international
Convention for the Prevention of Pollution from Ships (MARPOL)
Adoption: 1973 (Convention), 1978 (1978
Protocol), 1997 (Protocol - Annex VI); Entry into force: 2 October 1983
(Annexes I and II).
The International Convention for the
Prevention of Pollution from Ships (MARPOL) is the main international
convention covering prevention of pollution of the marine environment by
ships from operational or accidental causes.
The MARPOL Convention was adopted on 2
November 1973 at IMO. The Protocol of 1978 was adopted in response to a spate
of tanker accidents in 1976-1977. As the 1973 MARPOL Convention had not yet
entered into force, the 1978 MARPOL Protocol absorbed the parent Convention.
The combined instrument entered into force on 2 October 1983. In 1997, a
Protocol was adopted to amend the Convention and a new Annex VI was added
which entered into force on 19 May 2005. MARPOL has been updated by
amendments through the years.
The Convention includes regulations aimed
at preventing and minimizing pollution from ships - both accidental pollution
and that from routine operations - and currently includes six technical
Annexes. Special Areas with strict controls on operational discharges are
included in most Annexes.
Annex I Regulations for the Prevention of
Pollution by Oil (entered into force 2 October 1983)
Covers prevention of pollution by oil from
operational measures as well as from accidental discharges; the 1992
amendments to Annex I made it mandatory for new oil tankers to have double
hulls and brought in a phase-in schedule for existing tankers to fit double
hulls, which was subsequently revised in 2001 and 2003.
Annex II Regulations for the Control of
Pollution by Noxious Liquid Substances in Bulk (entered into force 2 October
1983)
Details the discharge criteria and measures
for the control of pollution by noxious liquid substances carried in bulk;
some 250 substances were evaluated and included in the list appended to the
Convention; the discharge of their residues is allowed only to reception
facilities until certain concentrations and conditions (which vary with the
category of substances) are complied with.
In any case, no discharge of residues
containing noxious substances is permitted within 12 miles of the nearest
land.
Annex III Prevention of Pollution by
Harmful Substances Carried by Sea in Packaged Form (entered into force 1 July
1992)
Contains general requirements for the
issuing of detailed standards on packing, marking, labelling, documentation,
stowage, quantity limitations, exceptions and notifications.
For the purpose of this Annex, “harmful
substances” are those substances which are identified as marine pollutants in
the International Maritime Dangerous Goods Code (IMDG Code) or which meet the
criteria in the Appendix of Annex III.
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MARPOL ANEX 1-3
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