Overview and Comparison of the IMO and the US Maritime Administration Ballast Water Management Regulations
Abstract
:1. Introduction
2. Major Regulatory Provisions of IMO and US Ballast Water Management
2.1. Status and Developments of the IMO BWM Regulations
- 22 Articles designed to provide general information, development, improvement, enforcement, and implementation of the BWMC.
- An annex divided into A, B, C, D, and E sections containing 24 regulations in total, including two Appendixes to annex. The regulations stipulate technical standards and requirements to be followed in meeting BWMC objectives.
- 16 presently developed guidelines aimed for uniform implementation of BWMC regulations. They have been constantly developed and amended since 2005 in accordance with new BWM experiences, knowledge gained, and related technological developments. Furthermore, IMO has issued a number of supplementary resolutions and circulars related to the implementation of the BWMC.
- Regulation D-1, Ballast Water Exchange Standard, requires ships to perform the exchange of coastal BW with open sea water with at least 95% volumetric efficiency by using one or a combination of three accepted methods: the sequential method, the pumping through method, or the dilution method. Regulation B-4 requires that the exchange has to be carried out 200 nautical miles from the nearest land and in waters with a depth of at least 200 m [28].
- Regulation D-2, Ballast Water Performance Standard, sets a maximum permissible concentration of viable organisms and specified indicator microbes harmful to human health in the discharged BW. In order to manage D-2 limits, ships need to treat BW prior to discharge by installing an IMO approved treatment system [28].
- Ballast Water Management Plan (BWMP)—Regulation B-1 is a document developed for each ship specifically and approved by the Flag State Administration/Recognised Organisation. It is comprised of detailed procedures for safe and efficient BWM regulations compliance and onboard practices such as crew familiarisation with their obligations and responsibilities, BW uptake and discharge timings, sediment management, and contingency procedures.
- Ballast Water Record Book (BWRB)—Regulation B-2 is either a paper or an electronic format book intended for recording all BWM activities. The BWRB form is given as Appendix II to the Annex. It can be included as part of the BWMP and must be available for Port State inspection at all times. All entries must be kept for at least three years from the time of writing.
- International Ballast Water Management Certificate is mandatory for all ships of 400 gross tons and above. It states which BWM standard is implemented onboard and thus confirms the ship’s compliance with BWMC regulations. The IBWMC is part of the BWMC as Appendix I to the Annex.
2.2. Status and Developments of the US Ballast Water Regulations
- Perform complete BW exchange in an area 200 nautical miles from any shore prior to BW discharge. This option as a BWM method is acceptable only up to a ship’s BWDS compliance date after which one of the further listed acceptable methods must be implemented. However, it may still be allowed by the USCG as a contingency measure in case of an emergency [45,48,49].
- Installation and operation of a BWMS evaluated and approved by the USCG type approval process defined in the 46 CFR 162, including a land-based testing according to the EPA’s Environmental Technology Verification (ETV) protocol [48,50]. The USCG protocol requires BWMSs to be tested in both land based and shipboard testing environments. After the preliminary stage of extensive planning and logistical arrangements, all further required evaluations and testing programs must be carried out by the USCG approved independent laboratories (IL), meaning that the laboratory cannot be affiliated with manufacturers applying for the type approval tests [9,51,52,53]. Prior to actual land based or shipboard efficacy tests, the manufacturers submit a Letter of Intent (LOI) to the USCG expressing their intention to start such testing at an IL [9]. Once all test results have been evaluated by the USCG Marine Safety Centre, the BWMS manufacturer can submit an application for system type approval [54]. As of 26 February 2019, there are 16 USCG type approved BWMSs available on the market and 7 more under review [55]. Some manufacturers have requested multiple amendments to their type approval certificates. Currently, including already approved BWMS, 50 manufacturers have submitted LOIs to pursue USCG type approval for their systems and more than 30 systems are currently undergoing testing [56].
- Discharge of BW to an onshore reception facility or to another vessel for treatment purposes.
- No discharge of BW inside US territorial waters, which includes sea water extended to 12 nautical miles from the baseline.
- Utilisation of a foreign IMO type approved BWMS accepted by the USCG as an Alternate Management System (AMS) if installed on board prior to the ship’s BWDS original compliance date as specified in 33 CFR 151.2035. This temporary option was included in the Final Rule as a bridging measure prior to the US regulations being published, thus allowing sufficient time for those systems to be eventually upgraded to USCG requirements and to obtain USCG type approval, or until USCG approved systems become widely available [57]. The foreign Administration type approval procedure is pursuant to the BWMC G8/G9 guidelines, which are not associated with US requirements. The AMS can be used as such for a period of up to five years from the ship’s compliance date. Thereafter, the ship is required to comply with BWDS by employing another approved method or, preferably, by obtaining the above mentioned USCG type approval certificate, thus maintaining compliance [9,57]. The USCG AMS program granted an AMS statusto111 foreign type approved BWMSs [58]. Under the USCG regulations, the AMS may not be installed if a USCG type approved BWMS is available for a given class or type of ship.
- An extension of a ship’s BWM compliance date is another interim measure granted by the USCG if the ship owner/operator provides documented evidence that compliance with one of the approved BWM methods is not possible despite all undertaken efforts [59]. At the time, this option was mainly granted to provide reasonable flexibility to shipowners/operators due to the unavailability of the USCG type approved BWMSs on the market, thus ensuring steady progress toward achieving BWM requirements [60,61]. As mentioned above, six approved BWMSs are currently available and more are expected to receive approval soon. Therefore, as per the March 2017 revised extension program regulations, further exemptions will be considered on a case by case basis while taking into account the ship’s scheduled compliance date, market availability of the USCG approved BWMS, detailed installation plan, as well as the timeline to comply [59]. In general, extensions can be granted for a period of 18 to 30 months, while the USCG do not anticipate granting further extensions for ships with a compliance date equal to or greater than 1 January 2021 [59]. An extension application submitted to the USCG must contain an explicit statement supported by documentary evidence that it is still not possible to install the USCG type approved BWMS [49,62].
3. Comparison of the IMO and the USMA BWM Major Regulations Differences
4. Discussion
5. Conclusions
Author Contributions
Funding
Conflicts of Interest
References
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Comparison items | IMO | US |
---|---|---|
Approval by | Flag or Class (Recognized Organizations (RO)) | USCG |
Test operator | Manufacturer | IL |
Test laboratory | Laboratory not owned/affiliated with manufacturer/vendor of BWMS/major equipment components | United States Coast Guard (USCG) approved IL |
Reporting of test results | Manufacturer/Laboratory | IL |
Testing methods required | G8/G9 Guidelines | USCG BWMS Environmental Technology Verification (ETV) Protocol |
Performance/Discharge standard | <10 viable organisms | <10 living organisms |
Shipboard 3 consecutive successful testing cycles | 3 | 5 |
Minimum holding time in the test tanks before discharge and sampling for the BWMSs not using Active Substances | Minimum holding time to be determined by the BWMS manufacturer (D-2 standard compliance); ≥5 days (regrowth evaluation) | ≥1 day; If justified in Test/Quality Assurance Plan, shorter or longer tank hold times may be utilized |
Component/Environmental test (vibration endurance test) | 2 h | 4 h |
ORGANISM SIZE INDICATOR MICROBES | IMO D-2 Regulation BW Performance Standard | USCG Regulation BW Discharge Standard |
---|---|---|
Size ≥50 μm in min dimension | <10 viable organisms/m3 of BW | <10 living organisms/m3 of BW |
10 ≤ Size < 50 μm in min dimension | <10 viable organisms/mL of BW | <10 living organisms/mL of BW |
Toxicogenic Vibrio cholera (O1 and O139) | <1 cfu */100 mL, or <1 cfu/g (wet weight) zooplankton samples | <1 cfu/100 mL |
Escherichia coli | <250 cfu/100 mL | <250 cfu/100 mL |
Intestinal enterococci | <100 cfu/100 mL | <100 cfu/100 mL |
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Čampara, L.; Frančić, V.; Maglić, L.; Hasanspahić, N. Overview and Comparison of the IMO and the US Maritime Administration Ballast Water Management Regulations. J. Mar. Sci. Eng. 2019, 7, 283. https://doi.org/10.3390/jmse7090283
Čampara L, Frančić V, Maglić L, Hasanspahić N. Overview and Comparison of the IMO and the US Maritime Administration Ballast Water Management Regulations. Journal of Marine Science and Engineering. 2019; 7(9):283. https://doi.org/10.3390/jmse7090283
Chicago/Turabian StyleČampara, Leo, Vlado Frančić, Lovro Maglić, and Nermin Hasanspahić. 2019. "Overview and Comparison of the IMO and the US Maritime Administration Ballast Water Management Regulations" Journal of Marine Science and Engineering 7, no. 9: 283. https://doi.org/10.3390/jmse7090283
APA StyleČampara, L., Frančić, V., Maglić, L., & Hasanspahić, N. (2019). Overview and Comparison of the IMO and the US Maritime Administration Ballast Water Management Regulations. Journal of Marine Science and Engineering, 7(9), 283. https://doi.org/10.3390/jmse7090283