Malta Maritime Law Association

Malta Maritime Law Association

Member of the Comité Maritime International

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Dr. Ann Fenech appointed on the Executive Council of the Comité Maritime International

June 1, 2014 Leave a Comment

Press Release:  June, 2014


The Malta Maritime Law Association is very happy to announce that its President, Dr. Ann Fenech has been elected as one of eight Councillors on the Executive Council of the Comité Maritime International (CMI) by the Assembly of CMI held in Hamburg held yesterday. Dr. Fenech is the first Maltese person to occupy such a post.

As you are fully aware, CMI is a non-governmental international organization established in Antwerp in 1897, with the object of contributing by all appropriate means and activities to the unification of maritime law. Its members are the National Maritime Law Associations and the Malta Maritime Law Association is a very active member of CMI.

CMI has since its inception been tasked with the drafting of some of the most important International Maritime Conventions on a variety of maritime issues including limitation of liability, carriage of goods (the Hague and the Hague Visby Rules, Hamburg Rules, and Rotterdam Rules), arrest of ships, carriage of passengers, civil liability for oil pollution damage, salvage, carriage of hazardous and noxious substances etc.

Meanwhile work has continued – primarily with IMO – on a number of highly important issues including Places of Refuge for vessels in distress, Fair Treatment of Seafarers, and Guidelines for National Legislation on Piracy and serious Maritime Crime. Yesterday the Assembly also approved a Resolution approving the text of the Draft International Convention on Foreign Judicial Sales of Ships and their Recognition.

The Maltese Maritime Law Association has been extremely active through a sub committee set up on purpose and has made a number of very valid contributions to the drafting which have been adopted at the Beijing conference, the Dublin Conference and in the final draft approved yesterday at Hamburg. The MMLA was represented in Hamburg by our President Dr. Ann Fenech, Treasurer Dr. Nicky Valenzia and member Dr. Adrian Attard.

The Comité was one of the first non-governmental international organisations to be granted consultative status by the IMO (which is itself a Consultative Member of the Comité) and the CMI remains in continual contact with all other recognised international organisations concerned in any way with maritime law.

To facilitate its increasing work with subsidiary bodies of the United Nations such as UNCTAD, UNCITRAL and the Office for the Law of the Sea, the CMI has in 1997 been granted consultative status with the UN. The Comité Maritime International also has the CMI Charitable Trust which was set up in 1985 which administers funds used for the advancement of legal education for the public benefit and the advancement and promotion of research and study in the fields of comparative law and international marine and commercial law and the publication of the results of such research.

The trust assists with the financing of visiting CMI lecturers to the International Maritime Law Institute (IMLI) in Malta and finances the CMI Prize for the best overall student at IMLI. Last year the prize for the best overall student was won by Dr. Denise Micallef.

Dr. Fenech was also appointed as one of the 7 trustees making up the Board of Trustees of the CMI Charitable Trust.

Filed Under: Events, International News, Malta, MMLA

Saving Lives of Refugees at Sea

May 13, 2014 Leave a Comment

Article, Times of Malta, 13 May, 2014.

Seminar organised by the European Maritime Law Organisation and the Malta Maritime Law Association.
See full article in pdf.

Filed Under: EU, Events, International News, Malta, Mediterranean maritime affairs

Maritime honours bestowed

June 23, 2013 Leave a Comment

Times of Malta, Sunday, June 23, 2013


The Malta Maritime Law Association (MMLA) recently joined the rest of the maritime community in Europe to celebrate European Maritime Day.

To celebrate the occasion the association organised an event during which its president, Ann Fenech, conferred, for the first time, an honorary membership on Joe Borg, former EU Commissioner, Lino Vassallo, Permanent Representative of Malta to the International Maritime Organisation and former Registrar General of Shipping and Seamen, and John Sullivan, chairman of Tug Malta, for their invaluable contribution to the maritime sector.

The association was set up in 1994 with the aim of promoting the study and advancement of maritime law. The MMLA is an affiliated member of the Comité Maritime International, the oldest international organisation in the maritime field, established in 1897.

Attending the event were 74 delegates, including Economy, Investment and Small Business Minister Chris Cardona.

Filed Under: Events, Malta, MMLA

MMLA seminar on Updated Commercial Yacht Code

February 3, 2011 Leave a Comment

 

More than 70 professionals attended the Malta Maritime Law Association’s seminar on the updated Commercial Yacht Code. Malta has just issued a revision of the code which will serve the needs of the yachting industry better while allowing for its developing technological advancements in conformity with international regulations and safety standards.

After an opening address by MMLA president Ann Fenech, Karl Briffa, flag and port state control inspector at Transport Malta’s Merchant Shipping Directorate explained the concept behind the Malta Commercial Code.

Launched in 2006 and amended in 2010, the code aimed to offer a proposition to owners and superyacht operators looking for a serious regulatory framework within which to register their yachts commercially. He explained how the code has been developed on industry established standards bringing together solutions for both yachts below and above 24 metres.

Commercial yachts registered under the Maltese flag has increased especially since 2006, with more than 150 yachts with an average length of 30 metres registered as commercial yachts. The Updated Commercial Yacht Code 2010 will apply to commercial yachts the keels of which are laid or which are registered under the Malta flag from January 2011.

Commercial yachts registered under the Malta Flag whose keels were laid before January 1, 2011, must comply with the requirements of the code by the first survey due on or after March 1 but by not later than December 31. Paul Cardona of Marine Industrial Consultancy Services highlighted the differences between the Maltese Code and other Codes, particularly the MCA Code.

Given his extensive experience, he was able to share instances which threw light onto the manner in which owners, yards, classification societies and various administrations need to act and interact.

 

Filed Under: Events, Malta, Superyachts

The Rotterdam Rules

March 2, 2010 Leave a Comment

The public seminar on the Rotterdam Rules discussed the new maritime law convention known as the Rotterdam Rules. The event was addressed by Prof Charles Debattista. The seminar was held on the 3rd of February at the Chamber of Commerce in Valletta, and was organised by the Malta Maritime Law Association. The following article by the president of MMLA Dr Anne Fenech was published in the Times of Malta, Business Section.


 

The Rotterdam Rules – A new international regime for Cargo Claims Seminar organised by the Malta Maritime Law Association.

On the 3rd February 2010, the Malta Maritime Law Association organised a public seminar on The Rotterdam Rules – A new international regime for Cargo Claims. The guest speaker was Prof. Charles Debattista an Arbitrator based at Stone Chambers, Grays Inn, London who is also Professor of Law at the University of Southampton. The Association is particularly grateful to its sponsors for this event – Atlas Insurance, Middlesea Insurance Plc and Malta Motorways of the Sea.

The seminar was extremely well attended by 170 participants including members of the Judiciary and a cross section of the shipping industry confirming that Malta has a thriving shipping / legal community eager to learn more about the latest developments in Maritime Law because this effects us directly as the versatile maritime nation that we are today.

In fact it is one of the primary roles of the Malta Maritime Law Association – to bring quality presentations to as wide a shipping / legal audience as possible. The two main international regimes currently governing the carriage of goods by sea are the Hague and the Hague Visby Rules.

Malta is not a signatory to either of these two conventions although the Hague rules are considered to be part of the law of Malta because they were incorporated into our law by virtue of the Carriage of Goods By Sea Act 1954. That said, our courts consistently apply the Hague Visby Rules when they are seized of a matter relating to a bill of lading incorporating the Hague Visby Rules.

The Hague and the Hague Visby Rules have been around for many years, and for some time now it has been considered that time was ripe for a new convention. We subsequently saw the emergence of the Hamburg Rules, however these were not particularly successful. On September 23rd last year, the UNCITRALpromoted United Nations Convention on Contracts for the International Carriage of Goods, wholly or partly by Sea was open for signature in Rotterdam.

This convention will come into force 12 months after the ratification of the convention by 20 states. To date 23 member states have signed up (not ratified) including the USA, France, Italy, Spain, Greece, Poland, Holland naturally, Denmark, Ghana, Nigeria, Togo, Guinea, Gabon, Congo, Norway, Senegal and Switzerland. Although these states have not ratified the Convention observers are of the view that the convention will probably come into force during 2011.

This is a massive convention containing 96 articles. Many have criticised the size of the convention however it must be seen as an attempt to accommodate the requests of so many involved in the industry. The Rotterdam Rules apply to all international contracts of carriage if either the place of receipt, port of loading, port of discharge or place of delivery is in a “Contracting State” irrespective of whether a Bill of Lading is issued or not. Thus it will apply to many short sea and way bill movements which were previously outside the scope of the Hague and the Hague Visby Rules. They apply to multi modal transport that include carriages when even part of the journey is by sea unlike the current situation with the Hague and the Hague Visby Rules. As a result it has been described as a “Maritime Plus” Convention.

The Rotterdam Rules propose a number of solutions to the problems which exist under the Hague and the Hague Visby Rules such as the effects of deviation from the contractual route and the issue regarding the identity of carrier.

One main difference between the current regime and the Rotterdam Rules is that the latter abolishes the defence of “negligent navigation” which will naturally effect the extent of the carrier’s liability and the amount which their P & I clubs will have to pay out. That said, the carrier has a greater “seaworthiness” obligation under the Rotterdam rules than under the Hague or the Hague Visby Rules because under the Rotterdam Rules the carrier must exercise due diligence to make the vessel seaworthy not only before and on the commencement of the voyage but also during the entire voyage.

Prof. Debattista delivered a first class and yet down to earth presentation on the Rules. He explained their current status, the history behind them coming into effect, some fundamental changes they bring in and finally whether they should be adopted.

His final take on the last matter was that the Rotterdam Rules are not perfect. However in this sector it is positively vital that we achieve uniformity and therefore it is the alternative to not adopting them which should convince states to adopt them. Failure to adopt the Rotterdam Rules will most probably mean that the industry will adopt or indeed come up with “regional regimes in different parts of the world.” This would be the very opposite of what the international shipping industry should be seeking to achieve.

Whether Malta should sign up or not remains to be seen. The important thing is that we know about these rules and what they stand for. It is now up to us in the industry to do our home work and to think hard about whether we stand to lose or gain.


Dr. Ann Fenech President of the Malta Maritime Law Association Managing Partner of Fenech and Fenech Advocates.

Filed Under: Events, International News, Malta, Malta Flag

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Malta Maritime Law Association

News & Publications

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  • MMLA President at Malta Maritime Summit October 18, 2024
  • MMLA lecturers at ELSA Malta Maritime Summer Law School August 29, 2024
  • MMLA President at 2nd UN Convention IEJSS Signing Ceremony June 20, 2024

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Malta Maritime Law Association (MMLA)
Sa Maison House
Sa Maison Hill
Floriana FRN 1612
MALTA
E: mmla@mmla.org.mt
T: (+356) 25 594 118
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International Events

The CMI Assembly and Colloquium 2024 was held between 22-24 May in Gothenburg, Sweden. More information can be found here

The CMI Colloquium 2023 took place in Montreal, Canada from 14-16 June. More information can be found here

The 2022 CMI Conference took place in Antwerp, Belgium from 18-21 October when the Comite’ Maritime International celebrated its 125th anniversary. Find out more…

The CMI Assembly and Colloquium was held in Mexico City between 30 September – 2 October 2019: Find out more…

The CMI held the Assembly meeting and other events on 8./9. November 2018 in London. Find out more…

The Malta Colloquium on Judicial Sales was held on 27 February 2018 in Valletta. Find out more…

 

 

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