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IMO
(INTERNATIONAL MARITIME ORGANIZATION)
FOCUS
Know About-
- July 11, 200
Source : www.imo.org
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The International Maritime Organization is the United Nations specialized agency responsible for improving maritime safety & preventing pollution from ships. IMO is also committed to technical co-operation. |
Shipping is perhaps the most international of all the world's great industries and one of the most dangerous. It has always been recognized that the best way of improving safety at sea is by developing international regulations that are followed by all shipping nations and from the mid-19th century onwards a number of such treaties were adopted. Several countries proposed that a permanent international body should be established to promote maritime safety more effectively, but it was not until the establishment of the United Nations itself that these hopes were realized. In 1948 an international conference in Geneva adopted a convention formally establishing IMO (the original name was the Inter-Governmental Maritime Consultative Organization, or IMCO, but the name was changed in 1982 to IMO). The IMO Convention entered into force in 1958 and the new Organization met for the first time the following year.
The purposes
of the Organization, as summarized by Article 1(a) of the Convention, are
"to provide machinery for cooperation among Governments in the field
of governmental regulation and practices relating to technical matters of
all kinds affecting shipping engaged in international trade; to encourage
and facilitate the general adoption of the highest practicable standards in
matters concerning maritime safety, efficiency of navigation and prevention
and control of marine pollution from ships". The Organization is also
empowered to deal with administrative and legal matters related to these purposes.
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IMO's first task was to adopt a new version of the International Convention for the Safety of Life at Sea (SOLAS), the most important of all treaties dealing with maritime safety. This was achieved in 1960 and IMO then turned its attention to such matters as |
the facilitation
of international maritime traffic, load lines and the carriage of dangerous
goods, while the system of measuring the tonnage of ships was revised. But
although safety was and remains IMO's most important responsibility, a new
problem began to emerge - pollution. The growth in the amount of oil being
transported by sea and in the size of oil tankers was of particular concern
and the Torrey Canyon disaster of 1967, in which 120,000 tonnes of oil was
spilled, demonstrated the scale of the problem. During
the next few years IMO introduced a series of measures designed to prevent
tanker accidents and to minimize their consequences. It also tackled the environmental
threat caused by routine operations such as the cleaning of oil cargo tanks
and the disposal of engine room wastes - in tonnage terms a bigger menace
than accidental pollution.
The most
important of all these measures was the International Convention for the Prevention
of Pollution from Ships, 1973, as modified by the Protocol of 1978 relating
thereto (MARPOL 73/78). It covers not only accidental and operational oil
pollution but also pollution by chemicals, goods in packaged form, sewage,
garbage and air pollution.
IMO was also
given the task of establishing a system for providing compensation to those
who had suffered financially as a result of pollution. Two treaties were adopted,
in 1969 and 1971, which enabled victims of oil pollution to obtain compensation
much more simply and quickly than had been possible before. Both treaties
were amended in 1992, and again in 2000, to increase the limits of compensation
payable to victims of pollution. IMO
also developed a number of other legal conventions, most of which concern
liability and compensation issues.
Shipping,
like all of modern life, has seen many technological innovations and changes.
Some of these have presented challenges for the Organization and others have
presented opportunities. The enormous strides made in communications technology,
for example, have made it possible for IMO to introduce major improvements
to the maritime distress system.
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Getting
acquainted with and gaining more knowledge, information and terminology
surrounding the Maritime World...
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| Conducted
by : Capt. Chairuddin Rasjid |
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