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29 Apr 2008
MANPOWER, training and development and all of the wider issues connected with human resources in shipping will become the biggest challenge the industry will face over the coming years, according to Admiral Peter Brady, Director General of the Maritime Authority of Jamaica and Chairman of the IMO’s STW sub-committee. That is why a review of the STCW Convention was
necessary, he says, to resolve inconsistencies in the previously
revised Convention and to ensure it meets the new challenges facing the
shipping industry today and in the years to come.
The basic principles of the STCW review are to • retain the structure
and goals of the 1995 revision • ensure that existing standards are not
down-scaled and do not amend the articles of the Convention • address
any inconsistencies, interpretations, outdated provisions, MSC
instructions, clarifications already issued and technological advances
highlighted • address requirements for effective communication •
provide for flexibility in terms of compliance and for required levels
of training, certification and watchkeeping arrangements, due to
technological innovation in technology • address the special character
and circumstances of short sea shipping and the offshore industry; and
address security-related issues.
“Following the invitation of the STW sub Committee, the Maritime Safety
Committee, which is our parent body, mandated us to carry out as a high
priority, a comprehensive review of the STCW Convention and the STCW
Code, with a target completion date of 2008. The sub Committee was
instructed by the Maritime Safety Committee to initially define the
scope of review of the instruments and submit its findings/report to
the Committee for its endorsement,” Admiral Brady added.
“As a second step, following the Committee’s endorsement, the sub
committee was tasked to undertake the review in a systematic and
organized manner. The list of areas in the Convention and the Code for
the comprehensive review were then identified and approved by the MSC
(83) which instructed us to go ahead and undertake the review in a
systematic and organized manner while extending the target completion
date to 2010.”
He adds: “As this is the first major review since the STCW Conference
in 1995, the revised Convention should meet the objectives and
challenges of the industry. Taking into account that it would, in
principle, enter into force at the beginning of the 2010s, it should
provide global standards of training for seafarers for a considerable
length of time thereafter.”
Source: Maritime Global Net