Press Release: IMO and Norway fund Bangladesh ship recycling improvements

Press release: The second phase of an IMO-implemented project to enhance safe and environmentally sound ship recycling in Bangladesh is set to begin in January, following a US$1.1 million funding agreement with Norway.

The two-year project will build on the first phase of the Safe and Environmentally Sound Ship Recycling in Bangladesh (SENSREC) project, which resulted in economic and environmental studies on ship recycling in Bangladesh, the development of training materials and capacity building plans and a preliminary design for infrastructure including facilities for treatment, storage and disposal of hazardous wastes generated from recycling operations.

Image courtesy IMO: Photo taken during an IMO mission to the Bangladesh recycling project in February 2015

Bangladesh is one the world’s top four ship recycling countries by capacity, alongside China, India and Pakistan, which together account for 94.9% of known ship recycling in the world . Ship recycling is key for the local economy and produces large quantities of steel and other materials which are recycled and sold on.

The second phase of the SENSREC project (SENSREC Phase II – capacity building) will continue to support Bangladesh to comply with international requirements and guide Bangladesh towards accession to the IMO ship recycling treaty, the Hong Kong International Convention for the Safe and Environmentally Sound Recycling of Ships (known as the Hong Kong Convention). The Hong Kong Convention sets the international standards for ship recycling and, when in force, will ensure that ships do not pose any unnecessary risks to human health, safety or the environment when being recycled at the end of their operational lives.

More details from the IMO press release

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Aronnax: July 3rd

Podcast time: Carly Hicks (Opportunity Green) on developing countries seeking legal teeth in climate battles, Nikos Mikelis on ship recycling policy and the issue with Basel and EU rules now the Hong Kong Convention is coming into force, Prof. Aykut Olcer (WMU) on new seafarer/Transport tech report shining light on key challenges.

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