Panay News

Demand for Filipino seafarers still rising

-

SEAFARERS remain in demand, despite challenges globally including the pandemic in 2020 and recent attacks in the Red Sea, brought about by the conflict in the Middle East.

According to Takeshi Hashimoto, CEO and president of Mitsui O.S.K. Lines (MOL), t he global economy i s expanding.

“We are quickly expanding the size of our Manila office and also we are recruiting so many Filipino people in internatio­nal offices like Singapore, London, Tokyo,” Hashimoto said.

MOL is one of the largest shipping companies in the world. It is headquarte­red in Japan and operates about 800 vessels globally.

Hashimoto admitted that the conflict in the Middle East is affecting logistics. But the shipping company can cope by diverting its vessels.

“The situation in the Middle East is actually becoming worse day by day.

And we need to divert almost all our fleet to avoid the passage through Suez Canal. And it creates a very big deviation of the route and also to the additional cost, mainly for the firm,” he said.

“So that, it is a bit painful for the shipping logistics industry. So to protect the vessel and the seafarers, we continue to avoid the navigation for the time being. At least, my analysis is at least one or two months or three months. It quite depends on the political situation of the Middle East. The good point is we have enough number of vessels,” Hashimoto explained.

Meanwhile, 91 cadets from the inaugural class of the MOL- Magsaysay Maritime Academy (MMMA) graduated on Tuesday, Feb. 20, and will become full-fledged seafarers as third officers and third engineers. Sixty-one of them will be joining MOL while 30 will go on board Magsaysay-operated vessels.

The MMMA is a partnershi­p between MOL and Magsaysay Maritime Corporatio­n.

In a speech, new Maritime Industry Authority (MARINA) chief Sonia Malaluan lauded the partnershi­p of MOL and Magsaysay in its efforts to raise the quality of maritime education in the Philippine­s.

It can be remembered that the j obs of around 50,000 Filipino seafarers were threatened after the Philippine­s failed to fully comply wi t h European Union ( EU) standards, including the Internatio­nal Convention on Standards of Training, Certificat­ion and Watchkeepi­ng for seafarers (STCW).

But after a series of coordinati­on sessions, the EU recognized Manila’s cooperatio­n and commitment to improve the system for training and certificat­ion and decided to allow Filipino seafarers to continue working in EU- flagged ships, for the time being.

“President Ferdinand Marcos Jr. just signed Executive Order number 55 adapting the Maritime Industry Developmen­t Plan of 2028. One of the core programs [ is] promoting highly skilled and competitiv­e Filipino maritime workforce, with a target outcome of increased reservoir of qualified and competent maritime human resource who are future- ready,” she said. ( ABS- CBN News)

 ?? ?? The European Union (EU) recognized Manila’s cooperatio­n and commitment to improve the system for training and certificat­ion and decided to allow Filipino seafarers to continue working in EU-flagged ships, for the time being.
The European Union (EU) recognized Manila’s cooperatio­n and commitment to improve the system for training and certificat­ion and decided to allow Filipino seafarers to continue working in EU-flagged ships, for the time being.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Philippines