COMPENSATION REGIMES OUTLINE OF PRESENTATION

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THE INTERNATIONAL REGIME ON LIABILITY AND COMPENSATION FOR OIL POLLUTION DAMAGE AN EQUITABLE SOLUTION Willem Oosterveen Director International Oil Pollution Compensation Funds Moving forward together International Seminar on Government and Oil/Shipping Industry Cooperation Rio de Janeiro, Brazil Wednesday 18 November 2009 1 2 OUTLINE OF PRESENTATION The international regime and the role of the IOPC Funds Additional voluntary industry arrangements (STOPIA & TOPIA) Brief analysis of the balance within the international regime COMPENSATION REGIMES Old regime: 1969 Civil Liability Convention/1971 Fund Convention 1971 Fund New regime: 1992 Civil Liability Convention/1992 Fund Convention 1992 Fund 2003 Supplementary Fund Protocol Supplementary Fund 3 4 1992 CIVIL LIABILITY CONVENTION 122 States Parties 1992 FUND CONVENTION 102 Member States 2003 PROTOCOL TO 1992 FUND CONVENTION 24 Member States 1971 Fund Convention ceased to be in force on 24 May 2002 5 6 1

THE THREE TIER SYSTEM RATIONALE OF THE INTERNATIONAL REGIME THIRD TIER SECOND TIER Oil receivers after sea transport Oil receivers after sea transport Supplementary Fund Protocol 1992 Fund Convention Supplementary Fund 1992 Fund Provide compensation to victims of pollution damage caused by spills of persistent oil from tankers Compensation through amicable settlements; court involvement avoided Uniform application; equal treatment FIRST TIER Shipowners 1992 Civil Liability Convention Insurers 7 8 1992 CONVENTIONS APPLY TO: Pollution damage Spills of persistent oil from tankers Territory, territorial waters and EEZ or equivalent Preventive measures Bunker spills from unladen tankers (unless clean) Mystery spills from a tanker 1 ST TIER 1992 CIVIL LIABILITY CONVENTION Strict liability of registered shipowner (no fault required; very few exceptions) Limitation of liability Shipowners may lose right of limitation Compulsory insurance Direct action against insurer 9 10 1992 CLC Limits of Shipowner s Liability GT SDR US $ 5000 4 510 000 7 158 412 Per additional GT up to 140 000 631 1002 SHIPOWNER EXEMPT WHEN INCIDENT RESULTED FROM Act of war or a grave natural disaster Intentional act of a third party Negligence of public authorities in maintaining navigational aids GT 140 000 89 770 000 142 485 730 11 Exchange rate as at 29 October 2009 12 2

CLC - SHIPOWNER CANNOT LIMIT LIABILITY if it is proved that the damage resulted from the owner s personal act or omission, committed with the intent to cause damage or recklessly with the knowledge that such damage would probably result 2 ND TIER THE 1992 IOPC FUND CONVENTION Provides compensation for pollution damage to the extent that the compensation available under the 1992 CLC is inadequate Creates an intergovernmental organisation: the 1992 IOPC Fund 13 14 2 ND TIER FUND CONVENTION APPLIES WHEN 2 ND TIER FUND CONVENTION DOES NOT APPLY Shipowner exempt Shipowner financially i incapable of meeting obligations Damage exceeds the shipowner s liability Damage in non-member State Damage caused by an act of war or spill from warship Claimant cannot prove oil originated from a ship as defined in the Conventions ( mystery spills ) 15 16 MAXIMUM AMOUNT OF COMPENSATION 1,200 LIMITS LAID DOWN IN THE CONVENTIONS 1,000 1992 CLC/Fund Conventions 203 million SDR 2003 Supplementary Fund 750 million SDR $ (millions) 800 600 400 200 0 0 20 40 60 80 100 120 140 160 Units of tonnage of ship (1 000 units) 1992 CLC 1992 Fund Supplementary Fund 17 18 3

1992 FUND: GENERAL FUND CONTRIBUTIONS 2007 WHO CONTRIBUTES TO THE FUND? Others 24% Spain 4% Singapore 5% Canada 5% United Kingdom 5% France 7% Japan 17% Italy 9% India 8% Rep. of Korea 8% Netherlands 8% Person receiving > 150 000 tons of contributing oil/year after sea transport Contributing oil = crude oil and heavy fuel oil Contributions decided by Fund Assembly Oil receivers pay, not governments 19 20 MAIN TYPES OF CLAIM Property damage Clean-up operations and preventive measures Losses in fishery, mariculture and tourism sectors: Consequential loss Pure economic loss Environmental damage; limited to costs of reasonable measures of reinstatement actually undertaken or to be undertaken ADMISSIBILITY OF CLAIMS GENERAL CRITERIA Loss or damage caused by contamination (link of causation between the contamination and the loss) Claimant must prove loss or damage Loss must be economically quantifiable Any expense or loss must have been incurred Any expense must be for measures which are reasonable and justifiable 21 22 Property damage s of claims of claims 23 Preventive Measures 24 4

Clean-up Operations Economic losses Fishery, mariculture, tourism s of claims s of claims 25 26 3 RD TIER SUPPLEMENTARY FUND of claims Environmental damage costs of reasonable measures of reinstatement actually undertaken or to be undertaken 27 Protocol establishing a Supplementary Fund in force in March 2005 Maximum compensation 750 million SDR, including amounts payable under 1992 Conventions Contributions to Supplementary Fund payable by oil receivers in States Parties to Protocol (= identical to 1992 Fund) 28 SHARING OF FINANCIAL BURDEN BETWEEN SHIPOWNERS AND OIL INDUSTRY; VOLUNTARY INDUSTRY ARRANGEMENTS Cost study; showed imbalance for smaller ships under present regime Impact of Supplementary Fund; potential exposure for contributors STOPIA / TOPIA 2006 STOPIA 2006 Basic concept is Relevant Ship : 29 548 GT or less; Entered in International Group P&I Club; and Reinsured through International Group s Pooling Arrangements Applies to pollution damage in 1992 Fund Member States Voluntary increase to 20 million SDR of limitation amount for relevant ships 1992 Fund remains liable to pay compensation to claimants over 4.51 million SDR 1992 Fund will be indemnified by the shipowner for difference between CLC limit and 20 million SDR 29 30 5

TOPIA 2006 Basic concept is Relevant Ship : Entered in International Group P&I Club; and Reinsured through International Group s pooling arrangements Applies to pollution damage in Supplementary Fund Member States Supplementary Fund will continue to pay compensation to claimants in accordance with Supplementary Fund Protocol Shipowner will indemnify the Supplementary Fund for 50% of the compensation it has paid to claimants The perspective of claimants: - Registered owner has strict liability: liable person available - Compulsory insurance with direct action: solvent liable person available - Fund and Suppl. Fund offer added protection - Criteria for admissibility well advanced and favourable - Compensation available is limited - Assessment process takes time, depending on the circumstances 31 32 The perspective of shipowners: - Predictability by channelled, strict and limited liability - Compulsory insurance with direct action: level playing field - Shared liability/responsibility with oil receivers - International uniformity for international business - Criteria for admissibility well advanced and favourable: acceptance of the regime internationally - Strict liability and compulsory insurance come at a cost - Sometimes problems relating to interplay between interim payments and limitation proceedings - STOPIA and TOPIA come at a cost 33 The perspective of the oil industry: - Predictability and protection by the international regime - Level playing field - Shared liability/responsibility with shipowners - Criteria for admissibility well advanced and favourable: acceptance of the regime internationally - Contributions to the IOPC Funds 34 The perspective of (Member) States: - Protection of Member State and its citizens and companies against pollution damage - Level playing field for industries involved - Shared liability/responsibility offers better protection - Criteria for admissibility well advanced and favourable: acceptance of the regime (inter)nationally - For some States: no cost to their industry - Compensation available is limited - Claims handling process takes time, depending on the circumstances, sometimes leading to complaints nationally 35 Thank you for your attention! For further information www.iopcfund.org 36 6