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Domestic shipping firms seek separate policy for local seafarers

Domestic shipping firms seek separate policy for local seafarers
February 02, 2023 https://www.sunstar.com.ph/article/1952440/cebu/business/domestic-shippi...

The PHILIPPINE Coastwise Shipping Association (PCSA) and other stakeholders in the local shipping industry remain firm in their stand against the passage of the Magna Carta for Filipino Seafarers.

During the public hearing on Thursday, Feb. 2, 2023, at Bai Hotel in Mandaue City, presided by Kabayan Partylist Rep. Ron Salo, chairman of the Committee on Overseas Workers Affairs of the House of Representatives, players in the domestic shipping industry want to have a separate policy for seafarers navigating the domestic waters of the country.

PCSA chairman Lucio Lim Jr. told lawmakers that the proposed measures are not applicable to the local shipping industry and may lead to its collapse. He said a distinction should be made between domestic and international vessels.

According to Lim, the proposed bill, which both have the House of Representatives and Senate versions, incorporates some provisions of the Maritime Labor Convention (MLC) of 2006 that are only applicable to ships or vessels navigating in international waters and engaged in global trade.

“If you look at the provisions of the MLC 2006, there’s no way we believe that the domestic shipping (players) can abide by it,” said Lim.

Lim said the Maritime Industry Authority and the Department of Labor and Employment must be tasked to come up with domestic maritime regulations that would set the living and working standards of seafarers working on board domestic ships engaged in the domestic trade.

Impact on apprenticeships

One of the sectors that will be greatly affected by the passage of the bill is maritime students.

Lim said if the bill will be passed, “nobody can accept any more apprenticeships.”

“The schools are also worried... they don’t have training ships. This (bill) will kill the goose that lays the golden egg,” he said.

Lim explained that unlike the big ships in Manila where they charge students for apprenticeships, vessels in the Visayas and Mindanao are giving training for free upon the requests of local government units, among others.

“Seventy percent of seafarers abroad come from the Visayas and Mindanao, and 70 percent that are from these islands come from Central Visayas. Our members, composed of small to medium operators, accept apprenticeships up to 20 or 25 each in a small ship. We sacrifice our passenger area for them to be accommodated,” said Lim.

He also noted that the bill is requiring the domestic shipowners so much that if implemented could disrupt domestic trade.

“We are objecting to the implementation of the Magna Carta on domestic trade because it is not necessary and doable. If they implement that in the Philippines, the operational cost will go up and of course, everybody will have to charge higher,” Lim said, in a virtual interview in 2021.