further by weak demand outlook

RightShip introduces PortRISK to transform port and terminal risk management

Baltic index scales over 9-month high on capesize surge

admin March 27, 2023
Share This Article
Facebook Twitter Whatsapp Whatsapp LinkedIn Copy Link Print
Previous Article APAC Seaport Ratings Driven by Revenue Stability, Capex, Funding Access & Leverage
Next Article Ukraine prepares new concession projects in Odesa and Izmail seaports
- Promotional Ads -

Latest News

Maersk back away from US Tanker Military contracts
Global Maritime News September 27, 2023
QatarEnergy signs $3.9bn deal for 17 LNG newbuilds in South Korea
Global Maritime News September 27, 2023
E.N. Bisso & Son, Inc. acquires Seabulk Towing, Inc.
Port news September 27, 2023
ABS Grants Approval in Principle to SHI for Cyber Resilience
Shipping news September 27, 2023

OOLP maritime news is a portal that gets latest updates and happenings from the maritime & cruise industry across the globe.

Top maritime stories

Global maritime news

International shipping news

Cruise news

Maritime ports

Security and piracy

About OOLP news

Contact us

Live maritime traffic

Events

Blog

Follow US
Ā© 2023 - All Rights Reserved. OOLP News.
  • Cookie Policy
  • Terms & Conditions
  • Disclaimer
  • Privacy Policy
Welcome Back!

Sign in to your account

Lost your password?