Chalos & Co summary of ‘Hot Topics’ from IMO Spring 2025 Committee Meetings in London

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We share the following significant outcomes for vessel owners and operators from this Spring’s International Maritime Organization’s (IMO’s) Committee Meetings:

LEG 112: The 112th session of IMO’s Legal Committee (LEG 112) took place from March 24 to 28, 2025 and focused on seafarer abandonment, fraudulent ship registrations, liability regimes for alternative fuels, and lost container reporting requirements. One of the most significant outcomes of LEG 112 was the adoption of the Guidelines on Fair Treatment of Seafarers Detained in Connection with Alleged Crimes, developed by the IMO-International Labour Organization (ILO) Joint Tripartite Working Group, which seek to address fair treatment of seafarers, including legal representation, due process rights, and protection from arbitrary detention.

The guidelines further clarify responsibilities for other interested industry stakeholders:  Flag States must provide consular assistance, legal support, and ensure detained seafarers receive fair treatment. In addition, Flag states should intervene if their nationals face unjust detention.  Port and Coastal States must conduct investigations promptly, avoid unnecessary vessel delay and seafarer detention, and ensure seafarers have access to legal representation. They must also communicate with flag States and shipowners to facilitate fair treatment.  Shipowners are required to pay wages, provide medical care, arrange repatriation if necessary, and otherwise ensure their crew is not abandoned during legal proceedings.  Seafarers are encouraged to understand their rights, seek legal assistance when/if detained, and are encouraged to cooperate with investigations.  The guidelines further promote collaboration between IMO, ILO, and member states to prevent prolonged detentions and ensure seafarers do not face coercion or intimidation.

There are two (2) significant agenda items for the next meeting of the Legal Committee (LEG 113, Spring 2026): Developing Guidelines or Best Practices for Ship Registration (these guidelines will be aimed at preventing fraudulent registrations via clear procedures to verify ship ownership and Flag State authorization; improving ship registration alignment with IMO conventions to prevent substandard vessel operations through fraudulent registries; strengthening verification mechanisms for ship registries, ensuring accurate records in databases like the Global Integrated Shipping Information System (GISIS); and increasing accountability for flag States, shipowners, and registries to prevent misuse of registration systems) – AND – Regulatory Scoping Exercise on Unlawful Ship Operations: (correspondence Group (CG) was established to begin evaluating possible new regulatory work).

MEPC 83:  IMO’s Marine Environment Protection Committee (MEPC 83) met April 7–11, 2025 and approved mid-term greenhouse gas (GHG) reduction measures, finalized Phase 1 of short-term GHG reduction strategies, and adopted new regulations on fuel oil reporting transparency.  The fuel oil reporting transparency regulations will have several direct impacts on shipowners, particularly in terms of compliance, operational adjustments, and financial considerations. These new requirements will formally take effect on March 1, 2027, following expected adoption in October 2025 and are expected to include stricter reporting obligations (shipowners must ensure that their vessels submit detailed fuel oil consumption reports in a standardized format. This means developing accurate data collection systems and training crew to comply with the new reporting requirements); verification & compliance costs (the amendments introduce stricter verification procedures to prevent data manipulation. Shipowners may need to implement third-party audits or digital monitoring tools to ensure compliance, potentially increasing operational costs); digital reporting systems (shipowners are encouraged to adopt automated data collection tools to streamline compliance. This may require upgrading onboard systems or integrating new software solutions to meet IMO transparency standards); public data accessibility (fuel oil consumption data will be publicly accessible, meaning shipowners may face increased scrutiny from regulators, environmental groups, and industry stakeholders); and potential fines and/or penalties for non-compliance.

source: cyprusshippingnews.com