
MSC and IMO Highlight Crew Stuck aboard Vessels under Charter
The issue of crew
changes aboard ships involved in charters is coming to light as the IMO issued
a statement denouncing no crew change clauses and MSC Mediterranean Shipping
Company highlighted the situation on one vessel as an example of the hardship
crews are facing.
Many of the crew were reported to be aboard up to 20 months
The situation
aboard the vessels waiting off the Chinese coast caught in the coal trade
dispute between China and Australia came to world attention when the National
Seafarers Union of India launched an appeal to get 10,000 messages sent to the
IMO. Twenty or more vessels have been lingering off China since the summer, but
two with Indian crews became the focus of the humanitarian crisis. Many of the
crew were reported to be aboard up to 20 months while China refused permission
to land the coal or implement a crew change, citing COVID-19 restrictions, and
the vessel’s operators refused to depart with their cargo to facilitate crew
changes in alternate ports.
MSC urging for relief and return of the seafarers onboard to their
families
Despite reports of
a possible agreement to let the coal be offloaded, MSC issued a statement calling
for an urgent solution to the crew change crisis aboard the Anastasia, which
has been waiting off China since August. “MSC has repeatedly requested during
the ship’s voyage that the seafarers onboard should be relieved to return home
to their families. These proposals have not yet been implemented by the
chartering parties which determine the ship’s movements,” MSC said.
MSC has been doing what it can
MSC as the
technical operator of the vessel says it has been doing what it can, including
regular contact with the crew and arranging for remote support from a clinical
psychologist, while also trying to facilitate a crew change. The line says it
attempted crew changes in Hong Kong in June and August, blocked by COVID
restrictions. Japan approved a crew change in August, but it was not
implemented, followed by efforts to organize a crew change in Manila, Hong
Kong, Singapore, and Busan, all of which were also refused, and its suggestion
last week that the vessel sail to Japan.
“After local
authorities recently blocked MSC’s attempt to send a doctor to visit the ship
in person, the company is currently seeking to remedy this through diplomatic
channels,” they reported. MSC says it is deeply concerned that none of the
solutions have worked so far but says it cannot “order the master to deviate to
a port for a crew change, as the vessel could be arrested as a result.”
Worrying development that is preventing crew changes IMO made aware of
The IMO says it
has been made aware of a ”worrying development that is preventing crew changes
on certain ships and that does not allow ships to deviate to ports where crew
changes could take place. Certain charterers are demanding the inclusion of 'no
crew change' clauses in charterparties, that is, no crew changes can occur
whilst the charterer’s cargo is aboard.”
The IMO says the
contracts should instead contain clauses that allow for crew changes if they
are available during the pandemic.