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IMO Urges States to Accede to 2012 Cape Town Agreement on Fishing Vessel Safety

Maritime Activity Reports, Inc.

April 27, 2022

Credit: IMO

Credit: IMO

International Maritime Organization's (IMO) Secretary-General Kitack Lim has urged states to take action to achieve entry into force of the Cape Town fishing vessel safety agreement, a key international treaty that will establish an international regime for fishing vessel safety.

IMO said the agreement would help make fishing safe, sustainable, and legal - and make a significant contribution to the protection of fishers, an unacceptably high number of whom lose their lives every year.

"We cannot afford to be complacent when it comes to addressing the safety of fishers and fishing vessels," said International Maritime Organization (IMO) Secretary-General Kitack Lim.

The Cape Town Agreement 2012 has been ratified by 17 states, with 1,925 fishing vessels declared. The treaty will enter into force 12 months after at least 22 states, with an aggregate number of fishing vessels of 24 meters in length and over operating on the high seas of no less than 3,600, have expressed their consent to be bound by it.

Following a ministerial conference in 2019, more than 50 states have signed the Torremolinos Declaration to indicate their determination to ratify the agreement by its tenth anniversary (October, 11 2022), thus moving a significant step closer to bringing it into force.

"The international regime brought in by the entry into force of the Cape Town Agreement would help to contribute to the broader fight against illegal, unregulated and unreported (IUU) fishing activities. This would help to protect world fish stocks, ensure fair competition in fishing, better working conditions, and safeguard fishers from human rights abuses. Additionally, the regime would help to reduce marine litter from fishing vessels. It would also reduce search and rescue (SAR) missions involving State SAR services, merchant and naval fleets, as well as fishing vessels, responding to distress calls from substandard fishing vessels," IMO said.

IMO has been working with other international entities to support ratification and entry into force of the Cape Town Agreement, including through regional seminars and webinars. 

"I remain confident that by working together, we will ensure the Agreement enters into force to complete the missing pillar for safe, sustainable and legal fishing," said Lim.

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