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Drafting IMO Submissions

Drafting IMO Submissions. Background. Where? IMO: UN Specialized Agency What? Routing and reporting measures for international ship traffic (SOLAS, GPSR, Reporting Guidelines); MARPOL Special Area designation; PSSA designation Why?

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Drafting IMO Submissions

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  1. Drafting IMO Submissions

  2. Background • Where? IMO: UN Specialized Agency • What? Routing and reporting measures for international ship traffic (SOLAS, GPSR, Reporting Guidelines); MARPOL Special Area designation; PSSA designation • Why? • Benefits (e.g., maritime safety, environmental protection, charting) • Burdens (e.g., IMO consensus)

  3. Overview • Getting started • Setting objectives/ identifying issue • Overarching considerations • Drafting a submission • IMO Process • Conclusion

  4. Getting Started • Gather appropriate documentation: • Data about the area and problem or threat thereof • Resources within area • Potential navigation hazards • Environmental factors • Data about the ship traffic (e.g., vol., traffic patterns) • Information regarding existing measures

  5. Getting Started • Gather appropriate documentation • Foreseeable changes in traffic patterns • Information regarding incident history • Existing aids to navigation • Charts (are they up to date?) • IMO documents (models)

  6. Getting Started • Delineate specific area • Identify neighboring States w/ interest • If possible, gather a group of experts: • Maritime users • Resource managers • Government officials, including IMO rep.

  7. Setting Objectives and Identifying the Issue • General Objectives: • Maritime safety • Pollution prevention • Collisions • Groundings • Discharges • Concern about oil • Protection of resources

  8. Setting Objectives and Identifying the Issue • Specific objectives—narrowly define the issue: • What is the maritime safety concern? (e.g., collisions with what, groundings on what?) Why is there concern about discharges? (e.g., accidents, mystery spills, illegal discharges) What types of discharges? (e.g., oil, aquatic nuisance species, sewage) • Protection of resources from what? • Identify international shipping behavior that needs to be addressed

  9. Overarching Considerations • Paramount interest: maritime safety • Impact on navigation: • Numbers of ships • Normal routes • Alternatives • Underkeel clearance

  10. Overarching Considerations • Consider various alternatives for addressing the identified need/objective: be creative and look for the best fit • Identify the appropriate IMO instrument for the measure • SOLAS • GPSR • Ship Reporting Guidelines and Criteria • MSC Circ. 1060 • MARPOL • Applicable Annex • Special Area guidelines • SOX Emission Control Area guidelines • PSSA designation • PSSA Guidelines • MEPC Circ. 510

  11. Overarching Considerations • Mandatory v. Recommended • SOLAS, MARPOL v. PSSA Guidelines • Success at IMO: • “shoes” theory • Large Tonnage States • Only Governments may submit and must make the case to obtain the measure • Implementation, compliance, and enforcement

  12. Example • Monterey Bay: • Issue identified: mystery spills, accidents, response capabilities • Working Group formed to discuss options • Proposed recommended tracks, realignment of TSSs • Considerations: navigation principles, ease of compliance, industry support, optics of traffic lanes along entire coast

  13. Drafting of Submission • Most important: • Get copies of applicable documents (e.g., legal instruments, guidelines) • Models of other proposals • Follow the format: • Executive summary • Sections from models • Action Requested • Annex: what actually goes into instrument

  14. Drafting of Submission • Potential pitfalls • Ensure that required elements are addressed • Linkage of need with measure • Mandatory v. recommended • Remember “shoes” theory • Too much or too little info

  15. Navigating Your Proposal through IMO • Prior to submission and meeting where proposal is considered: • Build support with key countries • If questions, call IMO Secretariat • Prepare a convincing presentation • Consider presentation in delegates’ lounge • Attend at least one meeting prior to consideration of proposal and “work the room”

  16. Navigating Your Proposal through IMO • IMO Structure: • Assembly, Council, 4 Committees, 11 Subcommittees • Working Groups, Drafting Groups, Correspondence Groups • Where to make initial submission: • NAV approve, MSC adopt • MEPC • Be aware of procedures and strict timeline for submission • Documents translation into 3 languages, interpretation at meetings

  17. Navigating Your Proposal through IMO • Plenary Session: • Brief presentation • Working Group addresses the details • Report out to plenary • Presentation to WG • Visuals, charts • WGs all conducted in English

  18. Navigating Your Proposal through IMO • Follow the proposal through to its conclusion • WG report • Committee report • NAV on to MSC/MEPC MARPOL amendment/PSSA designation in principle

  19. Navigating Your Proposal through IMO • “Working the room”: • Importance of coffee breaks and lobbying during lunch!! • Divide up States if more than one person on your delegation • Consider demarche before the meeting

  20. Conclusion • Implementation: • Timing: • Routing/Reporting date set by State, at least 6 months after adoption by MSC • MARPOL must follow amendment schedule • Notices to Mariners, charts, nautical pubs

  21. Conclusion • Is it worth it? • Notification, awareness, acceptance, compliance • Marked on charts of all States used for international navigation • Review by experts • Uniformity for shipping industry

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