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Belgium Ratifies Ballast Water Management Convention

IMO

Published Mar 7, 2016 6:44 PM by The Maritime Executive

On March 7, Belgium became the latest country to ratify the Ballast Water Management Convention. 

Aimed at preventing the spread of harmful and invasive aquatic species in ships' ballast water, the Convention requires ships to have procedures in place for ballast water management.

The Convention will enter into force 12 months after ratification by 30 States, representing 35 percent of world merchant shipping tonnage. With the accession by Belgium, the number of States stands at 48, with an aggregate of 34.82 percent of the world’s merchant fleet tonnage (based on global tonnage data as at end-February 2016). 

A small island Sate is expected to deposit on March 8, bringing the number to 49 tomorrow. However, this won’t change the tonnage due to zero tonnage registered in that State.   

Belgium also deposited its instrument of accession to the Hong Kong Ship Recycling Convention, bringing the number of contracting States to four. The Hong Kong Convention will enter into force 24 months after the date on which 15 States, representing not less than 40 per cent of world merchant shipping by gross tonnage, become party to the treaty. The combined maximum annual ship recycling volume of those States must, during the preceding 10 years, constitute not less than three percent of their combined merchant shipping tonnage.

IMO Secretary-General Kitack Lim encouraged other States that had not already done so, to ratify both treaties, in order to bring them into force.