“Regulatory Unfitness to Trade”:
The New Seaworthiness Frontier in Decarbonisation Disputes (Part I – CII)
- Adjunct Prof. Dr. Arun Kasi
As the maritime industry
enters the era of mandatory decarbonisation, the traditional legal boundaries
of seaworthiness are being reshaped. Moving beyond physical and documentary
fitness, this article explores the emerging frontier of “regulatory unfitness
to trade”. Part I of this series focuses specifically on the IMO CII
rating regime. It examines the strict technical and operational requirements,
the severe penalties for non-compliance including Port State Control detention,
and the growing legal friction between shipowners and charterers regarding
whose employment orders ultimately dictate environmental liability.
Evolving Concept of
Seaworthiness and Regulatory Unfitness to Trade
“Seaworthiness” is an evolving concept in
English law. Originally, it was heavily anchored in the physical fitness of the
vessel to safely carry out the contracted voyage—or, in the context of a time
charter, the chartered service—and to encounter the ordinary perils of the sea
on that voyage or any voyage the charterers could legitimately require the
vessel to make (F. C. Bradley & Sons Ltd. v. Federal Steam Navigation
Co. Ltd. Loyd’s Rep. [1926] 24 446).
The concept evolved beyond mere physical
structure to encompass other essential attributes of the vessel such as the crew
competency, adequate supply of bunkers and provisions, and possession of
adequate and up-to-date navigational charts and plans (Hongkong Fir Shipping
Co. Ltd. v. Kawasaki Kisen Kaisha Ltd. [1961] 2 478 Lloyd’s Rep). That
further expanded to include “documentary seaworthiness” or “legal
fitness” (The Elli and the Frixos [2008] Lloyd’s Rep. 1 273). A ship
lacking the necessary statutory certificates or clearances to enter a port has
come to be considered unseaworthy, as the absence of such documentation can
impede the voyage just as effectively as a hole in the hull. Courts have held
that a vessel lacking a legally mandatory deratisation certificate from the
port health authority was undeliverable in a seaworthy condition (The
Madeleine [1967] 2 Lloyd’s Rep. 224).
That is not the end. The emerging
question, as the global maritime industry sails into the era of mandatory
decarbonisation, is whether and how the boundaries of seaworthiness will be
reshaped to encompass “regulatory unfitness to trade”, which may render a
vessel liable to detention.
In order to attempt answering the
question, one will have to consider first (i) what these decarbonisation
regulations are, (ii) what they require, (iii) what the effect of
non-compliance with them is, and (iv) whose duty it is to comply with them
(i.e., owner or charterer).
The three major maritime decarbonisation
regulations are those relating to (a) IMO CII rating (effective since 1 January
2023), (b) EU ETS (effective since 1 January 2024), and (c) FuelEU Maritime
(effective since 1 January 2025). This article (Part I) explores only the
question of seaworthiness related to the first of them (IMO CII rating), and
the second and third ones are reserved for future articles in this series.
IMO CII Rating
(a)
What is Required?
The CII related requirements originate
from MARPOL Annex VI, which has undergone and continues to undergo substantial
amendments incorporating decarbonisation measures. The IMO has also issued
various guidelines, strategies and interpretative guidance relating to its
implementation. Generally, ships under 400 GT are not affected by the
regulations, while certain regulations apply to ships of 5,000 GT and above.
Design & Equipment: The
regulations require new ships of 400 GT and above to maintain a ship-specific Energy
Efficiency Design Index (EEDI) Technical File. Likewise, existing ships of 400
GT and above must meet Energy Efficiency Existing Ship Index (EEXI). This may
require them to implement technical modifications such as installing an
overridable Shaft/Engine Power Limitation (SHaPoLi/EPL) system to restrict the
maximum power output of the ship’s engines.
Operational Energy Efficiency &
Management: All ships of 400 GT and above must keep a Ship Energy
Efficiency Management Plan (SEEMP) on board. Depending on the ship’s size, the
SEEMP must include a management plan to improve energy efficiency through
operational measures (for ships of 400 GT and above); a Data-Collection Plan detailing
the methodology the ship will use to collect and report annual fuel oil
consumption, distance travelled, and hours under way; and a Ship Operational
Carbon Intensity Plan describing how the ship calculates its annual Operational
Carbon Intensity Indicator (CII) (for ships of 5,00 GT and above), called IMO
Data Collection System (DCS) (for ships of 5,00 GT and above).
CII Rating & Correction
Actions: Based on the emission data reported by DCS, ships are
given their annual operational CII rating from A (major superior) to E
(inferior). The data, and thus the rating, is influenced by the trading
activities and operation of the ship, including speed, route, and bunkers –
which are determined by the charterer’s employment orders. If a ship is rated
“D” for three consecutive years or “E” for a single year,
the shipowner must develop a plan of corrective actions to achieve the required
CII target, which must be strictly implemented.
Air Pollution Controls: Ships
of 5,000 GT and above must ensure the sulphur content (SOx) of fuel oil used or
carried on board does not exceed 0.50% m/m globally, and 0.10% m/m when
operating within designated Emission Control Areas (ECAs). They must retain Bunker Delivery Notes and
representative fuel samples on board. Marine diesel engines must comply with
specific Nitrogen Oxides (NOx) emission limits (Tier I, II, or III) depending
on the ship’s construction date and operating area. Ships must maintain an
ozone-depleting substances record book and, for tankers carrying crude oil,
implement an approved Volatile Organic Compounds (VOC) management plan.
Required Certification: Ships
must obtain and carry three certificates: (1) International Air Pollution
Prevention (IAPP) Certificate; (2) International Energy Efficiency Certificate
(IEEC); and an annual Statement of Compliance related to fuel oil consumption
reporting and operational carbon intensity rating (for ships of 5,000 GT and
above).
(b)
What is the Effect of Non-Compliance?
The regulations require sanctions severe
enough to discourage non-compliance.
If a ship fails to maintain the required
certificates, or a ship that has the certificates but her condition or
equipment does not substantially match the certificates, or the crew is
unfamiliar with the essential air pollution prevention procedures, a Port State
Control will detain the ship, and may permit sailing only to proceed to the
nearest appropriate repair yard.
When the equipment does not correspond to
the certificate and no corrective action is taken, the certificate will be
withdrawn by the ship’s Administration authority. If the required surveys are
not completed within the specified timeframes, or if unapproved changes are
made to the ship’s equipment or systems, the certificates will become invalid.
If a ship is rated “D” for three
consecutive years or “E” for a single year, the ship will not be
issued its annual Statement of Compliance until it develops a corrective action
plan (CAP) and integrates it into the SEEMP and has it verified by the ship’s
Administration authority.
(c)
Whose duty is it to comply?
The regulations place the duty on the
shipowner to comply with, while the general policy in environmental law is that
the polluter pays, which is the time charterer in the typical shipping
business.
Charterparties frequently pass on the
burden of compliance to the charterers. For example, the BIMCO CII Operations
Clause for Time Charter Parties 2022 shifts the burden to the charterer. The
Clause requires charterers to ensure an Agreed CII rating, which by default is
C. If the trajectory of the C/P Attained CII is deviating from the Agreed CII,
subclause (g) permits owners, subject to certain notice requirements and pre‑conditions,
to slow steam or even refuse to comply with the charterers’ orders while
keeping the vessel on hire — a drastic remedy for owners and a nightmare for
charterers, who must continue to pay full hire for a vessel that refuses to
perform the commercial voyage required.
Does Regulatory Unfitness equal
Unseaworthy?
While some of the regulatory requirements
are purely administrative, such as the duty to maintain a DCS and certificates
– which are quite plainly for the shipowner to meet – the others are
operation-influenced, i.e., influenced by the charterer’s employment orders,
such as the CII rating and SOx limit on fuel oil.
In the case of non-compliance with purely
administrative requirements, which renders the ship liable to detention, an
argument that the non-compliance renders the ship unseaworthy is not only
strong but also probably straightforward.
However, if is a non-compliance induced by
employment orders of the charterers, the issue might not be that
straightforward. As between the owners and the holders of the bills of lading
(who are not charterers), the owner is liable to exercise due diligence to
ensure seaworthiness at the beginning of the voyage. The fact that the
unseaworthiness was induced by the charterer’s order is not relevant. It might
be relevant as between the owner and the charterer, and its relevance will
depend on the terms of the charterparty.
Conclusion
The argument that regulatory unfitness
renders a vessel unseaworthy appears, generally, a strong one. When the concept
of seaworthiness has evolved far beyond physical fitness and already covers
cases where a vessel liable to detention for non-compliance with laws, there
does not appear to be a reason why it should not extend to regulatory unfitness
in relation to decarbonisation regulations.
COPYRIGHT: Dr. Arun Kasi, © 2025
PARALLEL PUBLICATION: This article is also published on 4-5 Gray’s Inn Square publications.
JURISDICTION: This article is based on English law. It may be relevant to other commonwealth jurisdictions including Malaysia.
DISCLAIMER: This material is provided free of charge on a full disclaimer of any liability. The contents are the opinion of the author, the correctness of which is not assured. The opinion of others may differ. Readers should not rely on the contents provided in this material but should seek legal advice specific to their context. If they rely on the contents provided in this material, they do so solely at their risk. All the images, if any, used in this material are purely illustrative only and have no connection with the subject.