By: Emilie Biechlin The International Convention for the Prevention of Pollution from Ships
The International Convention for the Prevention of Pollution from Ships, more commonly referred to as MARPOL was signed in There are 6 Annexes to the Act, the latest was added in 1997 and covered air pollution caused from ships. The 6 Annexes cover… 1)Pollution by oil 2)Noxious liquid substances 3)Harmful packaged material 4)Sewage dumping 5)Plastic dump from Ships 6)Air pollution from ships
To Implement these rules and regulations, MARPOL has several requirements ships must first complete in order to be allowed out in the sea. First, they must register their ship with the country it represents (Flag State). After completing this, they must comply with the domestic laws of the Flag State and agree to all of the 6 Annexes and any other related laws form their own Nation.
When the regulations set by MARPOL are broken, there are severe consequences… Violators can be charged $25,000 for each violation Criminal charges can reach $50,000 For severe cases, violators can be given up to 5 years in prison
Oil Spills contribute about 37 million gallons of oil into the ocean per year There is a mass, twice the size of Texas floating in the Pacific Ocean of trash. The most commonly found item is plastic bags. In any given year, about 25% of beaches in the US are under advisories or are closed at least one time because of water pollution
Do not pour any chemicals or cleaners down the drain Reduce/Reuse/Recycle Research and use lawn and garden chemicals sparingly, these could eventually end up in our water ways so the less…the better. Repair broken engines and boat motors immediately to ensure that youre not leaking anything into the water
Bibliography En.wikipedia.org/wiki/MARPOL Google images