Wednesday, July 24, 2013

Shipping Firms Sentenced to Pay $10.4 Million for Concealing Vessel Pollution / Shipping Industry Brought Up To Date On Container Security

24 Jul 13 - 18:29

Shipping Firms Sentenced to Pay $10.4 Million for Concealing Vessel Pollution

$2.6 Million to Benefit New Jersey and Delaware Coasts Hit by Hurricane Sandy

US Department o Justice According to the US Department of Justice, two shipping firms based in Germany and Cyprus were sentenced  in federal court in Newark, N.J., to pay a $10.4 million penalty for felony obstruction of justice charges and violating the Act to Prevent Pollution from Ships related to the deliberate concealment of vessel pollution from four ships that visited ports in New Jersey, Delaware and Northern California
Columbia Shipmanagement (Deutschland) GmbH (CSM-D), a German corporation, and Columbia Shipmanagement Ltd. (CSM-CY), a Cypriot company, were sentenced to pay a $10.4 million criminal penalty, $2.6 million of which will be directed to the National Fish and Wildlife Foundation to fund community service projects selected to help restore the coastal environment of New Jersey and Delaware hit by Hurricane Sandy.  The remaining $7.8 million is designated as a criminal fine.  In addition, the companies were placed on four years of probation.
During probation, the companies will be subject to the terms of an environmental compliance plan that requires outside audits by an independent company and oversight by a court appointed monitor.
The shipping firms admitted that four of their ships - three oil tankers and one container ship - had intentionally bypassed required pollution prevention equipment and falsified the oil record book, a required log regularly inspected by the U.S. Coast Guard.  The case is the largest vessel pollution settlement in either New Jersey or Delaware.
The companies previously pleaded guilty before U.S. District Judge Susan D. Wigenton on March 21, 2013, to six counts involving three vessels in New Jersey and four counts involving one ship in Delaware.
The counts consist of violations of the Act to Prevent Pollution from Ships for failing to maintain an accurate oil record book, obstruction of justice and making false statements.
Learn more about the case at US Department of Justice at http://www.justice.gov/opa/pr/2013/July/13-enrd-832.html






24 Jul 13 - 17:57

Shipping Industry Brought Up To Date On Container Security

SAJ introduces new ways to secure shipments and minimise tampering

Members of the shipping industry were last week briefed on issues related to container security on the Port of Kingston.
The briefing was conducted by the United States Container Security Initiative team in Kingston, during the Shipping Association of Jamaica's (SAJ) Lunch and Learn Seminar.
The team suggested new ways to secure shipments and minimise tampering.
Representatives from the Jamaica Customs Department were also on hand to answer questions posed by the participants.
Held at the SAJ's Fourth Avenue offices, the presentation showed ways in which shipments may become contaminated and measures that may be used to safeguard these shipments.
Please click at Jamaica-Gleaner to find out more