MARPOL Background
MARPOL Background
ENVIRONMENTAL
PROTECTION
By
Capt.S.Kishore
HISTORY
Oil pollution of the seas was
recognized as a problem in the first
half of the 20th century.
RECEPTION FACILITIES
FOCUS..
Captain woken at 06.00 a.m., Scilly Isles still not in radar view
(the radar had a range of 40 miles). Captain decides to sleep
some more.
Captain woken again at 06.30 a.m. Scilly Isles now on the radar
scope, but on Port side, not to Stbd.
After short discussion, captain orders "continue course"
07.00 a.m., Captain on bridge
0800 a.m., Changeover of the watch: captain, junior officer (1st
trip) + experienced helmsman now on the bridge.
Junior officer assigned navigation duties.
Helmsman on watch on bridge wings.
08.15 a.m. Torrey Canyon is now passing the Scilly Isles, 30
minutes to Seven Stones reef .
Captain orders a course alteration while on autopilot
THE PROGRESSION
There are reefs all round
Land's End and round the Scilly
Isles (look at all the
lighthouses). Two particularly
dangerous ones are 'Wolf Rock',
and 'Seven Stones'. 'Wolf
Rock' has a lighthouse;
'Seven Stones' has a lightship.
Position rechecked.
Captain goes into the chartroom at the back of the
bridge to look again at the chart. Helmsman shouts
that vessel not steering.
BROKEN
INTO
TWO
HALVES
THE REACTION
The incident raised questions about
accidents at sea.
RESPONSE
IMO called an Extraordinary session of its
Council, which drew up a plan of action on
technical and legal aspects of the Torrey
Canyon incident. Then, the IMO Assembly
decided in 1969 to convene an international
conference in 1973 to prepare a suitable
international agreement for placing
restraints on the contamination of the sea,
land and air by ships.
INTERNATIONAL
CONVENTION
Finally, an international Conference in