In response, the United Nations’
International Labour Organization (ILO) plans to refine the language concerning
work and rest regulations at sea during the Special Tripartite Committee of the
Maritime Labour Convention (MLC) set to convene in Geneva this April. This
initiative underscores the ILO’s commitment to enhancing the working conditions
for maritime professionals. The ILO’s
renewed focus on work/rest hours follows the release of a comprehensive 64-page
report by the World Maritime University (WMU), another UN institution. The
WMU conducted a survey in 2022 that garnered over 9,000 responses from
seafarers worldwide, shedding light on the pressing issues surrounding maritime
labor.
The survey results indicate that
seafarers are working an average of 11.5 hours per day, with rest periods
averaging only 10.8 hours and sleep averaging a mere 7.0 hours. Alarmingly,
28.1% of respondents reported resting for less than the recommended 10 hours,
thus breaching established rest hour standards. This situation not only jeopardizes the wellbeing of seafarers but
also raises concerns about safety at sea.
Moreover, the data reveals that
seafarers are working an average of 74.9 hours per week. This figure starkly
contrasts with the global average of 43 hours per week identified in the ILO’s
2018 general survey, highlighting a significant discrepancy in expectations and
reality for maritime workers....The
report asserts that high compliance rates reported by port state control often
obscure the reality of seafarers’ experiences, creating what the authors
describe as a “false narrative at policy levels.” This situation is
exacerbated by a regulatory framework that lacks rigor, enabling flag states to
compete by issuing manning certificates with minimal oversight, thereby relying
on shipowners and managers to self-regulate....International Maritime
Organization (IMO) regulations, including the MLC and the Seafarers’ Training,
Certification, and Watchkeeping Code (STCW), dictate the permissible working
hours for crew members. These guidelines
specify that the maximum working hours should not exceed 14 hours within any
24-hour period and 72 hours over a seven-day span. Conversely, the minimum
required hours of rest should not fall below 10 hours in a 24-hour period and
77 hours weekly.
However, reconciling the need for
crew well-being with excessive operational demands appears increasingly
challenging. Steven Jones, founder of the Seafarers Happiness Index,
articulated this dilemma in a recent article for Splash, stating, “Crews face overwhelming demands while
grappling with chronic underreporting of work hours, and the threat of
punishment for infractions.” He highlighted the difficult position
seafarers find themselves in: choosing between honesty about their overwork,
which could lead to punitive measures, or dishonesty that might allow them to
evade consequences. This dynamic fosters an environment where effective and
transparent recording of work hours is disincentivized.