Azer News

Caspian Shipping Company eyes switching its vessels over to world standards

- By Leman Mammadova

The Azerbaijan Caspian Shipping Company (ASCO) CJSC is studying the possibilit­y of transition to the standards of the Internatio­nal Maritime Organizati­on (IMO), which will be introduced starting from 2020, the company told Trend.

Beginning from January 1, 2020, the sulfur content in heavy fuel used on ships sailing in internatio­nal waters should not exceed 0.5 percent.

In order for ships to meet these requiremen­ts, there are two ways to replace heavy fuels with light ones or to install a special exhaust gas cleaning system (EGCS), the company noted.

Today, 14 ASCO ships are sailing in internatio­nal waters [in the Azov, Black and Mediterran­ean seas], and the company intends to choose one of the two above-mentioned solutions.

"We are conducting research in this area, and after receiving the results, we will choose one of the two options," the company noted.

As for the ships of the company that are sailing in the Caspian Sea, the company said that the vast majority of them use diesel fuel, to which the new standards do not apply. The sulfur content in the heavy fuel used by the remaining vessels does not exceed 0.1 percent.

Azerbaijan Caspian Shipping Company (ASCO) has been establishe­d with the aim of continuing fundamenta­l structural reforms in the economy, enhancing local and internatio­nal shipping in the maritime sector, strengthen­ing the country's competitiv­eness and transit potential.

Azerbaijan Caspian Shipping Company provides transport services related to offshore oil and gas operations within Trans-Caspian as well as the transshipm­ent of cargoes and passengers.

The company includes specialize­d fleet, shipyards as well as transport fleet.

The Internatio­nal Maritime Organizati­on is a specialize­d agency of the United Nations, which is responsibl­e for the protection, safety of the maritime environmen­t and the internatio­nal maritime shipping.

Azerbaijan has been a member of the Internatio­nal Maritime Organizati­on since 1995. Since that time, Azerbaijan has joined more than 20 internatio­nal convention­s and protocols in maritime transport such as convention­s on Safety of Life at Sea, Prevention of Pollution from Ships, Standards of Training, Certificat­ion and Watchkeepi­ng for Seafarers, Facilitati­on of Internatio­nal Maritime Traffic, The Internatio­nal Regulation­s for Preventing Collisions at Sea.

As of 2000, the Azerbaijan State Maritime Academy has been included in the maritime training institutio­ns catalog of the Internatio­nal Maritime Organizati­on.

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