PH Deposits Instruments of Accession to 3 Maritime Conventions
PR-IMO Gilberto Asuque (4th from left) hands over to Director Frederick Kenney, IMO Legal Affairs and External Relations (5th from left), representing Secretary General Kitack Lim, the Accession documents signed by President Rodrigo Roa Duterte and the Senate Resolutions concurring to the accession by the Philippines to the 3 IMO Instruments on the safety of ships and prevention of air pollution. Joining him are Atty. Virgilio B. Calag of MARINA (left); Maritime Attaché Arsenio Lingad (2nd from left); Alternate Permanent Representative to IMO Emma Sarne of the Philippine Embassy in London (3rd from left); and LEG 105 Chair Volker Schöfisch (right).
LONDON 26 April 2018 – The Philippines is now committed to the global efforts to reduce air pollution from ships as it deposited the Instrument of Accession to the Protocol of 1997 to Amend the International Convention for the Prevention of Pollution from Ships,1973 as modified by the Protocol of 1978 (MARPOL Annex VI).
MARPOL Annex VI, first adopted in 1997, limits the main air pollutants contained in ships exhaust gas, including sulphur oxides (SOx) and nitrous oxides (NOx), and prohibits deliberate emissions of ozone depleting substances (ODS). MARPOL Annex VI also regulates shipboard incineration, and the emissions of volatile organic compounds (VOC) from tankers.
In addition, the Permanent Representative of the Philippines to the International Maritime Organization (IMO), Gilberto Asuque, deposited on 24 April 2018 to the IMO Secretary General the Instruments of Accession to:
- the Protocol of 1978 Relating to the to the International Convention for the Safety of Life at Sea, 1974, (on measures to further improve the safety of ships, particularly tankers); and
- the Protocol of 1988 Relating to the International Convention on Load Lines, 1966 (Load Line Protocol 88).
The IMO Secretary General is the designated depository of all instruments of ratification or accession by Member States to IMO Conventions. In accordance with IMO regulations, these 3 IMO instruments will become effective for the Philippines three months from the date of deposit or on July 2018.
The Instruments of Accession were deposited during the 105th Session of the IMO Legal Committee (LEG 105) which discussed under agenda item 10 the “Review of the Status of Conventions and Other Treaty Instruments Emanating from the Legal Committee.”
LEG 105 was also informed that the Philippine Senate has also concurred to two other IMO Conventions, namely, the International Convention on the Control of Harmful Anti-Fouling Systems on Ships 2001 and the Protocol of 1988 Relating to the International Convention for the Safety of Life at Sea, 1974, (on the harmonized system of ship survey and certification). The Instruments of Accession to these two IMO Conventions will soon be deposited with the IMO Secretary General.
PermRep Asuque thanked the Legal Committee and the Technical Cooperation Committee for the assistance extended to the Philippines to facilitate the ratification or accession to IMO Conventions or Treaties. During the Senate hearings for the concurrence to the accession of these IMO instruments held on 09 March 2018, PermRep. Asuque explained the importance of these IMO conventions for the safety of Filipino seafarers and in protecting the marine environment from the operation of ships. END
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