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Malta Maritime Law Association

Member of the Comité Maritime International

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The Grimaldi Group strengthens its presence in Malta

April 8, 2021 Leave a Comment

Naples, 6th of April 2021: In recent months, the Naples-based Grimaldi Group has proceeded to significantly strengthen its presence in Malta through various initiatives, showing its full commitment in promoting the country’s maritime vocation.

Following the effects of Brexit, Atlantic Container Line (ACL), a Grimaldi Group company, has proceeded to reflag its fleet in the last six months, leaving the Union Jack and opting for the Malta flag. A total of nine vessels of ACL are currently under Maltese flag while another one is due to be added in the next few months. ACL operates the biggest con/ro vessels in the world, offering a liner service between various North European and North American ports for the transport of rolling units and containers.

Moreover, Malta Motorways of the Sea Ltd (MMOS), a Grimaldi Group company, has recently strengthened its fleet with the purchase of two additional vessels: the ro/ro units Eurocargo Catania and Eurocargo Sicilia. Currently, Valletta-based MMOS has a fleet of six modern ro/ro vessels and operates various regular maritime services in the Mediterranean.

Particularly, MMOS runs, in cooperation with the Grimaldi Group, a regular service between mainland Italy (Genoa, Livorno, Salerno and Catania) and Malta, under a Public Service Obligation contract with the Maltese Government, thus guaranteeing the shipment of essential commodities into the country.

With a view of promoting maritime education in Malta, MMOS has a permanent cooperation agreement with MCAST – Maritime Institute for the training of sea cadets onboard its vessels. Hundreds of young Maltese cadets have received training so far, many of whom have also been hired by Grimaldi Group companies.

Finally, in the course of the month, the Grimaldi Group will further strengthen the maritime connections it offers between Italy (Genoa, Livorno, Catania) and Malta. In fact, in the second half of the April, Malta is due to be served with one of the 12 GG5G-class (Grimaldi Green 5th Generation) ro/ro vessels, currently under construction in Asia, four of which already delivered to the Group. A second vessel of the same class will be deployed on the same route at the beginning of June.

C O M U N I C A T O S T A M P A

The GG5G-class vessels are the biggest short sea ro/ro units in the world as well as the most ecofriendly. They have a length of 238 meters, a beam of 34 meters, a gross tonnage of 67,311 tonnes and a service speed of 20.8 knots. Their loading capacity is twice that of the previous class of ro/ro ships deployed by the Grimaldi Group: each vessel can carry over 500 trailers as well as 180 cars. Their quarter stern ramp allows the loading of freight units weighing up to 150 tons.

At the same speed, the GG5G-class vessels consume the same amount of fuel compared to the previous generation vessels and are therefore able to halve CO2 emissions per unit transported: this was made possible through the adoption of several innovative technological solutions that optimize fuel consumption and ship performance. Moreover, they are equipped with an exhaust gas cleaning system for the reduction of sulphur and particulate emissions.

During port stays, the GG5G-class vessels are capable of cutting emissions to zero by using the electricity stored in mega lithium batteries with a total power of 5 MWh, which are recharged during navigation thanks to shaft generators and 350 m2 of solar panels.

“We are very proud to contribute to strengthening our long affiliation with the Maltese Islands, its people and its industry”, states Emanuele Grimaldi, Managing Director of the Grimaldi Group and Vice-President of the Malta International Shipping Council. “Having been present for over half a century in Malta is a demonstration of our commitment to the wellbeing of this nation whom we intend to serve with increasingly modern and ecofriendly vessels”, concludes Emanuele Grimaldi.

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

Effect of COVID-19 on Maltese shipping industry

April 1, 2020 Leave a Comment

Europe is presently facing its most testing challenge since World War II. Faced with the threat of the COVID-19 pandemic, many EU states are increasingly adopting stringent measures to ensure that the spread is, to the extent possible, contained. Malta is no exception in this regard.

Conscious of the fact that Malta is a small island with one of the highest population densities per square kilometre in the world, local authorities have been busy implementing various staggered restrictive measures aimed at social distancing. These measures range from the closing of all schools to stopping all commercial flights in and out of the island.

As a result, most sectors of Malta’s economy have to some extent been affected by this epidemic. The local shipping industry has also been hit with several restrictions in recent weeks.

Restrictions on shipping

In early March 2020, all passenger vessels travelling from Italy were prohibited from entering Maltese ports. By virtue of Port Notice 05/20, the Authority for Transport informed the shipping community that it was imposing an immediate temporary ban on the entry of cruise liners and passenger vessels to Maltese ports. This restriction has now been extended. On 21 March 2020, the superintendent of public health extended the order of a travel ban on persons entering or leaving Malta to and from all countries, including by sea. However, an exception was made for all cargo ships, including container ships and ro-ro vessels carrying goods and essential commodities and tankers loaded with essential fuels.

Legal notices affecting court procedures

The measures taken to date have also affected the legal community. By means of Legal Notices 97 and 65 of 2020, the superintendent of public health has ordered the indefinite closure of:

any of the courts of justice, that is the superior courts and the inferior courts including appellate courts irrespective of their competence or jurisdiction, and includes also any tribunal established by law which operates from the building of the Courts of Justice, and any boards, commissions, committees or other entities which operate from the building of the Courts of Justice before which any proceedings are heard or procedures undertaken which are subject to legal, judicial or administrative time limits for filing any claims, defences or other acts.

The closure order came into effect on 16 March 2020 and will remain in force until it is revoked. Legal Notice 97 of 2020 also sets out the time frames in which an appeal of a decision by any other administrative tribunal, board or body may be filed in court once the latter reopens.

Notwithstanding the above, for now, the court registry is still accepting filings in situations where any delay could be seriously detrimental to a party. In such cases, the claimant must file an application to open the court registry and justify the urgency at hand. Within the context of shipping, this effectively means that the filing of warrants of arrest of ships, urgent injunctions prohibiting the transfer of ownership of vessels or the entry of any further mortgages, or any such similar measures, can continue to be filed. Moreover, the processes involved remain expeditious and provided that all documents are in hand, an arrest or a flag injunction can still be carried out in a matter of hours.

Further, to ensure that the closure of courts does not prejudice the rights of any persons, the superintendent of public health has also issued Legal Notices 61 and 84 of 2020 to suspend all prescriptive periods and other time bars. During the period that the courts remain closed, the running of any legal and judicial times and any other time limits have been suspended, including peremptory periods applicable to proceedings or other procedures before said courts. This suspension also applies to prescription in criminal and civil matters.

With regard to the legal and judicial time frames, which are not peremptory in nature, Maltese law already caters for the possibility of extending said limits. Article 106 of the Code of Organisation and Civil Procedure, Chapter 12 of the Laws of Malta, allows for such a request on good cause to be made, provided that it is filed within the time period sought to be extended. However, it is not permissible to request such an extension once the original time period has expired. Therefore, in the given circumstances, said article alone would not have provided the necessary safeguards, particularly since it is still unclear when the courts will be reopened. Accordingly, the new legal notices ensure that further protection is offered by legislating the immediate suspension of all such time limits. By doing so, the legislature has also ensured that the judiciary will hopefully not be flooded with extension requests the moment that the courts are reopened.

On the other hand, most peremptory periods cannot be suspended or extended on the request of interested parties. This includes those time bars which cannot normally be derogated from. By way of example, this would include the one-year period to bring a claim in respect of damaged or loss of goods under the Carriage of Goods by Sea Act and those maritime-related time bars found under the Commercial Code. These periods have therefore also all been suspended by means of the superintendent of public health’s legislative interventions.

The abovementioned suspension will last until seven days from when the superintendent repeals the court closure order. Thus, where a legal and judicial time frame or prescriptive period would have ordinarily expired in the period when the court is closed, the interested party now has seven days from the reopening of the courts to file the necessary acts or court papers.

Thus, any party involved in disputes or contentious matters which could result in a claim before the Maltese courts should bear the above in mind and also watch this space to see when the Maltese courts will reopen. In the meantime, with respect to urgent filings such as ship arrests and flag injunctions, it is very much business as usual in Malta.

By Adrian Attard at Fenech & Fenech Advocates

Source: ILO

Filed Under: COVID-19, International Law News, International News, Latest, Malta, Malta Flag, Maltese law

2020 Global Sulphur Cap: The countdown begins

October 14, 2019 Leave a Comment

In just a few months’ time, one of the International Maritime Organization’s most ambitious and far-reaching regulatory amendments shall enter into force. Back in October 2016, the IMO’s Marine Environment Protection Committee (MEPC) confirmed 2020 as the deadline to introduce a new global limit for sulphur emissions in shipping.

While restrictions on sulphur emissions from ships have existed for quite some time in specifically designated regions (known as emission control areas), the envisaged transition on a global scale is proving to be quite daunting. As at January 1, 2020, the permissible sulphur content in marine fuels consumed by all ocean-going vessels will drop overnight from the present 3.5 per cent m/m (mass by mass) to just 0.5 per cent m/m in accordance to Annex VI to the International Convention for the Prevention of Pollution from Ships.

From an environmental point of view, the 2020 Global Sulphur Cap is literally a breath of fresh air. The decision to steam ahead with the 2020 deadline highlights IMO’s willingness to implement more environmentally friendly policies. Sulphur emissions from ships are considered as a major component of air pollution. They are harmful both to the environment as well as to human health – for instance they can lead to respiratory diseases and contribute to acid rain.

Ships generally need to burn fuel products (bunkers) to navigate from one port to another. Consequently, the combustion of these fuels releases sulphur emissions into the air. Heavy fuel oils used by ships are presently permitted to have a sulphur content of 3.5 per cent, making them amongst the dirtiest transport fuels in the world. This is extremely alarming given that 90 per cent of world trade is transported by sea. In 2018 alone, the demand for the bunker fuels was circa 3.5 million barrels per day, which translates into around 5 per cent of the total global fuel demand of that year.

The need to radically lower ships’ sulphur emissions was highlighted in a study submitted by Finland in 2016 to the IMO, which estimated that if the 2020 deadline had been postponed by just five years, the air pollution from ships would have contributed to more than 570,000 additional premature deaths between 2020 and 2025.

As of next year, therefore ship owners and operators must ensure that the fuel being burned in both their main and auxiliary engines has a maximum Sulphur content of 0.5 per cent. This will help to significantly reduce the impact of ship emissions and should contribute to improving air quality.

However, as stakeholders prepare for this imminent stricter regime, they have to also come to terms with the escalating operational costs and new challenges which they must overcome in order to ensure compliance. The impact of IMO 2020 has had a rippling effect throughout the shipping and energy sectors effecting not just ship owners and charterers but also fuel refineries, bunker suppliers, storage facilities, flag administrations and port state control. S&P Global Platts Analytics have estimated that the global impact of this new sulphur cap will cost in excess of one trillion American dollars over the span of five years. Whilst this is indeed a staggering figure, environmentalists argue that the impact of shipping pollution is far costlier.

Ship owners have identified three principal avenues to pursue compliance with the new 0.5 per cent limit. First, a ship owner may opt to switch from heavy fuel oils to low-sulphur distillates (MGO, VLSFO or other low sulphur fuel blends). Second, a ship owner may resort to using alternative fuels such as LNG. This second option is perhaps more suitable for new builds. The third option available to ship owners is to continue to use heavy fuel oil (HFO) and to install emission abatement technology (‘scrubbers’) on board the vessel.

Each option has its own advantages and setbacks

Each option has its own advantages and setbacks. There does not yet appear to be all encompassing solution and thus each ship owner must pursue the route which is most feasible and cost-effective for it to achieve compliance. Ship owners must weigh a number of different considerations such as the age of their vessels and the number of receiving tanks on board, their trading patterns and the locational availability of different fuel products. Some prudent ship owners have already started re-organizing their bunker supply chains and networks to ensure that come January, they will be able to source compliant fuel. Cautious of the anticipated hikes in fuel prices and possible shortage of higher specification marine fuels, numerous ship owners are holding out for as long as possible before deciding how to proceed. As stated earlier, ship owners are however, not the only maritime stakeholder with a vested interest in IMO 2020.

On the other side of the supply chain, fuel refiners and bunker suppliers are also having to adapt to ensure that they can keep up with the market demand. Bunker suppliers and refiners have already started developing and experimenting with new fuel blends. For example, oil majors such as BP and ExxonMobil have both already also started producing very low sulphur fuels that comply with the 0.5 per cent requirement.

Apart from compliance, the effectiveness of IMO 2020 will be dependent on proper monitoring and enforcement. The expected price differential between compliant 0.5 per cent fuels and high sulphur fuels may tempt unscrupulous ship owners to risk non-compliance. This temptation could become a more realistic threat should the new regime fail to be adequately enforced. As a specialized agency of the United Nations, the IMO has no authority to enforce the new limits. Thus, enforcement will depend predominantly on flag States and Port State Control.

Port States are expected to conduct initial inspections based on documents and other possible materials, including remote sensing and portable devices. For instance, port State control officials will need to examine the vessel’s certification such as the International Air Pollution Prevention (IAPP) Certificate as well as the copies of the bunker delivery notes for the last supplies furnished to the ship. As from January 1, 2019, these bunker delivery notes must include a declaration by the bunker supplier confirming the sulphur content in the fuel it is supplying. It is also anticipated that a number of port States shall be deploying “sniffer drones” in major ports in order to identify any violations. Furthermore, if clear grounds to conduct a more detailed inspection exist, Port State Control will be permitted to conduct sample analysis and other detailed inspections to verify compliance to the regulation, as appropriate. Flag State administrations will also need to ensure that adequate fines and sanctions will be introduced in order to serve as a real detriment against violations or breaches.

Earlier this year, the IMO MEPC issued its Guidelines for Consistent implementation of the 0.5 per cent Sulphur Limit under MARPOL Annex VI as well as its Guidelines for port State control under MARPOL Annex VI in order to offer some assistance in relation to the implementation and enforcement of the new sulphur cap.

Nonetheless, a plethora of questions are still being put forward. For instance, will flag States with limited resources – including human resources – be in a position to effectively ensure compliance when their ships are navigating on the high seas? The International Bunker Industry Association has also raised concerns of the possibility of a compliance breach as a result of sulphur still being present in the tanks before switching. Are all ships expected to have cleaned their fuel tanks just prior to January 1, 2020?

Moreover, the effectiveness of IMO 2020 as a global threshold will only be possible if the same enforcement levels are applied across the board. Uniformity could help avoid market distortions. Due to public outcry, Indonesia had to recently backtrack on its original plans for a partial implementation of the new limit (by not applying it to cabotage vessels).

That said, there are still a number of countries, such as Egypt or Argentina, which have not yet even ratified Annex VI of MARPOL 73/78 and therefore ships in those jurisdictions may face no enforcement checks. Apart from external enforcers, ship owners may have contractual reasons to wish to comply. If a ship has an incident and it transpires that the bunker fuel are off-spec, P&I Clubs may consider the ship ‘unseaworthy’ or in breach of applicable laws, and thus could decide to invalidate that owner’s policy.

With just three months to go before the January 2020 deadline sets in, there still remain a number of variables at play and several lingering questions remain unanswered. It appears that only time will tell as to whether or not the shipping industry and the fuel supply chain in general are adequately prepared for this imminent momentous change.

by Adrian Attard, Fenech & Fenech Advocates

Source: Times of Malta

Filed Under: International Law News, International News, Latest, Marine Environment

MMLA President at UNCITRAL Working Group VI first meeting held in New York on the International Recognition of Judicial Sales

May 31, 2019 Leave a Comment

Between the 13th and 17th of May 2019, President of the MMLA, Dr Ann Fenech  was at the first meeting of UNCITRAL Working Group VI which has been tasked with considering the draft convention presented by CMI on the International Recognition of Judicial Sale of Ships.

Dr. Fenech participated in this meeting at  UNCITRAL in her capacity of Vice President of CMI and as CMI co-ordinator for the project at UNICTRAL.

This was the first meeting of the Working Group VI attended by States members of UNICTRAL during which Dr. Beata Czerwenka was appointed Chairman of Working Group VI.

During this first meeting lasting an entire week,  the Swiss Delegate Prof. Alex von Zeigler, a member of the Executive Council of CMI, presented the project since it was on the proposal of Switzerland last July 2018 that the 51 Assembly of UNICTRAL accepted to take on this work as part of its programme.

As CMI co-ordinator for the project Dr. Fenech was tasked with giving a preliminary explanation of each proposed article to the convention.  There was agreement on  the usefulness of the CMI draft to be used as the basis for any future work.  The entire week was taken up with the explanations and answering of questions raised by all the delegations present.  It was concluded at this first meeting that the UNCITRAL secretariat will now work on another draft taking into account the various ideas expressed and that the  next draft will be the subject matter of the next Working Group VI meeting in Vienna in November of this year.

Filed Under: CMI, International Law News, International News, Judicial Sales, Latest, Malta, MMLA, Uncategorized

Dr Ann Fenech elected CMI Vice President

December 5, 2018 2 Comments

The Malta Maritime Law Association is delighted to announce that Dr Ann Fenech, President of the Malta Maritime Law Association and Managing Partner of Fenech & Fenech Advocates was last Friday (9 November 2018) elected Vice President of the Comité Maritime International  (CMI) by the General Assembly of the CMI at the IMO in London.

The CMI is an international body established in Antwerp in 1891 with the aim of unifying International Maritime Law.  It has been responsible of drafting some of the most important international maritime conventions including the Arrest Conventions of 1952 and 1999, the Collision Regulations and the Salvage Convention.

Dr Fenech was suggested for nomination for this position by Ireland and Sweden.  She was  voted in by the members of CMI who are the  national maritime law associations of 51 different countries.  She is the first Maltese to be elected to the position of Vice President within the CMI.

The CMI is currently working on a number of important projects including Automation and the International Recognition of Judicial Sales.  Dr Fenech was heavily involved in recent efforts in persuading UNCITRAL (the United Nations Committee on International Trade Law) to accept the proposal of the Government of Switzerland to commence work on an International Convention on the International Recognition of Judicial Sales.  UNICITRAL has in fact added this project to its working agenda.

Dr Fenech’s election as Vice President of the CMI is considered as a very valuable addition to the profile of Maritime Malta world wide.  It will mean that Maritime Malta will also be represented at the highest levels of international maritime law.  Ann Fenech has been practicing maritime law exclusively since 1986.

Filed Under: CMI, International Law News, International News, Latest, Malta, MMLA

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News & Publications

  • 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
  • MMLA at IMO IMLI Conference June 20, 2024
  • Case Law Update Seminar – Call for Contributions May 3, 2024
  • AIJA seminar “Setting sails in turbulent times” in Valletta, Malta from 13 to 15 June 2024 April 29, 2024

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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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