Help us find the illegally exported Canadian end-of-life ship Ferbec
(now named Michalakis)
Toronto, Amsterdam, March 15, 2005 - Greenpeace calls for your help to
find the end-of-life ship Michalakis, heading for an unknown shipbreaking
yard. The vessel, until recently known as the Ferbec, is presently on
its way to a shipbreaking yard in South Asia after having left the Port
of Montreal without prior notification to government officals as required
under international law. The ship was sold by Canada Steamship Line (CSL),
a company owned by the sons of Canadian prime minister Paul Martin. Greenpeace
and the Basel Action Network demanded that the federal government do everything
in its power to have the recently owned CSL ship "Ferbec" returned
to a Canadian port. The vessel is laden with hazardous materials such
as asbestos and PCBs.
Greenpeace learned that the Ferbec, a Canadian ship owned and flagged
by Canada Steamship Lines (CSL) since 1977, left the port of Montreal
on the 24th of January. According to the Montreal Port Authorities the
ship left with an unknown shipbreaking destination and without prior notification
to government officals as required under international law. The ship,
has since been renamed "Michalakis" and is believed to be flying
the Mongolian flag. According to the maritime magazine Fairplay the ore
carrier was sold by CSL to unknown breakers for $3.79M. In a meeting between
Greenpeace and CSL on March 4, CSL confirmed that the ship had been sold
with a destination of India for breaking. However, chances are that the
ship will be heading for Bangladesh.
"Nobody is denying that the Ferbec was sold for shipbreaking purposes,
in fact everyone freely admits that the ship was destined for breaking.
Once the ship is destined for shipbreaking it becomes hazardous waste
and must be treated as such under the law," said Steven Guilbeault,
Greenpeace Campaigner. "The Canadian government has failed to meet
its international legal obligations. If the ship had been carrying hazardous
waste as cargo Canadian officials would have acted, but in this case when
the ship itself is a hazardous cargo, they sat on their hands and did
absolutely nothing."
As witnessed and documented by Greenpeace and BAN over the past several
years, the current practice of sending toxic old ships to developing countries
is a carefully disguised form of the hazardous waste trade. The Basel
Convention Conference of Parties a decision of 163 countries, of which
Canada was a part, in October 2004 confirmed that ships can be waste under
the Convention and that Parties are obligated to fulfill their Basel Convention
obligations with respect to ships. This means treating vessels destined
for breaking as hazardous waste.
"It is not too late for the federal government to take action,"
added Jim Puckett of the waste trade watchdog group Basel Action Network.
"As the ship is on its way to a shipbreaking yard right now, we urge
the government to immediately exercise their authority under the Convention
to demand compliance before it gets broken apart in Asia in horrific conditions
and the asbestos and PCBs wreak havoc on unsuspecting workers and the
environment."
Hundreds of people at shipbreaking yards endure hard physical labour
working in permanent danger. Steel plates and pieces fall off the ships.
On board gasses cause fires and explosions. Many workers are injured or
even killed by the physical hazards. Pollutants such as asbestos, heavy
metals and persistent organic pollutants are on the ships affecting human
health and the environment.
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LATEST UPDATE: The Ferbec has arrived in Alang, India for breaking
on March 24, 2005
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