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30 Jun 2008
The maritime industry needs to be proactive, not reactive, to issues facing it and should see new challenges as opportunities and not as threats, according to Dimitrios Theologitis, head of unit, Maritime Transport & Ports Policy at the European Commission. Speaking at the Ship Management International 2nd International Ship Management Summit in Limassol, Cyprus, Theologitis said for this to happen “requires an exercise of collective responsibility from all involved actors, not only from ship
owners. Flag and coastal states, cargo owners and ship management
companies, among others, play a very important role in shaping the
image of the overall shipping activity.”
Shipping is entering into a new era where new forms of logistics,
shifting patterns of maritime trade, advanced technologies and growing
environmental concerns will change the face of the business as we know
it today, delegates were told. “There is an enormous potential for
European shipping, both in the deep-sea and short-sea trades. The
removal of obstacles and simplification of controls in European ports
for ships transporting internal market goods under a ‘European maritime
space without barriers’ will be an important step forward,” he said.
However, this will not be enough. Competitive pressure from shipping
nations close to the Pacific and Indian Oceans will continue to
increase, Theologitis added. “As Europeans, we need to consider
carefully all challenges and shipping scenarios in order to take the
right strategic decisions for securing the future for our industries.
“We all have an interest in ensuring that Europe retains its shipping
excellence and maritime know-how.
“It is for that very reason that, in the framework of the integrated
maritime policy of the European Union, the Commission is carrying a
strategic review of its maritime transport policy, examining
opportunities and threats for European shipping in the coming ten
years. Included there will be three main points of focus: the
competitiveness of European shipping in a globalised environment, the
human factor – which in part is the subject of today’s conference – and
the question of quality shipping, meaning safe, secure and
environmentally responsible shipping.
“We expect to present our views next October, by means of a policy
Communication to be addressed to the European Parliament and Council,”
he said. Pointing to the issue of the shortage of qualified seafarers
as an area of less success within the industry, he told delegates that
the European Commission has been working for years to improve the
health and safety conditions on board vessels. “We make constant
efforts on the training and certification requirements of seafarers. We
have a long-standing commitment to support adequate labour conditions
in the maritime world. We have also been instrumental to bringing into
reality the consolidated convention on maritime labour
of the ILO, and we actively support the social partners towards
achieving an agreement for the practical implementation of these rules
in European shipping.
“These are practical, concrete actions of our daily work in support of
seafarers. It is certainly curious that all those efforts of the
European Commission are rarely presented or commented on in shipping
conferences. “Therefore, claims that the application of the principle
of environmental responsibility to the shipping sector criminalises the
sector gives a very bad image of shipping, as it suggests that
violations of the environmental regulations are a normal practice in
the shipping sector. Furthermore, the claim is not factual,” he said.
Source: Motor Ship