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José Maura International Oil Pollution Compensation Funds Maritime Institute of Technolgoy and Graduate Studies Maryland, 6 June 2011 Addressing Potential.

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Presentation on theme: "José Maura International Oil Pollution Compensation Funds Maritime Institute of Technolgoy and Graduate Studies Maryland, 6 June 2011 Addressing Potential."— Presentation transcript:

1 José Maura International Oil Pollution Compensation Funds Maritime Institute of Technolgoy and Graduate Studies Maryland, 6 June 2011 Addressing Potential Underwater Threats: IOPC Funds’ perspective

2 Presentation outline Part I IOPC Funds’ role Who we are Oil removal from sunken ships Part II Case studies Prestige Solar I

3 The international regime Why do we need it? It provides compensations to victims of pollution damage caused by spills of persistent oil from tankers It provides compensations through amicable settlements, avoiding court involvement Application is uniform Everyone gets equal treatment

4 The international compensation regime

5 The compensation regime: How does it work? Claimants Third tier Supplementary Fund Third tier Supplementary Fund Compensation regime Source of money: contributors Paying organism Second tier 1992 Fund Convention Second tier 1992 Fund Convention First tier 1992 Civil Liability Convention First tier 1992 Civil Liability Convention

6 USD Millions Gross Tonnage (x 1000 tonnes) $143 m $323m $1 196 m Supplementary Fund 1992 Fund 1992 CLC Compensation limits Laid down by the Conventions

7 The Member States (Map: ITOPF) 1992 Fund Convention (105 Member States) 1992 Civil Liability Convention (124) Supplementary Fund (27) 1969 Civil Liability Convention (37)

8 Contributions From the Member States’ oil industry

9 Majority claims settled in 3 years and no court action Article VIII –1992 Civil Liability Convention Article 6 – 1992 Fund Convention –‘Rights to compensation shall be extinguished unless’ –‘Action is brought within 3 years from date of damage; or’ –‘In no case shall an action be brought after 6 years from the date of the incident’ Time bar For submission of claims

10 The 1992 Fund Convention does not apply when: ‘the pollution damage resulted from an act of war, hostilities, civil war or insurrection’ ‘... [the pollution damage] was caused by oil which has escaped or been discharged from a warship or other ship owned... by a State and used... only on Government non-commercial service’ Article 4. 2. (a) 1992 Fund Convention Exceptions

11 Criteria fundamentals Removal of oil from sunken ships Claims Manual ‘ Claims for the cost of measures to remove any remaining persistent oil from a sunken ship are... subjective to the overall criterion of reasonableness from an objective point of view... the relationship between costs and benefits... should be reasonable’

12 Criteria fundamentals Claims Manual ‘The fact that a government... decides to take certain measures does not in itself mean that the measures are reasonable for the purposes of compensation under the Convention’

13 Oil removal from sunken ships ‘Reasonableness’ determined case by case Claims Manual Specific sub-criteria A.Situation and condition of sunken ship, such as the likelihood of release of the remaining oil, quantity and type of oil, stability of the seabed B.Likely pollution damage in relation to the cost of removal operation, such as the area’s economic and environmental vulnerability to oil pollution damage

14 Oil removal from sunken ships ‘Reasonableness’ determined case by case Claims Manual Specific sub-criteria C. Feasibility of operation, such as the likelihood of success of removal operation and release of significant quantity of oil during such operation D.The cost of removal operation in relation to likely pollution damage

15 Prestige Spain 2002 Broke in two in November 2002 in north west of Spain; 63,000 tonnes of heavy oil estimated to have been lost Approximately 10,500-foot depth In 2003, operation to seal further oil leaks emanating from the sunken and surveys cost €9.5 million In 2004, oil removal operation and introduction of nutrients into the tanks in the sunken ship (to promote biodegradation of remaining oil) costs €100 million

16 Prestige Spain 2002 1992 Fund Executive Committee decides the costs incurred in 2003 to seal the oil leaks are admissible in principle The cost of operation to remove oil from the sunken ship incurred in 2004 are not admissible – as the relationship between costs and benefits was judged not reasonable Social and political considerations are outside the scope of the Conventions

17 Solar I Philippines 2006 Sank in the Guimaras Straights, Philippines in August 2006; small oil leak from the sunken ship continues Approximately 1,900-foot depth Survey shows the possibility of significant quantity of oil remaining on board The sunken ship located in seismically active area, close to sensitive coastal environmental and economic resources 1992 Fund Executive Committee decides the cost of extracting oil is admissible in principle, as it is proportionate to the risks of pollution damage resulting from further oil leak

18 Solar I Philippines 2006 Operation removes remaining oil from the sunken vessel in 2007 Only 9 tonnes of oil found on board The entire cargo had been spilt at the time of incident Total cost of the operation approximately $6 million

19 José Maura Acting Director Head of Claims Department www.iopcfund.org


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