The Manila Times

IMO ‘White List’ ensures jobs of 400K PH seafarers

- BY YASHIKA F. TORIB

MORE than 400,000 Filipino seafarers deployed on internatio­nal vessels benefit from the country’s inclusion on the Internatio­nal Maritime Organizati­on’s (IMO) “White List,” Brenda Pimentel, former regional coordinato­r of the Internatio­nal Maritime Organizati­on (IMO) in East Asia, said.

The IMO White List is composed of countries compliant with the Internatio­nal Convention on Standards of Training, Certificat­ion and Watchkeepi­ng. The STCW Convention is the reference used by foreign auditors inspecting the level of compliance of IMO member states with internatio­nal maritime standards.

“That convention sets a minimum standard for all seafarers. It levels the playing field for seamen of all nationalit­ies to be hired by any ship owner. It requires a Whitelist, however — those who have complied with the requiremen­ts set by IMO. Without this, a seafarer cannot be hired,” Pimentel said in an interview on Saturday with

SMNI News Channel’s “Business and Politics” program host Dante “Klink” Ang 2nd, the chairman and CEO of The Manila Times.

This also affirms the capacities and diligence of the Maritime Industry Authority (Marina) in ensuring the competenci­es of Filipino seafarers, which took over the functions of the abolished Maritime Training Council under the Department of Labor and Employment.

The Philippine­s was included in the White List for the third time when it was last released in 2011.

“Port States will consider a foreign ship, regardless of the flag unseaworth­y if the crew onboard are certificat­ed by countries which are not in the IMO whitelist. Therefore if the Philippine­s fails to maintain its status in the White List, shipowners will shy away from hiring Filipino seafarers.”Pimentel explained.

According to the Philippine Overseas Employment Administra­tion, 469,996 Filipino workers were onboard merchant shipping vessels around the world in 2019.

If removed from the White List , the Philippine­s will lose the certificat­e of recognitio­n, thus, leaving tens of thousands of Filipino seafarers onboard all internatio­nal vessels jobless.

Train for safety

“The problem arises in the way we implement STCW because it is a safety convention, not labor. There should be a paradigm shift, a change of mindset that we are training our seafarers not just to go abroad and earn dollars but to keep the ships and oceans safe,” Pimentel emphasized.

She added that policies implemente­d by the government with regards to STCW must be clear with a topline objective of keeping lives and properties at seas safe.

“There is no cohesive implementa­tion of the regulation amongst government agencies, it is conflictin­g,” Pimentel said.

Pimentel cited the curriculum developmen­t for maritime higher education institutio­ns (MHEIs) which is placed under the Marina, the single maritime administra­tion responsibl­e for the implementa­tion and enforcemen­t of the STCW Convention.

“There are pedagogica­l [approaches] in curriculum developmen­t, which is the core function of the Commission on Higher Education. Are they (Marina) qualified for that? Why do you have to do that when you already have an agency that is supposed to have that expertise?” she maintained.

Pimentel furthered that agencies change the curriculum every two years for a course that is slated for four years.

“Students are still not done with the full four-year course when they change the curriculum. MHEIs would comply with the requiremen­t of having millions of pesos worth of simulators and be told later that it was no longer needed.

“Our regulation must be very clear. Is it the way we teach our cadets or the facilities that we need to address?” she asked.

 ?? FILE PHOTO ?? n The Philippine­s was on the White List for the third time when it was last released in 2011
FILE PHOTO n The Philippine­s was on the White List for the third time when it was last released in 2011

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