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Small Flag of the United Nations ZP.svg International Maritime Organization
Flag of the International Maritime Organization.svg
The IMO flag
Org type UN agency
Acronyms IMO
Head Greece Efthimios E. Mitropoulos
Status active
Established 1959
Headquarters United Kingdom London, United Kingdom
Website www.imo.org
Formely Inter-Governmental Maritime Consultative Organization
Participation in the International Maritime Organization      Member states      Associate members      Candidate
Headquarters of the International Maritime Organization in Lambeth, adjacent to the east end of Lambeth Bridge
Headquarters building taken from the west side of the Thames

The International Maritime Organization (IMO), formerly known as the Inter-Governmental Maritime Consultative Organization (IMCO), was established in Geneva in 1948,[1] and came into force ten years later, meeting for the first time in 1959. The IMCO name was changed to IMO in 1982.[2]

Headquartered in London, United Kingdom, the IMO is a specialized agency of the United Nations with 168 Member States and three Associate Members.[2] The IMO's primary purpose is to develop and maintain a comprehensive regulatory framework for shipping and its remit today includes safety, environmental concerns, legal matters, technical co-operation, maritime security and the efficiency of shipping. IMO is governed by an Assembly of members and is financially administered by a Council of members elected from the Assembly. The work of IMO is conducted through five committees and these are supported by technical subcommittees. Member organizations of the UN organizational family may observe the proceedings of the IMO. Observer status is granted to qualified non-governmental organizations.

The IMO is supported by a permanent secretariat of employees who are representative of its members. The secretariat is composed of a Secretary-General who is periodically elected by the Assembly, and various divisions such as those for marine safety, environmental protection, and a conference section.

Contents

[edit] History

IMCO was formed to fulfill a desire to bring the regulation of the safety of shipping into an international framework, for which the creation of the United Nations provided an opportunity. Hitherto such international conventions had been initiated piecemeal, notably the Safety of Life at Sea Convention (SOLAS), first adopted in 1914 following the Titanic disaster.[2] IMCO's first task was to update that Convention; the resulting 1960 Convention was subsequently recast and updated in 1974 and it is that Convention that has been subsequently modified and updated to adapt to changes in safety requirements and technology.

When IMCO began its operations in 1958 certain other pre-existing instruments were brought under its aegis, most notable the International Convention for the Prevention of Pollution of the Sea by Oil (OILPOL) 1954. Throughout its existence IMCO, renamed the IMO in 1982, has continued to produce new and updated instruments across a wide range of maritime issues covering not only safety of life and marine pollution but also encompassing safe navigation, search and rescue, wreck removal, tonnage measurement, liability and compensation, ship recycling, the training and certification of seafarers, and piracy. More recently SOLAS has been amended to bring an increased focus on maritime security through the International Ship and Port Facility Security (ISPS) Code. The IMO has also increased its focus on air emissions from ships.

In 1983 the IMO established the World Maritime University in Malmö, Sweden.

[edit] Legal instruments

IMO is the source of approximately 60 legal instruments that guide the regulatory development of its member states to improve safety at sea, facilitate trade among seafaring states and protect the maritime environment. The most well known is the International Convention for the Safety of Life at Sea (SOLAS).

IMO regularly enacts regulations, which are broadly enforced by national and local maritime authorities in member countries, such as the International Regulations for Preventing Collisions at Sea (COLREG). The IMO has also enacted a Port State Control (PSC) authority, allowing domestic maritime authorities such as coast guards to inspect foreign-flag ships calling at ports of the many port states. Memoranda of Understanding (protocols) were signed by some countries unifying Port State Control procedures among the signatories.

[edit] Current issues

Recent initiatives at the IMO have included amendments to SOLAS, which upgraded fire protection standards on passenger ships, the International Convention on Standards of Training, Certification and Watchkeeping for Seafarers (STCW) which establishes basic requirements on training, certification and watchkeeping for seafarers and to the Convention on the Prevention of Maritime Pollution (MARPOL 73/78), which required double hulls on all tankers.

In December 2002, new amendments to the 1974 SOLAS Convention were enacted. These amendments gave rise to the International Ship and Port Facility Security (ISPS) Code, which went into effect on 1 July 2004. The concept of the code is to provide layered and redundant defenses against smuggling, terrorism, piracy, stowaways, etc. The ISPS Code required most ships and port facilities engaged in international trade to establish and maintain strict security procedures as specified in ship and port specific Ship Security Plans and Port Facility Security Plans.

The IMO is also responsible for publishing the International Code of Signals for use between merchant and naval vessels.

The First Intersessional Meeting of IMO’s Working Group on Greenhouse Gas Emissions from Ships took place in Oslo, Norway (23-27 June, 2008), tasked with developing the technical basis for the reduction mechanisms that may form part of a future IMO regime to control greenhouse gas emissions from international shipping, and a draft of the actual reduction mechanisms themselves, for further consideration by IMO’s Marine Environment Protection Committee (MEPC).[3]

The IMO has also served as a key partner and enabler of U.S. international and interagency efforts to establish Maritime Domain Awareness.

[edit] Governing Bodies

The governing body of the International Maritime Organisation is the Assembly which meets every two years. In between Assembly sessions a Council, consisting of 40 Member States elected by the Assembly, acts as the governing body. The technical work of the International Maritime Organisation is carried out by a series of Committees. The Secretariat consists of some 300 international civil servants headed by a Secretary-General.[4]

[edit] Secretary-General

The current Secretary-General is Efthimios E. Mitropoulos, elected for a four-year term on 18 June 2003. On 9 November 2006 at the ninety-seventh session of the IMO Council, Mr. Mitropoulos' mandate was renewed for a further four years until 31 December 2011.[1]

Previous Secretaries-General were:

  • 1959 Ove Nielsen (Denmark)
  • 1961 William Graham (United Kingdom; acting, following death of Mr Nielsen)
  • 1963 Jean Roulier (France)
  • 1968 Colin Goad (United Kingdom)
  • 1974 C P Srivastava (India)
  • 1990 William O'Neil (Canada)

[edit] Technical Committees

The technical work of the International Maritime Organisation is carried out by a series of Committees. This includes:[4]

[edit] Maritime Safety Committee

It is regulated in the Article 28(b) of the Convention on the IMO:.

ARTICLE 28

(a) The Maritime Safety Committee shall consider any matter within the scope of the Organization concerned with aids to navigation, construction and equipment of vessels, manning from a safety standpoint, rules for the prevention of collisions, handling of dangerous cargoes, maritime safety procedures and requirements, hydrographic information, log-books and navigational records, marine casualty investigation, salvage and rescue, and any other matters directly affecting maritime safety.

(b) The Maritime Safety Committee shall provide machinery for performing any duties assigned to it by this Convention, the Assembly or the Council, or any duty within the scope of this Article which may be assigned to it by or under any other international instrument and accepted by the Organization.

(c) Having regard to the provisions of Article 25, the Maritime Safety Committee, upon request by the Assembly or the Council or, if it deems such action useful in the interests of its own work, shall maintain such close relationship with other bodies as may further the purposes of the Organization

The Maritime Safety Committee is the most senior of these and is the main Technical Committee; it oversees the work of its nine sub-committees and initiates new topics. One broad topic it deals with is the effect of the human element on casualties; this work has been put to all of the sub-committees, but meanwhile, the Maritime Safety Committee has developed a code for the management of ships which will ensure that agreed operational procedures are in place and followed by the ship and shore-side staff.[4]

The work of the nine sub-committees is described by their titles, as follows:

The sub-committees work on numerous topics, including, for example, improvements in the design of passenger ships and the requirements for the stowage and packaging of the vast range of dangerous goods carried by sea.

[edit] Resolutions

Resolution MSC.255(84) (adopted on 16 May 2008) adopts the Code of the International Standards and Recommended Practices for a Safety Investigation into a Marine Casualty or Marine Incident ( Casualty Investigation Code).[5]

[edit] Member states

The list of member and associate member states is followed by the year of joining the IMO.[6]

Country Year
 Albania 1993
 Algeria 1963
 Angola 1977
 Antigua and Barbuda 1986
 Argentina 1953
 Australia 1952
 Austria 1975
 Azerbaijan 1995
 Bahamas 1976
 Bahrain 1976
 Bangladesh 1976
 Barbados 1970
 Belgium 1951
 Belize 1990
 Benin 1980
 Bolivia 1987
 Bosnia and Herzegovina 1993
 Brazil 1963
 Brunei 1984
 Bulgaria 1960
 Burma 1951
 Cambodia 1961
 Cameroon 1961
 Canada 1948
 Cape Verde 1976
 Chile 1972
 China 1973
 Colombia 1974
 Comoros 2001
 Congo 1975
 Cook Islands 2008
 Costa Rica 1981
 Côte d'Ivoire 1960
 Croatia 1992
 Cuba 1966
 Cyprus 1973
 Czech Republic 1993
 Democratic Republic of the Congo 1973[7]
 Denmark 1959
 Djibouti 1979
 Dominica 1979
 Dominican Republic 1953
 Ecuador 1956
 Egypt 1958
 El Salvador 1981
 Equatorial Guinea 1972
 Eritrea 1993
 Estonia 1992
 Ethiopia 1975
 Fiji 1983
 Finland 1959
 France 1952
 Gabon 1976
 Gambia 1979
 Georgia 1993
 Germany 1959
 Ghana 1959
 Greece 1958
 Grenada 1998
 Guatemala 1983
 Guinea 1975
 Guinea-Bissau 1977
 Guyana 1980
 Haiti 1953
 Honduras 1954
 Hungary 1970
 Iceland 1960
 India 1959
 Indonesia 1961
 Iran 1958
 Iraq 1973
 Ireland 1951
 Israel 1952
 Italy 1957
 Jamaica 1976
 Japan 1958
 Jordan 1973
 Kazakhstan 1994
 Kenya 1973
 Kiribati 2003
 Kuwait 1960
 Latvia 1993
 Lebanon 1966
 Liberia 1959
 Libya 1970
 Lithuania 1995
 Luxembourg 1991
 Madagascar 1961
 Malawi 1989
 Malaysia 1971
 Maldives 1967
 Malta 1966
 Marshall Islands 1998
 Mauritania 1961
 Mauritius 1978
 Mexico 1954
 Moldova 2001
 Monaco 1989
 Mongolia 1996
 Montenegro 2006
 Morocco 1962
 Mozambique 1979
 Namibia 1994
 Nepal 1979
 Netherlands 1949
 New Zealand 1960
 Nicaragua 1982
 Nigeria 1962
 North Korea 1986
 Norway 1958
 Oman 1974
 Pakistan 1958
 Panama 1958
 Papua New Guinea 1976
 Paraguay 1993
 Peru 1968
 Philippines 1964
 Poland 1960
 Portugal 1976
 Qatar 1977
 Macedonia 1993
 Romania 1965
 Russia 1958
 Saint Kitts and Nevis 2001
 Saint Lucia 1980
 Saint Vincent and the Grenadines 1981
 Samoa 1996
 San Marino 2002
 São Tomé and Príncipe 1990
 Saudi Arabia 1969
 Senegal 1960
 Serbia 2000
 Seychelles 1978
 Sierra Leone 1973
 Singapore 1966
 Slovakia 1993
 Slovenia 1993
 Solomon Islands 1988
 Somalia 1978
 South Africa 1995
 South Korea 1962
 Spain 1962
 Sri Lanka 1972
 Sudan 1974
 Suriname 1976
 Sweden 1959
 Switzerland 1955
 Syria 1963
 Tanzania 1974
 Thailand 1973
 Timor-Leste 2005
 Togo 1983
 Tonga 2000
 Trinidad and Tobago 1965
 Tunisia 1963
 Turkey 1958
 Turkmenistan 1993
 Tuvalu 2004
 Ukraine 1994
 United Arab Emirates 1980
 United Kingdom 1949
 United States 1950
 Uruguay 1968
 Vanuatu 1986
 Venezuela 1975
 Vietnam 1984
 Yemen 1979
 Zimbabwe 2005

Associate members

Country Year
 Hong Kong, China 1967
 Macau, China 1990
 Faroe Islands, Denmark 2002

[edit] See also

[edit] Notes and references

[edit] Further reading

[edit] External links




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