Press Release
17 December 2013
Refer to: Jeeno C. Arellano
(0927 228 6617)
Alarmed by the report of possible
blacklisting of Filipino seafaring officers by the European Union, Senate
President Franklin M. Drilon urged the swift passage of a bill which seeks to
transfer all functions pertaining to training and certification of over 400,000
Filipino seafarers to one central agency, the Maritime Industry Authority
(MARINA).
In his sponsorship speech, Drilon
warned over possible repercussions of the country’s failure to comply with the
2010 Manila Amendments to the “1978 International Convention on Standards of
Training, Certification and Watchkeeping for Seafarers (STCW Convention).
At present, the STCW functions
are lodged in various agencies such as the Philippine Regulatory Commission,
Commission of Higher Education, Department of Science and Technology, Technical
Education and Skills Development Authority, and National Telecommunication
Commission.
The present practice, according
to Drilon, is not consistent with the STCW Convention. “Our seafarers face an
imminent threat that, if not addressed urgently, will in all likelihood capsize
our maritime industry,” said Drilon.
It can be recalled that the
European Union (EU) has recently expressed its inclination to blacklist
Filipino seafarers from EU-flagged vessels, blaming the country’s
unsatisfactory and incomplete observance of the STCW Convention. The STCW
Convention sets the global minimum qualifications for masters, officers and
watch personnel engaged in international shipping.
The Senate chief said that
employment bans on Filipino seafarers would cause sizeable damage to the
Philippine economy: “We have to remember that remittances from sea-based
workers – which reached $5 billion in 2012 and for this year alone, is already
worth $1.2 billion – keep our economy afloat by fueling domestic consumption,
preventing foreign exchange instability, and serving as a buffer against
inflation of the peso.”
He added that the blacklisting by
the EU could “terribly upset” the country’s position in the global maritime
professional industry, and “would negatively affect the estimated 400,000
Filipino sea-based workers employed worldwide.”
“There is a need to align
our maritime regulatory system with the international standards and practices,”
he added.
To prevent such ban and its negative
consequences from happening, the Senate Bill No. 2043 seeks to consolidate the
functions relating to the country’s compliance with the SCTW Convention in one
agency which is the MARINA.
“The Senate Bill No. 2043 will
address the aforementioned concerns through the introduction of major
structural changes to our maritime regulatory system that will address the
inefficiencies in the current scheme and will therefore ensure our country’s
complete compliance with the STCW Convention,” explained Drilon.
“By designating the MARINA as the
sole maritime administrative agency empowered to enact uniform rules and
regulations governing global maritime professionals and to regularly monitor
our conformity with the STCW Convention, we can now meet standards and avert
employment bans,” Drilon said.
Drilon then called for the
measure’s swift passage, explaining that the urgent implementation of SBN 2043
will “positively influence” the ongoing audit report being prepared by the
European Maritime Safety Agency (EMSA), which will determine if the country is
indeed in conformity to the STCW Convention.
-end-
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