The Oil Pollution Act of 1973 or Oil Pollution Act Amendments of 1973, 33 U.S.C. Chapter 20 §§ 1001-1011, was a United States federal law which amended the United States Statute 75 Stat. 402. The Act of Congress sustained the United States commitment to control the discharge of fossil fuel pollutants from nautical vessels and to acknowledge the embargo of coastal zones in trans-boundary waters.
Long title | An Act to amend the Oil Pollution Act, 1961 (75 Stat. 402), as amended, to implement the 1969 and 1971 amendments to the International Convention for the Prevention of Pollution of the Sea by Oil, 1954, as amended; and for other purposes. |
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Nicknames | Oil Pollution Act Amendments of 1973 |
Enacted by | the 93rd United States Congress |
Effective | October 4, 1973 |
Citations | |
Public law | 93-119 |
Statutes at Large | 87 Stat. 424-2 |
Codification | |
Acts amended | Oil Pollution Act of 1961 |
Titles amended | 33 U.S.C.: Navigable Waters |
U.S.C. sections amended | 33 U.S.C. ch. 20 §§ 1001-1016 |
Legislative history | |
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The H.R. 5451 legislation was passed by the United States 93rd Congressional session and enacted by the 37th President of the United States Richard Nixon on October 4, 1973.
History of OILPOL
editThe International Convention for the Prevention of Pollution of the Sea by Oil (OILPOL) was an international convention organized by the United Kingdom in 1954. The convention was held in London, England from April 26, 1954 to May 12, 1954. The international meeting was convened to recognize the disposal of hazardous waste which could potentially yield toxic contamination to the marine ecosystems.[1]
The International Convention for the Prevention of the Pollution of the Sea by Oil, 1954 original text was authored in English and French. The environmental protocol was amended in 1962, 1969, and 1971.[2][3]
The 1971 OILPOL amendments imposed irrevocable oceanic jurisdictions for the Great Barrier Reef located in the Coral Sea. The international convention amendments introduced design control provisions for sea-going vessels which specified tank formation arrangement and tank size limitations for nautical transport ships.
Provisions of the Act
editThe 1973 amendments accentuated the International Convention for the Prevention of Pollution of the Sea by Oil, 1954 by complying with the 1969 and 1971 international convention agreement amendments.
Definitions
edit- Oily mixture means a mixture with any oil content.
- Discharge in relation to instantaneous rate of discharge of oil content means the rate of discharge of oil in liters per hour at any instant divided by the speed of the ship in knots at the same instant.
- Discharge of oil or oily mixture from a ship is prohibited unless
- I.) ship is proceeding en route
- II.) the instantaneous rate of discharge of oil content does not exceed 60 litres (13 imp gal; 16 US gal) per 1 mile (1.6 km)
- Discharge of oil or oily mixture from a ship, other than tankers is prohibited unless
- I.) oil content of the discharge is less than one hundred parts per one million parts of the mixture
- II.) oil content of the discharge is made as far as practicable from the nearest land
- Discharge of oil or oily mixture from tankers is prohibited unless
- Discharge of oil or oily mixture from a ship is prohibited unless
- Nearest land means more than 50 miles (80 km) from a coastline
- Secretary means the Secretary of the department which governs the operations of the United States Coast Guard
Tank Ship Construction Standards
edit- Tankers built in the United States shall be constructed in accordance with the provisions of annex C of the International Convention for the Prevention of the Pollution of the Sea by Oil, as amended in 1971, relating to tank arrangement and limitation of tank size.[4]
- The construction standard has an effective date for all tankers built in the United States as of;
- I.) Delivery of the tanker is after January 1, 1977
- II.) Delivery of the tanker is not later than January 1, 1977, and the building contract is placed after January 1, 1972
- III.) In cases where no building contract has previously been placed, the keel is laid or the tanker is at a similar stage of construction, after June 30, 1972
- United States tankers are required to have on board a certificate of compliance attesting to the construction of the nautical vessel in accordance with annex C to the convention as specified by tank arrangement and limitation of tank size.
Zone Prohibitions
edit- Australian Zone - northeastern coast of Australia or Queensland designated by a line drawn from a point on the coast of Australia in latitude 11 degrees south, longitude 142 degrees 08 minutes east (11°00′00″S 142°08′00″E / 11.00000°S 142.13333°E) to a point in latitude 10 degrees 35 minutes south, longitude 141 degrees 55 minutes east (10°35′00″S 141°55′00″E / 10.58333°S 141.91667°E).
- Great Barrier Reef - Coral reef protection zone of the Earth's largest coral reef system.
- thence to a point latitude 10 degrees 00 minutes south, longitude 142 degrees 00 minutes east (10°00′00″S 142°00′00″E / 10.00000°S 142.00000°E)
- thence to a point latitude 9 degrees 10 minutes south, longitude 143 degrees 52 minutes east (9°10′00″S 143°52′00″E / 9.16667°S 143.86667°E)
- thence to a point latitude 9 degrees 00 minutes south, longitude 144 degrees 30 minutes east (9°00′00″S 144°30′00″E / 9.00000°S 144.50000°E)
- thence to a point latitude 13 degrees 00 minutes south, longitude 144 degrees 00 minutes east (13°00′00″S 144°00′00″E / 13.00000°S 144.00000°E)
- thence to a point latitude 15 degrees 00 minutes south, longitude 146 degrees 00 minutes east (15°00′00″S 146°00′00″E / 15.00000°S 146.00000°E)
- thence to a point latitude 18 degrees 00 minutes south, longitude 147 degrees 00 minutes east (18°00′00″S 147°00′00″E / 18.00000°S 147.00000°E)
- thence to a point latitude 21 degrees 00 minutes south, longitude 153 degrees 00 minutes east (21°00′00″S 153°00′00″E / 21.00000°S 153.00000°E)
- thence to a point on the coast of Australia in latitude 24 degrees 42 minutes south, longitude 153 degrees 15 minutes east (24°42′00″S 153°15′00″E / 24.70000°S 153.25000°E)
Oil Record Book
edit- The oil record book is to be completed on each occasion, on a tank-to-tank basis, whenever any of the following operations take place on a ship and tanker.
Oil Record Book for Tankers |
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Name of ship |
Total cargo carrying capacity of ship in cubic metres |
I.) Loading of oil cargo |
Date and place of loading |
Types of oil loaded |
Identity of tank(s) loaded |
II.) Transfer of oil cargo during voyage |
Date of transfer |
Identity of tank(s) |
(a) From transfer tank(s) |
(b) To transfer tank(s) |
Was (were) tank(s) in (a) From transfer tank(s) emptied? |
III.) Discharge of oil cargo |
Date and place of discharge |
Identity of tank(s) discharged |
Was (were) tank(s) emptied? |
IV.) Ballasting of cargo tanks |
Identity of tank(s) ballasted |
Date and position of ship at start of ballasting |
V.) Cleaning of cargo tanks |
Identity of tank(s) cleaned |
Date and duration of cleaning |
Methods of cleaning* |
Hand hosing, machine washing, or chemical cleaning. Where chemically cleaned, the amount and chemical used are to be specified in the oil record book. |
VI.) Discharge of dirty ballast |
Identity of tank(s) |
Date and position of ship at start of discharge to sea |
Date and position of ship at finish of discharge to sea |
Ship's speed(s) during discharge |
Quantity discharged to sea |
Quantity of polluted water transferred to slop tank(s) (identify slop tank(s)) |
Date and port of discharge into shore reception facilities (if applicable) |
VII.) Discharge of water from slop tank(s) |
Identity of slop tank(s) |
Time of settling from last entry of residues, or |
Time of settling from last discharge |
Date, time and position of ship at start of discharge |
Sounding of total contents at start of discharge |
Sounding of interface at start of discharge |
Bulk quantity discharged and rate of discharge |
Final quantity discharged and rate of discharge |
Date, time and position of ship at end of discharge |
Ship's speed(s) during discharge |
Sounding of interface at end of discharge |
VIII.) Disposal of residues |
Identity of tank(s) |
Quantity disposed from each tank |
Method of disposal of residue: |
(a) Reception facilities |
(b) Mixed with cargo |
(c) Transferred to another (other) tank(s) (identify tank(s)) |
(d) Other method |
Date and port of disposal of residue |
IX.) Discharge overboard of bilge water containing oil which accumulated in machinery spaces (including pump rooms) |
Port |
Duration of stay |
Quantity disposed |
Date and place of disposal |
Method of disposal (state whether a separator was used) |
Oil Record Book for Ships Other Than Tankers |
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Name of ship |
I.) Ballasting or cleaning of bunker fuel tanks |
Identity of tank(s) ballasted |
Whether cleaned since they last contained oil and, if not, type of oil previously carried |
Date and position of ship at start of cleaning |
Date and position of ship at start of ballasting |
II.) Discharge of dirty ballast or cleaning water from tanks |
Identity of tank(s) |
Date and position of ship at start of discharge |
Date and position of ship at finish of discharge |
Ship's speed(s) during discharge |
Method of discharge (state whether separator used) |
Quantity discharged |
III.) Disposal of residues |
Quantity of residue retained on board |
Methods of disposal of residue: |
(a) Reception facilities |
(b) Mixed with next bunkering |
(c) Transferred to another (other) tank(s) |
Date and port of disposal of residue |
IV.) Discharge overboard of bilge water containing oil which accumulated in machinery spaces |
Port |
Duration of stay |
Quantity disposed |
Date and place of disposal |
Method of disposal (state whether separator used) |
Repeal of Oil Pollution Act of 1973
editThe 1973 United States public law was repealed by the enactment of Act to Prevent Pollution from Ships on October 21, 1980.
See also
editReferences
edit- ^ "International Convention for the Prevention of Pollution of the Sea by Oil, 1954". Admiralty and Maritime Law Guide. May 12, 1954. Retrieved December 26, 2013.
- ^ "Amendments to the International Convention for the Prevention of Pollution of the Sea by Oil of 12 May 1954". Admiralty and Maritime Law Guide. April 11, 1962. OCLC 133522. Retrieved December 26, 2013.
- ^ "Amendments to the International Convention for the Prevention of Pollution of the Sea by Oil of 12 May 1954". Admiralty and Maritime Law Guide. October 21, 1969. Retrieved December 26, 2013.
- ^ "Amendments to the International Convention for the Prevention of the Pollution of the Sea by Oil, 1954 concerning the tank arrangements and limitation of tank size" (PDF). International Maritime Organization (IMO). October 15, 1971. OCLC 10925358. Retrieved December 26, 2013.
External links
edit- International Convention for the Prevention of the Pollution of the Sea by Oil, 1954, p. 2989, at Google Books
- Supplement Relating to the International Convention for the Prevention of Pollution of the Sea by Oil, 1954 as Amended in 1962 and 1969, p. 1, at Google Books
- OCLC 496668525
- OCLC 630927457
- OCLC 10925358
- OCLC 17155361
- "Shipboard Guide to Pollution-Free Operations". Internet Archive. Maritime Administration - U.S. Department of Commerce. December 1976. OCLC 822729563.
- "Automatic Identification System Marine Tracking". MarineTraffic.com.
- "Automatic Identification System Vessel Tracking". VesselFinder.com.