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Maritime Union calls for more training and better jobs for skilled European seafarers

Thursday, 02 March 2017 | 00:00

Maritime professionals’ trade union Nautilus International is arguing for fairer regulation in the shipping industry to safeguard more skilled and less precarious jobs for European seafarers.

Speaking during a European Shipping Week seminar on how to make the European shipping industry a generator of wealth and employment – hosted by the European Transport Workers’ Federation – Nautilus’ General Secretary Mark Dickinson warned: “We need to see adequate regulation for the shipping industry, to stamp out the downwards spiral in the quality of seafarers’ working lives, provide support for the maritime cluster and ensure the overall resilience of European shipping.”

In a bid to reverse this downward trajectory in jobs and training opportunities for its members, Nautilus launched its Charter for Jobs in October 2016. A 10-point charter, the document calls on the government and industry to secure the future of the UK maritime sector, delivering decent work and training opportunities for the UK’s seafarers.

Devised by the union, which represents 22,000 maritime professionals at sea and ashore, the charter provides a commitment to lobby the government and industry on issues including improving the system for issuing foreign seafarers with Certificates of Equivalent Competency, which currently promotes unsustainable competition within the industry.

“Shipping is a microcosm of the damage done by unchecked and unfair competition,” said Mr Dickinson.

“Some 35 OECD (Organisation for Economic Cooperation and Development) countries now supply 23% of the world’s officers and 14% of the world’s ratings – compared with 28% of officers and 24% of ratings a decade ago. Are we just meant to accept those trends and decide that seafaring is no longer a first world profession?

“A failure to agree on a manning directive has meant a steady flow of social dumping in our ferry trades and now also offshore services,” Mr Dickinson told the seminar.

“Globalisation of domestic shipping services simply doesn’t work. Regulating the competitive climate for such routes will not only ensure we combat exploitation in our waters, but also encourage operators to compete on quality, not cost, as well as improving the job security of European seafarers and protecting the maritime skills base and thus the EU maritime cluster. It will allow us to set EU standards and thus set a level playing field for all those who wish to trade in our waters.”

“Instead of attacking the US Jones Act which promotes and maintains the American Merchant Marine, we should emulate it and understand the strategic economic and defence drivers that have ensured the Act’s survival for almost 100 years. Canada, New Zealand and Australia have, in the past few weeks alone, taken significant steps to limit the numbers of foreign seafarers employed on ships in their coastal waters.” Mr Dickinson concluded that the Maritime Labour Convention was an important set of minimum standards but was, “conceived as a journey, not a destination and we need an industry strategy to continuously improve those minimum standards and drive a race to the top not a race to the bottom.”

Source: Nautilus International

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