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Malta – Recent Changes to Laws Regulating Shipping Companies

May 13, 2020 Leave a Comment

The Merchant Shipping (Shipping organisations – Private Companies) Regulations (Subsidiary Legislation 234.42 of the Laws of Malta, “the Regulations”) have recently been amended by Legal Notice 31 of 2020 published in the Government Gazette on the 21st of February 2020.

Originally promulgated in 2004, the Regulations address the establishment and corporate workings of what is typically referred to as the Maltese shipping company.

Well known by players in the international shipping industry, shipping companies incorporated under the Regulations are used for the ownership, operation, and management of merchant vessels (both Malta-flagged or flagged elsewhere) as well as other maritime-related activities.

Legal Notice 31 of 2020 has now further improved the legislative and regulatory position in the area.

Continuation of foreign companies in Malta and vice-versa

Continuation (sometimes referred to as re-domiciliation) entails the transfer of a corporate entity’s ‘seat of incorporation’ or registration from one jurisdiction to another, thus ensuring the continuing corporate existence of the migrating entity.

Continuation seeks to ensure the continued existence of the same legal person. Accordingly, the company retains all the assets, rights, liabilities and obligations previously held or due by it.

Re-domiciliation into Malta is a useful and advantageous route for those existing shipping companies or shipping groups wishing to move their corporate seat to Malta. Existing shipping companies incorporated elsewhere may retain their corporate existence, instead of incurring winding up costs or leaving them idle whilst incurring costs to keep them in good standing, combined with the cost of incorporating a new company in Malta.

The continuation of a foreign shipping company into Malta may also be considered in connection with the simultaneous flagging of new tonnage or the re-flagging of existing tonnage under the Malta flag. Indeed, the whole re-domiciliation exercise, combined with the registration of the underlying owned or operated vessels in Malta, may well serve as a point of entry into the Maltese tonnage tax system.

Whilst re-domiciliation laws for non-shipping companies have been enacted in Malta a number of years ago, Legal Notice 31 of 2020 has brought about a novel faculty for Maltese shipping companies. Prior to 21st February 2020, a foreign shipping company wishing to re-domicile to Malta would first need to do so as a non-shipping company and subsequently convert to a shipping company post re-domiciliation.

This time consuming and burdensome procedure has now been removed through the introduction of Legal Notice 31 of 2020.

The Regulations now govern both the continuation in Malta of a foreign corporate entity as well as the continuation of a Maltese company in a country or jurisdiction outside Malta.

Re-domiciliation is only possible if the laws of the concerned jurisdiction (other than Malta) allow so.

Additionally, re-domiciliation may only take place when the foreign jurisdiction is considered as an “approved country or jurisdiction”. In this regard, the Registry relies on the Financial Action Task Force (FATF) country evaluations and treats as an approved jurisdiction a country that is not on the FATF blacklist.

Reporting & filing obligations for shipping companies

Starting from financial year 2020, shipping companies are requested to keep accounting records in accordance with the Regulations and will be subject to the exemptions and disclosure requirements as detailed in the said Regulations. Shipping companies will, therefore, need to prepare financial statements in accordance with the Regulations and the relevant applicable financial reporting standards such as GAPSME or IFRS.

Shipping companies will now submit audited financial statements to the Registrar of Companies. Submission must be made within 42 days from the end of the period for the laying before and approval by the company in general meeting of the annual accounts, that is 10 months after the end of the applicable and relevant accounting reference period.

Simply put, the large majority of shipping companies having their respective year-end in December must make their first filing of their audited accounts for financial year 2020 towards early December 2021.

A “small” shipping company is exempt from the general requirement to prepare a directors’ report. A “small” shipping company is one which, in terms of Regulation 64 of the amended Regulations, does not exceed two of the below thresholds:

  • A balance sheet total of € 6,000,000
  • Turnover of € 12,000,000
  • Not more than fifty employees

At a parent company level, exemptions from the preparation of consolidated accounts are also present. A parent shipping company incorporated under the Regulations can qualify as a “small company” in terms of the foregoing only if the group of which it is parent qualifies as a small group, meaning that, on a consolidation basis, it does not exceed the limits of two of the following criteria:

  • An aggregate balance sheet total of € 6,000,000 net or € 7,200,000 gross
  • An aggregate turnover of € 12,000,000 net or € 14,400,000 gross
  • An aggregate number of fifty employees

The above-described size exemption applicable to the preparation of consolidated accounts does not seem to apply in the event that the parent shipping company, or any of its undertakings to be consolidated, have their securities listed on a regulated market and in the event that none of the group companies are public interest entities.

Other

An additional Schedule – the Tenth Schedule – has been added to the Regulations. This Schedule lists a number of administrative penalties which may be imposed by the Registrar of Companies in the event of a number of defaults concerning failure by a shipping company and its officers to abide by their notification and filing obligations with respect to annual accounts as well as other matters concerning corporate governance.

by Ganado Advocates

Source: Lexology

Filed Under: Malta, Malta Flag, Maltese law, Maritime Registration, MMLA's Seminar: Key Insights on VAT & Yachting Transactions

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

Measures taken by the Malta Transport Authority in the context of COVID-19

March 31, 2020 Leave a Comment

The Malta Transport Authority has taken measures in the context of COVID-19 which have been made public with the following notices:

MS Notice 160 on SUPPORTING MEASURES TO THE MALTESE SHIPPING INDUSTRY DURING THE COVID-19 PANDEMIC offering shipowners the possibility of deferring due payment of registration fees and annual tonnage tax, the anniversary date of which falls due on or after the first day of April 2020. The deferment may be made for a period of three months, during which period the Registry will continue to issue renewed certificates of registry upon receipt of a request to proceed.

MS Notice 158 on EXTRAORDINARY MEASURES RESULTING FROM THE COVID-19 PANDEMIC

Port Notice 6/2020 ADDITIONAL PRECAUTIONARY MEASURES AND INSTRUCTIONS TO MARINE TERMINALS AND PORT SERVICE PROVIDERS

Port Notice 5/2020 PRECAUTIONARY MEASURES TO CRUISE LINERS AND PASSENGER SHIPS

Filed Under: COVID-19, Malta, Malta Flag

The Malta flag: shipping funds and sale and leaseback transactions

October 12, 2019 Leave a Comment

The popularity of sale and leaseback transactions is now evident to whoever is involved in the shipping industry. In the current global ship finance scenario, financiers and ship-owners now appear comfortable in selecting this method of finance for maritime assets.

Briefly, in a sale and leaseback scenario, the existing vessel owner sells the vessel to a third party and then leases it back again for a certain period of time, with the lessee sometimes enjoying an option to purchase the leased vessel at the end of the lease period. It is held that the economic effect is the same for a vessel owner as that of borrowing money secured on the vessel being financed.

Funds and other investment vehicles with an appetite for the financing of vessels and other maritime objects often use the sale and leaseback model as a preferred method of financing. Over the past few months, news items of shipping funds scooping up ownership of a select number of vessels within a larger fleet or acquiring an entire fleet keep appearing on various industry periodicals. The increased presence of shipping funds, together with their growing shipping portfolios, has therefore contributed to the popularity of sale and leaseback transactions.

It is generally acknowledged that a lessor in a sale and leaseback context has no interest in operating the vessel. It is the lessee who is effectively the operator of the vessel responsible for all matters concerning the vessel’s actual operation and management.

Constantly sensitised to the changing needs of the shipping industry, Malta has enacted legislation to facilitate the relationship between a lessor, typically set up as a wholly owned SPV of a shipping fund or other financing house, and a lessee being the original owner of the vessel and the trusted counterparty in the transaction based on his expertise and experience. In these cases, however, there cannot be a default as there is no loan. The contractual covenants all relate to the operation and maintenance of the vessel and the payment of the hire rather than loan repayments.

Emphasis will here be made on amendments to Malta’s merchant shipping legislation, primarily the amendment to Article 19A and the addition of Article 19B to the Merchant Shipping Act (Chapter 234 of Laws of Malta).

Consequent to amendments made through Legal Notice 210 of 2016, a lessor and a lessee party to a sale and leaseback transaction may avail themselves of the ‘dual’ registration option in the Maltese Register of Ships. Registration is wholly and exclusively retained within the Maltese Register of Ships and is not to be confused with bareboat charter registration in or out from the Maltese Registry, which is dealt with under separate provisions.

Article 19A essentially permits a person, such as the shipping fund SPV, to register title over the vessel as registered owner in the Maltese register of ships whilst simultaneously allowing another entity, as lessee, to have the operational certificate of Malta registry and any other certificates issued by the Maltese flag authorities, in its name as lessee. This option is also available in those instances were the lessee has subsequently chartered the vessel to a third party charterer that wishes to have the registration certificate issued in its name as charterer, subject of course to both the registered owner’s and the lessor’s consent.

The procedure is simple and efficient. Once title has been registered over the vessel, subject to the usual provisions applicable to any prospective owner of a Maltese vessel, a lessee or a charterer wishing to have the certificate of registry in its name may submit an application in this respect subject to the satisfaction of the following conditions: the consent of the vessel’s registered owner; the consent of any mortgagee (s); the submission of a copy of the lease agreement or the charter party (typically, a bareboat charter). This will not be made available for public inspection ensuring the confidentiality of the contractual relationship between the parties payment by the lessee or the charterer to the Registrar of an amount equal to the annual registration fee for that year in addition to that paid by the registered owner.

Article 19 B provides that the registered owner retains the right to withdraw its consent at any time during the period that a certificate is issued in the name of the lessee or the charterer. Whilst the applicable provision does not specify so, it is generally understood that such right may only be exercised on condition that there is an instance of default under the lease.

This right is also afforded to any mortgagee. This ensures that the grant of the lease does not create a burden on the vessel which affects third party rights such as those of the mortgagee who may have financed the original acquisition of the vessel.

Have made it more attractive and convenient for ship financiers to retain control over the financed vessel

Upon the withdrawal of either the registered owner’s or the mortgagee’s consent, the lessee’s or charterer’s certificate of registry will cease to have effect, and the lessee or charterer is obliged to surrender the certificate of registry to the flag authorities.

The Registrar is in turn obliged to inform the registered owner and any mortgagee on the surrender of the certificate to the authorities, therefore ensuring that the registered owner is kept abreast of developments in this respect.

It is clear that the amendments made through Legal Notice 210 of 2016 have made it more attractive and convenient for ship financiers to retain control over the financed vessel without added responsibility, whilst allowing the flexibility needed for a lessee or subsequent charterer to operate the vessel.

As registered owner, the lessor enjoys all of the advantages of owning the financed asset, yet is free from the usual obligations of a vessel owner including, amongst others, those of constantly ensuring that the vessel’s certificates are valid and in order, maintaining exchanges of correspondence and communi­cation with the flag authorities, engaging with professional third party managers for the technical management of the vessel and dealing with any hiccup at local ports.

On the other hand, a lessee (saving any operational covenants contained in the lease and other related agreements with the lessor) is afforded a free hand in the management and operation of the vessel in its name whilst being responsible for maintaining and insuring the vessel as well as generally being liable for any loss or damage to it.

In an enforcement scenario, a lessor (as registered owner) may make use of the power to withdraw the consent required for the issue and continued use of a lessee’s or charterer’s certificate of registry, therefore essentially “freezing” the movement of the vessel and allowing greater freedom for the lessor to re-possess the vessel on the strength of its proprietary rights.

As briefly mentioned above, any mortgagee present also has a role in an Article 19A registration. The mandatory support of a mortgagee through the granting of its required consent blends in well with those finance models in which a shipping fund only takes up a portion of the required funding with the remainder being provided by traditional lenders. The latter obtain comfort through the registration of a Maltese mortgage over the financed vessel with all of the statutory powers that come with it.

In addition to the amendments made to the Merchant Shipping Act, fresh provisions and amendments which support the shipping industry were introduced in virtue of Act No. LII of 2016. Amongst the legal instruments effected by Act No. LII of 2016, amendments and additions were introduced to the provisions governing the sale and letting of things in the Civil Code (Chapter 16 of the Laws of Malta).

A thorough examination of the amendments contemplated in Act No. LII of 2016 falls outside the scope of this paper. However, it is worth highlighting those amendments and insertions which effect the sale and letting of ships.

Any agreement concerning the sale and letting of ships, for instance in the context of a vessel sale and leaseback, is to be governed by the terms of the agreement reached between the parties and international usages of trade. Such terms will prevail over the provisions in the Maltese Civil Code in case of conflict. This ensures that any ill-suited provisions contained in the legal institutes of sale and of lease in the Maltese Civil Code, and which contextually do not apply to the realities of a modern sale and leaseback transaction, are effectively blocked from regulating the parties relationship and consequently being applied by the courts in a dispute. Of course, the choice of the usually selected foreign laws in a sale and/,or lease agreement will do this admirably well and Maltese law will recognise the choice. So this clarification on the subordination of Maltese law to the contract is essentially a defence against any purely local public policy arguments which could potentially upset the parties’ choice of law.

A lessor’s position in terminating the lease agreement and repossessing the leased vessel has also been facilitated given the tendency of Maltese law, as a civil law system, to discourage self help and requiring a court order to terminate the possessory rights emerging from a lease.

A lessor may immediately terminate the lease in the event of a default by serving notice (including through electronic means) notwithstanding the opposition of the lessee and without any prior court authorisation. The requirement to notify the lessee through a judicial act, typically applicable to all things under the Maltese Civil Code, has been removed. Moreover, what constitutes an “event of default” has been defined in the law seeking to mitigate any lengthy negotiations between the parties on whether an “event of default” exists or not. A default has essentially been defined as a change in the financial condition of the lessee, the fulfilment of a condition under which the dissolution of the lease was expressly covenanted as well as an action which deprives the mortgagee of the security expected from its own debtor, typically the lessor. Instances of default may of course be further amplified and supplemented in the lease agreement itself.

Once notice has been served, the lessor may immediately proceed with taking possession of the leased vessel and, upon the lessor’s request, the court is obliged to render its full support to the lessor. Essentially, the amendments again seek to empower lessors (qua financiers) by overturning the bias that exists in Maltese civil law in favour of the possessor of an object subject to lease.

The lessee retains its right to seek damages in the event of an unjustified termination of the agreement.

Parties involved in vessel sale and leaseback transactions now enjoy the comfort that, in instances where the laws of Malta do apply, since a foreign law is not selected by the contracting parties, or where a foreign law is chosen but for one reason or another cannot be applied, Maltese law is well suited to match the realities and demands of today’s modern vessel sale and leaseback models. This recalibrates the risk undertaken in financing transactions and that previously arose under the Maltese legal system, to produce calmer waters going forward.

By Jan Rossi and Ilias Theocharis, Ganado Advocates

 

Filed Under: Malta, Malta Flag, Maltese law, Maritime Finance

Is State aid essential to the shipping industry?

September 4, 2018 Leave a Comment

The recent long-awaited European Commission decision on the Maltese Tonnage Tax System has been welcomed by the shipping community, both locally as well as from other member states.

The European Commission rightly concluded that Malta was not abusing the European State Aid guidelines for shipping in an attempt to grow its registered fleet and hence was satisfied that Malta was not taking an unjust competitive advantage with respect to the other member states.

Furthermore, the Maltese Tonnage Tax System was endorsed by the Commission for a period of 10 years – this will create certainty and stability for owners intending to use the flag, giving them the confidence to properly plan ahead.

This article is not intended to be an analysis of Tonnage Tax Rules or how Malta has transposed them into its system. Rather, it addresses a question that has been posed to me a number of times by both colleagues and friends who are not versed in maritime law: Why should the shipping industry be afforded special tax treatment on the income it generates? And why is shipping treated differently than most other industries?

In a nutshell, State aid is granted to the shipping industry in the form of fiscal incentives that are offered to eligible owners and operators of vessels flying the flag of a European member state or operating from an EU jurisdiction. The scope behind this benefit is to attract owners to register, operate and manage their vessels within the European Union and also has the objective of increasing the tonnage registered in the EU.

In 1989, the European Commission published its first set of guidelines on the use of State aid for shipping. The primary objective of this was to create guidance and standard adherence by member states to the rules. The guidelines were also introduced on account of the fact that many owners were flagging out of the EU to jurisdictions which at the time were offering more attractive fiscal incentives and friendly environments to operate from.  This legal development did not prove to be successful and there was an ever-growing trend of ship owners who opted for non-EU flags to register their vessels in, as well as non-EU jurisdictions to operate from. This led to the 1997 Communication defining new guidelines on state aid to maritime transport, followed by the 2004 commission communication which was issued, in part, to cater for further ship registries, including the Malta ship registry, which through the accession of such States in the union, were going to increase European tonnage considerably.

These two communications proved to be helpful for those member states wishing to attract shipping to their jurisdiction and were successful in enabling European member states to attract tonnage back to Europe. Historically, Greece was the first to adopt its tonnage tax rules, and others such as the Netherlands, Denmark, France and Spain followed suit.

Managing to attract and keep ship owners within the EU is important for a number of reasons, including that EU standards can be imposed on ships registered in European member states – this ensures, among other things, safer and cleaner seas and better conditions applicable to the seafarers’ rights, giving added value to the owners or operators of vessels, which are seen to confirm and adhere to the best mari­time standards. Moreover, more leverage is acquired by member states with substantial tonnage to influence non-EU international players, encouraging them to adopt international conventions putting higher standards into practice. Also, as a consequence, ship management activities could employ a number of skilled and well-paid workers, ensuring the industry gene­rates a substantial amount of income.

Non-EU jurisdictions have proved to be quite successful in attracting tonnage to their shores

Shipping is not like any other industry. Ships and their owners have, to a large degree, no real necessity to operate or flag their vessels in a particular jurisdiction. There are a number of non-EU registries having white list status, meaning that they are flags that enjoy a good reputation. Historically, these non-EU jurisdictions have proved to be quite successful in attracting tonnage to their shores and thus negatively impacting European fleet numbers.

The European Union has recognised this phenomenon and has, through the adaptation of the guidelines and its recent fine-tuning as to how such guidelines should be implemented by EU states, created much needed clarity within the industry. Issues of transparency and checks and balances have also strengthened the system and are intended to reduce any potential abuse.

In principle, aid should be given for income that is generated from pure shipping activities as defined in the guidelines and should not be afforded without some level of scrutiny. In order for the scheme to be effective, each member state adopting it must ensure that abuses are minimised and that the objectives of growth are being achieved.

The European Commission needs to monitor the behaviour of each member state offering this assistance to their shipping industry in order to ensure that there is a level playing field between EU countries and that no member state is gaining unjust competitive advantage on others. It does, however, also need to sensitise itself to the competition that its own member states are facing from third countries. In this respect, one cannot but criticise the undue delay by the Commission in providing its decision on the Maltese tonnage tax rules – a staggering five years.

The European Union and the so-called European Fleet need to be able to compete and attract more owners to their shores. This is critical not only from an economic perspective, but also because a larger fleet can exert more leverage and influence on the manner in which this industry is regulated. This, in turn, will benefit the mari­time environment generally. Higher environmental standards, better working conditions and safer vessels are the bi-product of attracting more tonnage towards European shores. Ship owners who have not experienced the EU flag for a while, need to be re-introduced accordingly and understand the many benefits of opera­ting within a European member state or flying the flag of such member state.

The ability of member states to offer State aid to the shipping industry needs to be regarded as an essential tool afforded to it by the European Union which should be exploited and utilised in order to achieve the goals and aspirations set out by the Commission. It is imperative that member states, including Malta, which boasts of being the largest register in Europe, work towards a common objective – the continued growth and influence of the European fleet and the European shipping industry.

by Matthew Attard,  Vice-President of the Malta Maritime Law Association and maritime lawyer within the shipping practice at Ganado Advocates.

Souce: Times of Malta

 

Filed Under: EU, Latest, Malta, Malta Flag, State aid

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