Voyage Charters
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Chapter 65
Oil Pollution
26. OIL POLLUTION CLAUSE: Owner agrees to participate in Charterer’s program covering oil pollution avoidance. Such program prohibits discharge overboard of all oily water, oily ballast or oil in any form of a persistent nature, except under extreme circumstances whereby the safety of the vessel, cargo or life at sea would be imperiled. |
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Limitation of liability
65.4 Liability for pollution is the subject of the 1992 International Convention on Civil Liability for Oil Pollution Damage by Article III of which, subject to certain limited exceptions,3 the registered owners of vessels have an absolute liability for pollution damage up to a limit determined by the size of their vessel unless the pollution damage resulted from the personal act or omission of the person concerned, committed with the intent to cause such damage, or recklessly and with knowledge that such damage would probably result.4 Carriers of cargoes greater than 2,000 mts of oil are required to carry a blue card evidencing insurance for such liability and insurers may be directly liable for such pollution damage up to that limitation figure.Page 1073
U.S. Law
65A.1 Clause 26 was originally intended to obligate tanker owners to cooperate with the pollution prevention efforts of oil company charterers. However, the United States’ enactment of the Oil Pollution Act of 1990 (“OPA”),5 soon followed by several state oil pollution statutes, altered the way in which owners and charterers viewed the risk of oil spills and the cost of insuring against these liabilities. 65A.2 An owner’s oil pollution liabilities are usually insured by mutual Protection and Indemnity associations (“P. & I. Clubs”) who underwrite on an indemnity basis and are not generally guarantors. The 13 P. & I. Clubs currently making up the International Group of P. & I. Clubs (“the Group”) insure approximately 90 percent of the world’s ocean-going tonnage in this way. 65A.3 The P. & I. Clubs have nevertheless agreed to be guarantors and to provide evidence of financial responsibility in two exceptional cases: (1) certificates (commonly known as “Blue Cards”) guaranteeing payment of the shipowner’s liability for pollution damage under the 1969 and 1992 Civil Liability Conventions; and (2) certificates of financial responsibility (COFRs) issued under previous U.S. pollution law, the Federal Water Pollution Control Act,6 up to the limit of $150 per gross registered ton (“grt”). 65A.4 OPA drastically increased the limit of liability of owners, operators and demise charterers of tank vessels for removal costs and damages, up to $1,200 per grt with a minimum of $10 million for vessels in excess of 3,000 grt. OPA also introduced a new range of potential liabilities extending to economic and non-economic losses; eliminated an owner’s right to limit liability under the Limitation of Liability Act of 1851; and the courts have interpreted OPA’s provisions allowing an owner to limit its liability strictly against owners and limitation.7 The limitation amounts are adjusted from time to time for inflation.Source categor | New CPI-adjusted limit of liability |
§138.230(a) Vessels | |
(1) The OPA 90 limits of liability for tank vessels, other than edible oil tank vessels and oil spill response vessels, are-. |