UN agencies, shipping corporations to tackle environmental threats
LONDON, United Kingdom, March 2, 2009 - A Global Industry Alliance
(GIA) was launched today at the Headquarters of the International
Maritime Organization (IMO) in London, to tackle the threats of marine
bio-invasions caused by the transfer of alien plants and animals in
ships’ ballast tanks. Ballast water is carried in cargo ships to
provide needed stability. It is taken onboard at the start of every
trip an unladen ship makes and then pumped out on arrival.
The Alliance, made up of an innovative partnership between the
International Maritime Organization (IMO), United Nations Development
Programme (UNDP), the Global Environment Facility (GEF) and four major
private shipping corporations, aims to harness the different skills and
expertise brought by these groups in order to develop concrete
solutions to this global environmental hazard.
IMO Secretary-General Efthimios Mitropoulos, who exchanged Memoranda of
Understanding with the four companies, said he would like to see the
GIA serving as a model for more such alliances, “all embracing the
goals of corporate social responsibility and addressing the many
safety, security and environmental protection issues that characterize
today’s shipping industry,” he said.
According to IMO’s findings, an estimated 10 billion tonnes of ballast
water are being carried around the globe each year, and more than 3,000
species of plants and marine organisms are being transferred daily. As
a result, a serious environmental threat has developed, caused by the
introduction of exotic species to new ecosystems threatening
biodiversity, fisheries and aquaculture. The damage done by these alien
species is costing the world billions of dollars.
“The scope of this achievement should not be underestimated; I rank the
responsiveness of the international community to this issue as one of
the world’s best examples of international cooperation on a global
environmental issue, on par with how the world took decisive steps to
address ozone-depleting substances through the Montreal Protocol,” said
Andrew Hudson, UNDP’s expert on water governance.
In many areas of the world, the effects of it have been devastating
since once these invasive species are established they are extremely
difficult to eradicate. For example, the introduction of the comb jelly
(mnemiopsis leidyi) to the Black and Azov Sea caused a near extinction
of anchovy and sprat fisheries and the introduction of the zebra mussel
(dreissena polymorpha) in the Great Lakes required multibillion dollar
control and cleaning of underwater structures and pipelines.
Recognizing the significance of the global environmental threat from
ballast water transfer of such harmful species, the international
community has developed a regulatory framework for ballast water
management, culminating in the adoption of the International Convention
for the Control and Management of Ships' Ballast Water and Sediments by
IMO member States in 2004.
The problem is due largely to the expansion of seaborne trade and
traffic over the last century. When cargo ships are not loaded, they
pump water into their ballast tanks in order to maintain stability on
their way to pick up cargo. Once the ships are loaded with heavy cargo,
they discharge the water from within the ship into the sea or ocean.
Alien and potentially harmful invasive species are released with the
discharged water. So far, very little of this ballast water is being
managed in a way that minimizes the spread of these marine invaders and
new invasions are being recorded at an alarming rate.
The Alliance will contribute to research and development of cost
effective ballast water treatment technologies that can be fitted
onboard ships. In addition, it will assist with exploring new ship
design options such as 'flow thru' ballast tanks and ‘ballast-free
ships’. The Alliance aims to promote the transfer and diffusion of
technology within the industry by opening a ballast water information
exchange mechanism, developing training tools targeted at the maritime
industry and establishing an industry dialogue forum.
The agreement signed today forming the GIA was initiated by GloBallast
Partnerships – a joint initiative founded by IMO, UNDP and GEF. The
Alliance is hosted by IMO in London. To date, four major shipping
corporations - APL, BP Shipping, Daewoo Shipbuilding and Marine
Engineering, and Vela Marine International – have signed on to this
partnership. More shipping corporations have expressed their interest
to join.
Above article sourced from http://thegef.org/interior_right.aspx?id=24318
For more information of the GIA, visit: http://globallast.imo.org/index.asp?page=GIA.html



