IMO: 400,000 seafarers stuck at sea as crew-change crisis deepens

Unga

Unga

(LONDON) — Some 400,000 seafarers from across the world are now stranded on ships, continuing to work but unable to be relieved, in a deepening crew-change crisis which threatens trade and maritime safety.

During a high-level event on the margins of the United Nations General Assembly on Sept. 24, Capt. Hedi Marzougui, who was in command of a vessel between December 2019 and May 2020, appealed to governments to act to allow seafarers to come home.

“Not knowing when or if we will be returning home brings a severe mental toll on my crew and myself,” Marzougui said. “I would encourage each and every one of you to think of how you would feel, if you had to work every day, for 12 hours, with no weekends, without seeing your loved ones, and trapped at sea. Now add that you have to do that with no idea of when you will be repatriated.”

The COVID-19 pandemic restrictions on travel and transit have severely impacted on seafarers. Despite multiple pleas to governments to designate them as essential key workers and to facilitate their travel, the number of seafarers whose contracts have been extended by several months has continued to increase. Some seafarers have now been at sea for 17 months without a break, well beyond the 11-month limit set out in the Maritime Labor Convention (MLC). Besides the 400,000 seafarers stuck at sea, another 400,000 are unable to join ships.

This threatens the fundamentals of ship safety standards which the International Maritime Organization (IMO) has worked to develop over six decades, IMO Secretary-General Kitack Lim told the online event, which brought together leaders from major global businesses, the maritime industry, government, the U.N. and unions.

“Overly fatigued and mentally exhausted seafarers are being asked to continue to operate ships,” Lim said. “On more than 60,000 cargo ships which continue to deliver vital goods, foods and medicines, ship safety is hanging in the balance, just as seafarers’ lives are being made impossible. The safety of navigation is in peril.”

Lim restated his plea to governments: “Action is needed – and is needed now. We all depend on seafarers. They should not be the collateral victims in this pandemic. Seafarers deliver for us – and now we need to deliver for them.”

In a statement read out at the event, to mark World Maritime Day 2020, U.N. Secretary-General Antonio Guterres reiterated his concern for seafarers stranded at sea. He renewed his appeal to governments “to address their plight by formally designating seafarers and other marine personnel as ‘key workers’, ensuring safe crew changes and implementing the protocols developed by U.N. agencies, as well as the International Chamber of Shipping and the International Transport Workers’ Federation, allowing stranded seafarers to be repatriated and others to join ships.”

In a letter issued to Guterres, the CEOs of 30 Consumer Goods Forum companies, including Unilever and Danone, have called on governments to designate seafarers as “key workers” and raised strong human rights concerns, stating, “the situation has also inadvertently created a modern form of forced labor.”

Unilever’s Chief Supply Chain Officer Marc Engel said COVID safe crew changes were needed without delay. “When the ships stop, so does everything else. We are now close to an entirely avoidable breaking point which could ripple out through the economy. Even a temporary interruption could push companies and countries over the edge,” he said. Henriette Hallberg Thygesen, vice president and CEO, fleet and strategic brands at A.P. Moller-Maersk, echoed the call for words to be followed by action.

Sanda Ojiambo, CEO and executive director of the U.N. Global Compact, the world’s largest corporate sustainability initiative, encouraged businesses to call on governments to end the labor abuses that seafarers are suffering, noting that the 10 principles of the U.N. Global Compact represent pillars of responsible business which “are connected to the humanitarian, economic and safety crisis unfolding on our seas.”

Both Guy Platten, secretary-general of the International Chamber of Shipping, and Stephen Cotton, general secretary of the International Transport Workers’ Federation, called on governments to intervene to end the crew-change crisis, warning the numbers of seafarers impacted would only continue to increase without coordinated action by governments.

ILO Director General Guy Ryder called on governments to implement urgent and pragmatic solutions that fully respect seafarers’ rights. “Seafarers are exhausted and simply cannot continue working on board indefinitely,” Ryder said.

Transport and maritime ministers from Canada, France, Kenya, Panama and the Philippines also addressed the virtual event. They urged other governments to join them in designating seafarers as essential workers, implementing measures for safe crew change and facilitating COVID-safe transit for seafarers.

The meeting was convened by the U.N. Global Compact, the International Maritime Organization and the International Labor Organization, in collaboration with the International Chamber of Shipping and the International Transport Workers’ Federation.

 – International Maritime Organization

By Professional Mariner Staff