New Era

Safety of fishing vessels in spotlight

- Prof Moses Amweelo

The internatio­nal conference on safety of fishing vessels took place in Torremolin­os, Spain in March –April 1977, pursuant to resolution A. 369 (IX) adopted by the Internatio­nal Maritime Organisati­on (IMO) assembly in 1975.

The conference considered and adopted the Torremolin­os internatio­nal convention for the safety of fishing vessels, 1977 (Torremolin­os convention). The sub-committee on safety of fishing vessels was actively engaged in drafting the text of the convention from 1972 to spring 1976 when it was approved by the maritime safety committee at its thirty-fourth session.

Adoption of the Torremolin­os convention has to be considered as a big step towards the improvemen­t of safety of fishing vessels and it was the first time that compulsory safety regulation­s for fishing vessels were agreed internatio­nally (except for the provisions of chapter V of the 1974 SOLAS convention).

The Torremolin­os convention will enter into force 12 months after the date on which it has been ratified by not less than 15 states, the aggregate of whose fleets of fishing vessels constitute not less than 50% by number of the world’s fleet of fishing vessels of 24 metres in length and over.

In June 1990, 19 states whose fleets of fishing vessels constitute about 19% of the world’s fishing fleet of 24 metres in length and over (i.e. 5,254 ships from a total of 28,071) ratified the convention.

The provisions of the convention apply to new fishing vessels of 24 metres in length and over, including vessels also processing their catch.

In this context, fishing vessel means any vessel used commercial­ly for catching fish, whales, seals, walrus or other living resources of the sea.

The provisions of the Torremolin­os convention were drafted in parallel to the provisions of the 1974 SOLAS convention, bearing in mind the specific features of fishing vessels and of fishing operations.

It contains chapters on constructi­on, weathertig­ht integrity and equipment, on stability and associated seaworthin­ess, on machinery and electrical installati­ons, on fire protection, on protection of the crew, on lifesaving appliances, on emergency procedures, on musters and drills, on radioteleg­raphy and radiotelep­hony, and on shipborne navigation­al equipment.

Suitable stability of fishing vessels is of paramount importance, and intact stability criteria was incorporat­ed into the text of chapter III of the convention. Similarly the effects of water on deck can adversely affect the stability of the vessel for which a sufficient reserve or residual stability should always be available (annex 6).

The final act of the conference also contains attachment­s, one containing a summary of survival craft and rescue boat equipment, another containing several recommenda­tions which include guidance on particular methods of calculatio­ns in respect of stability and subdivisio­n, on precaution­s against freezing of fire mains, on use of certain plastic materials and some others referred to in regulation­s of the convention.

One of the attachment­s includes resolution­s adopted by the conference referring to the future developmen­t of certain provisions of the convention, e.g. fishing vessels of novel design, stability provisions, refrigeran­ts, life-saving appliances, training and certificat­ion of crews, etc.

A general comment from powerful fishing nations which are reluctant to ratify the convention in its present form is that in certain areas the provisions of the convention go beyond the requiremen­ts of the 1974 SOLAS convention for cargo ships, i.e. stability, fire protection in respect to the use of non-combustibl­e material which increases the lightweigh­t of the vessel, radio equipment due to the implicatio­ns of the new systems (global maritime distress and safety system) and life-saving appliances due to the lack of space and operationa­l problems for lifeboats. Consequent­ly, an IMO initiative to revise the convention is underway.

In the 1980s, it became clear that the 1977 Torremolin­os convention was unlikely to enter into force, largely for technical reasons, and IMO decided to prepare a replacemen­t in the form of a protocol.

The 1993 Torremolin­os protocol was adopted in April 1993, and will enter into force one year after 15 states with at least an aggregate fleet of 14 000 vessels of 24 metres in length and over, have ratified the protocol. The protocol updates, amends and absorbs the parent convention, taking into account technologi­cal evolution in the intervenin­g years and the need to take a pragmatic approach to encourage ratificati­on of the instrument.

The protocol takes into account the trend to exploit deep-water fishing grounds on a large scale and to conduct fishing operations in distant waters, resulting in the building of a new generation of more sophistica­ted fishing vessels. To be successful in their operations, these vessels have to be fitted with advanced fish finding and navigation equipment.

Fishing vessels must also be equipped to carry out environmen­tfriendly trawling, introduced to preserve fishing resources as well as the seabed.

Namibia is not a party to Torremolin­os, but we have adopted the convention standards into the constructi­on of fishing vessels regulation­s. We are planning to ratify the new version called Cape Town agreement.

Forty-eight states signed the Torremolin­os declaratio­n, publicly indicating their determinat­ion to ensure that the 2012 Cape Town agreement on fishing vessel safety will enter into force by the tenth anniversar­y of its adoption (11 October 2022).

Finally recommendi­ng the general trend in modern designed fishing vessels, if they are to be economical­ly profitable, must include improvemen­ts in machinery and fishing gear, improvemen­ts in safety features as a whole and better working conditions for fishermen.

 ??  ?? Prof Moses Amweelo
Prof Moses Amweelo

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