(FMA) Decision to ban OCEANEXL FZC from bunker trading Maritime tickers

(FMA) :Decision to ban OCEANEXL FZC from bunker trading

OCEANEXL FZC has banned bunker trading and fuel supply to ships in the UAE waters and ports with a decision from the UAE Maritime Administration

In response to serious breaches of maritime regulations, the UAE Federal Maritime Administration (FMA) has banned a Dubai-based bunker supplier from operating within its waters and ports after an investigation revealed the supplier had engaged in unlawful bunkering practices

No navigation license

OCEANEXL FZC supplied 700 tons of high Sulphur fuel from their chartered vessel at Khorfakkan port anchorage to a vessel not equipped with Exhaust Gas Cleaning Systems (scrubber). otherwise known as scrubbers, without which vessels emit harmful sulfur oxides (SOx) into the atmosphere, contributing to air pollution and acid rain.

Without scrubbers, OCEANEXL FZC’s illegal and unsafe bunkering operation, thus, raised concerns about environmental protection in the region.

In addition, this operation was carried out without obtaining the navigation license from this administration for the vessel to operate in the UAE waters.

Marine environment standards

Such practices undertaken by OCEANEXL FZC endanger the safety of ships and seafarers, adversely affecting the marine environment, and the bunkering standards in the UAE, in addition to violating the applicable national laws and international conventions, as following:
– Federal Decree-Law No. (43) of 2023 on Maritime Law.
– Federal Law No. (24) of 1999 on the protection and development of the environment.
– Federal Law No. (14) of 2017 on trading in petroleum products.
– Provisions of the International Convention for the Prevention of Pollution from Ships (MARPOL) 73/78.

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Strict measures

The UAE FMA —represented by the Ministry of Energy and Infrastructure—has implemented strict measures for vessels supplying high-sulfur fuel. All bunker ships, before conducting supply operations within UAE waters and ports, are required to review the International Air Pollution Prevention Certificate (IAPP) of the receiving ship and retain a copy to ensure it complies with the requirements of high-sulfur fuel consumption through the use of scrubbers.

Misled the UAE’s FMA

OCEANEXL FZC had misled the UAE’s FMA by concealing the actual fuel type supplied during the transaction, initially claiming it to be a cargo ship-to-ship operation and not bunkering. In addition, OCEANEXL FZX was operating without the required navigation license from the administration.

Note (BDN) 

Failure to comply with the UAE FMA was revealed during the official investigation of the electronic correspondence between OCEANEXL FZC and the receiving ship, confirming prior arrangements were in place for the bunkering operation.

Falsification

A bunker delivery note (BDN) issued by OCEANEXL FZC contradicted the company’s earlier claim that the BDN had never been issued in the first place. In reality, it had been falsified to reflect that the supplied fuel was very low sulphur fuel oil (VLSFO).

International conventions.

According to the UAE Federal Maritime Administration, such practices endanger not just the safety of the ships, but also the seafarers and ultimately the marine ecological system.

Furthermore, OCEANEXL FZC’s actions are said to contravene several applicable national laws and international conventions.

Zero-tolerance policy

As informed, the UAE Federal Maritime Administration also took the decision to ban the Palau-flagged oil product tanker, DSG—chartered by OCEANEXL FZC and owned by DSG shipping—within the UAE waters and ports under any ownership.

The UAE Maritime Administration has said that it has a ‘zero-tolerance policy’ when it comes to the companies, personnel, or vessels involved in manipulating the operations of bunkering in terms of the quality and quantity of fuel, tampering with the fuel samples, falsifying bunker delivery note, or providing inaccurate information to the Maritime Administration or Port Authorities about the nature of the operations conducted in order to preserve the safety of ships and seafarers on board and the standard of the bunkering operations in the UAE.

Cameroon-flagged ships

It is noteworthy that in January 2024, the UAE FMA banned Cameroon-flagged ships from calling UAE waters and ports.

Though reasons as to why the restriction was enforced were not fully revealed, it was assumed that the decision was linked with Cameroon’s reputation as a haven for Russia’s so-called ‘ghost fleet’.

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