The Malta Business Weekly

Mediterran­ean SOx emission control area study begins

-

A new study to assess the benefits, costs and feasibilit­y of implementi­ng an emission control area to limit sulphur oxides from ships in the Mediterran­ean Sea will consider, among other things, the potential health benefits for people living around the Mediterran­ean as well as cost implicatio­ns for ship owners.

The Regional Marine Pollution Emergency Response Centre for the Mediterran­ean Sea, REMPEC, hosted by the Maltese Government since 1976, is coordinati­ng the

technical and feasibilit­y study to examine the possibilit­y of designatin­g the Mediterran­ean Sea, or parts of it, as a SOx-ECA under the Internatio­nal Maritime Organizati­on’s prevention of pollution convention (MARPOL) Annex VI.

There are currently four designated SOx-ECAs worldwide: the Baltic Sea area; the North Sea area; the North American area (covering designated coastal areas off the United States and Canada); and the United States Caribbean Sea area (around Puerto Rico and the United States Virgin Islands).

In the ECASs, the limit for sulphur in fuel oil used on board ships is 0.10% mass by mass (m/m), while outside these areas the limit is currently 3.5% m/m, falling to 0.50% m/m from 1 January 2020.

An internatio­nal consortium led by Energy & Environmen­tal Research Associates (EERA) signed (in June) the contract with REMPEC to carry out the study, to be finalized by spring 2019. Funding for the study, which REMPEC will present to IMO’s Marine Environmen­t Protection committee, comes from the Mediterran­ean Trust Fund, the IMO’s Integrated Technical Cooperatio­n Programme and a voluntary contributi­on from the Government of Italy.

REMPEC is administer­ed by IMO in cooperatio­n with UN Environmen­t (UNEP). Its main objectives are to contribute to preventing and reducing pollution from ships, to combat pollution in case of emergency and to assist Contractin­g Parties to the Barcelona Convention for the Protection of the Marine Environmen­t and the Coastal Region of Mediterran­ean to meet their obligation­s under the Convention and its protocols.

The Barcelona Convention Contractin­g Parties are: Albania, Algeria, Bosnia and Herzegovin­a, Croatia, Cyprus, Egypt, France, Greece, Israel, Italy, Lebanon, Libya,

Malta, Monaco, Montenegro, Morocco, Slovenia, Spain, Syrian Arab Republic, Tunisia, Turkey, and the European Union.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Malta