“Regulatory Unfitness to Trade”:
The New Seaworthiness Frontier in Decarbonisation Disputes (Part III – FuelEU Maritime)
- Adjunct Prof. Dr. Arun Kasi
As
the maritime industry enters the era of mandatory decarbonisation, the
traditional legal boundaries of seaworthiness are being reshaped. Building upon
the analyses of the previous articles in this series, the IMO CII rating regime
in Part I and the EU ETS and MRV framework in Part II, this third instalment
examines the FuelEU Maritime regulation. This article unpacks the strict
operational targets on greenhouse gas intensity, the severe enforcement arsenal—including
Port State Control detentions, stoppages, and EU-wide expulsion orders—and how
these draconian mechanisms firmly cement “regulatory unfitness” as the modern
equivalent of documentary unseaworthiness.
Introduction
As
was explored in Parts I and II of this series, the traditional English law
concept of seaworthiness has evolved far beyond the mere physical capacity of a
ship to withstand the ordinary perils of the sea. Today, a lack of “documentary
seaworthiness”—the absence of statutory certificates or legal clearances
required to trade—can practically impede a contracted voyage just as
effectively as a physical defect.
Following
the analysis of the IMO CII rating regime and the EU ETS/MRV framework in the
previous Parts of this series, this third instalment addresses the final major
pillar of the EU’s maritime decarbonisation strategy: the FuelEU Maritime
Regulation (Regulation (EU) 2023/1805). Taking effect from 1 January 2025,
FuelEU Maritime introduces strict targets for the types of energy ships
consume. Much like the EU ETS, it contains severe enforcement
mechanisms—including detention, stoppage, expulsion, and banning—that firmly
cement “regulatory unfitness” as the modern equivalent of documentary
unseaworthiness.
What
Does FuelEU Maritime Require?
FuelEU
Maritime applies to commercial passenger and cargo ships above 5,000 GT when
arriving at, staying within, or departing from EU ports.
The
regulation imposes two primary operational obligations:
- Greenhouse
Gas (GHG) Intensity Limits: Ships must adhere to a
limit on the yearly average GHG intensity, measured on a Well-to-Wake
(WtW) basis, of the energy they use on board. The limit will progressively
decrease—the reduction targets start at 2% in 2025, escalating to 14.5% by
2035, and reaching a massive 80% reduction by 2050—compared to a 2020
reference value. The maths of this have been covered in a previous article
titled “The
20x Penalty Risk: The BIMCO FuelEU Blind Spot”,
and are not repeated here.
- On-Shore
Power Supply (OPS): Starting 1 January 2030,
containerships and passenger ships moored at the quayside in major EU
ports must connect to an on-shore power supply and use it for all their
electrical power needs at berth, heavily restricting the use of auxiliary
engines while in port.
For
each calendar year (“reporting period”), the relevant company must comply with
the following condensed sequence:
- By
31 January of the following year: submit verified
FuelEU energy consumption data to an accredited verifier.
- By
1 May: verifier records the final compliance balance in the
FuelEU database.
- By
30 June:
- pay
any FuelEU penalty due; and
- obtain
a valid FuelEU Document of Compliance (FuelEU DOC).
- Validity:
the FuelEU DOC remains valid until 30 June of the following year, subject
to additional compliance checks.
If
subsequent checks reveal a misstatement resulting in additional penalties,
payment must be made within one month. Failure to do so results in the
immediate removal of the FuelEU DOC from the FuelEU database.
Where
a ship maintains a compliance deficit for two or more consecutive reporting
periods, the financial penalty is subject to a progressive multiplier. Separate
penalties apply for each hour of non‑compliance with OPS obligations at berth without
a valid exception.
The
relevant company is the shipowner, or an ISM manager or bareboat charterer
where they have assumed the operational responsibility and agreed to take over
all the duties and responsibilities imposed by the ISM Code for the Safe
Operation of Ships and for Pollution Prevention.
The
Consequences of Failing to Comply: A Sequential Enforcement Framework
The
severe commercial and legal risk posed by FeulEU Maritime lies not in the
penalties themselves, but in the graduated enforcement sequence that follows
onc a vessel operates without a valid FuelEU DOC. The regulation interfaces
directly with the EU Port State Control (PSC) Directive (Directive 2009/16/EC),
integrating the FuelEU DOC into the mandatory list of ship certificates.
Once
compliance fails, the regulatory consequences typically unfold as follows:
- Detention
and Stoppage under Port State Control: The absence of a
valid FuelEU DOC constitutes “clear grounds” for a detailed PSC
inspection. Where deficiencies are found that are clearly hazardous to the
environment, the port State is obliged to ensure that the ship is
detained, or that specific operations (such as cargo handling or
bunkering) are stopped, until the hazard is remedied.
- EU-Wide
Expulsion Orders: Where a ship fails to hold a valid
FuelEU DOC for two or more consecutive reporting periods, and other
enforcement measures have proved ineffective, the competent authority of a
port of call may, at its discretion, issue an expulsion order. Once such
an order is issued, all EU Member States (other than the ship’s flag
State) are legally obliged to refuse the vessel entry to their ports until
compliance is restored.
- Flag
Detention: If the expelled ship flies the flag of an
EU Member State and enters a port of that flag State, that flag administration
must issue a flag detention order until the compliance is rectified.
- Banning
(Refusal of Access and Permanent Ban): Ships with a
history of repeated detentions face escalating access refusal measures
under the PSC Directive. A ship flying a black-listed or grey-listed flag
that is detained multiple times will be issued a refusal of access order
(banning it from all EU ports). If the operator persistently fails to take
corrective action, this can ultimately escalate to a permanent refusal of
access (a permanent ban) from the European Union.
Seaworthiness
Implications and Commercial Friction
The
intersection of these enforcement powers with charterparty obligations creates
the new frontier of decarbonisation disputes. As established in landmark cases
like The Madeleine [1967] 2 Lloyd’s Rep. 224 and The Derby [1985]
2 Lloyd’s Rep. 325, a ship liable to expulsion or detention from its intended
ports of call due to missing compliance documentation suffers from
“documentary unseaworthiness”.
Under
FuelEU Maritime, the relevant company is strictly responsible for regulatory
compliance and paying the penalties. However, in a time charter context, it is
the charterer who dictates the vessel’s employment, controls the speed and
route, and purchases the bunker fuel.
If
a time charterer supplies high-emission fossil fuels that cause the vessel to
exceed its FuelEU GHG intensity limits, or orders the vessel to a port without
ensuring OPS compatibility, a compliance deficit will accrue. If the resulting
penalty goes unpaid, the vessel will lose its FuelEU DOC. If that vessel is
subsequently ordered to an EU port, it faces immediate detention or a
fleet-wide expulsion order. At that exact moment, the vessel becomes
documentarily unseaworthy, putting the owner in breach of its strict,
non-delegable duty to cargo interests under the Hague/Hague-Visby Rules.
Anticipating
this commercial friction, the FuelEU Maritime Regulation explicitly
acknowledges the “polluter pays” principle, preserving the owner’s
right to conclude contractual agreements that hold commercial operators liable
to reimburse the costs of FuelEU penalties, as between the owner and the
charterer.
The
industry standard response to this is the newly published BIMCO FuelEU
Maritime Clause for Time Charter Parties 2024. To protect owners from
accumulating massive compliance deficits, the clause requires owners to
periodically notify charterers of the vessel’s aggregated ‘Compliance Balance’.
If the balance is negative, charterers are obligated to pay a periodic ‘Surcharge’
(usually monthly or per voyage) equal to the expected FuelEU Penalty.
Furthermore,
to protect owners against the progressive penalty multiplier effect, the clause
stipulates that if a vessel is redelivered with a negative compliance balance
for two or more consecutive reporting periods, the charterer must pay
liquidated damages to cover the owner’s future exposure to the FuelEU
multiplier. Regarding On-Shore Power Supply (OPS), the clause allocates
physical readiness to the owner (ensuring the vessel is fitted to connect), but
places the financial burden of paying for the electricity at berth squarely on
the charterer. Pragmatically, the clause, that is a helpful starting point,
will require suitable modifications before adoption.
Conclusion
As
we have seen across the CII, EU ETS, and now the FuelEU Maritime regimes, the
era of decarbonisation has fundamentally altered the landscape of maritime law.
When a charterer’s fuel procurement or employment orders lead to a revoked FuelEU
DOC—triggering PSC detentions, stoppages, or EU-wide expulsion orders—the
vessel is rendered legally unfit to trade.
Owners
will increasingly seek to incorporate the BIMCO FuelEU Maritime Clause into
their time charters, and rely on implied indemnities (such as The Island
Archon [1994] 2 Lloyd’s Rep 227) to pass the crippling costs of FuelEU
penalties back to the charterers. Crucially, if a charterer fails to pay the
required FuelEU Surcharge, the BIMCO clause grants the owner the right to
suspend the performance of any or all obligations under the charterparty.
As
with the EU ETS regime, this suspension mechanism serves as a vital contractual
shield. It allows owners to halt operations before the unpaid penalties trigger
the revocation of the FuelEU DOC, thereby attempting to prevent the vessel from
becoming documentarily unseaworthy in the first place. However, as far as
third-party cargo interests and port authorities are concerned, regulatory
unfitness remains the new, undeniable standard of unseaworthiness.
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.