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Maritime Risk International

Articles for March 2022

Measures to prevent the smuggling of drugs

Mike Carroll and David Thompson, of Signum Services, warn of the risks of being caught up in drug smuggling

The EU Blocking Regulation in practice

Sebastiaan Moolenaar, at AKD, provides more detail on the EU Blocking Regulation and the recent ECJ ruling from a European perspective

Vague terms remain in speed and consumption clauses

Prokopios Krikris, charterparties claims expert, takes a look at the use of a performance clause

International sanctions and the marine insurance industry

Christopher Jones, of IUMI, takes a look at sanctions from an insurance perspective

Shipowners must carry out constant due diligence to manage sanctions risk

In a view from a P&I Club, Ursula O’Donnell, of the Standard Club, considers the impact of the EU and Chinese Blocking Regulations.

It’s the little things that matter

Small interventions lead to big changes in crew welfare, suggests Peter Hult, at Vikand

Can digitised documents transform international trade flow?

Jacco De Jong, of Bolero, looks at the way digitised documents are changing the way maritime trade is transacted

Implication of BIMCO clauses and IMO 2023

Alessio Sbraga, Joseph Malpas and Isabel Philips, at HFW, discuss navigating the decarbonisation wave and the risk implications of reducing shipping’s carbon footprint

Data-informed decisions driven from a clearer risk picture

By bringing together data from across their fleet operations, ship managers and charterers can make better decisions to increase safety and efficiency, writes Gurinder Singh, of ABS

Maritime trade needs to monitor rapidly developing sanctions situation

Regulators, geopolitics and sanctions - Hill Dickinson’s Siiri Duddington, Trudie Protopapas and Charlie Fraser examine these complex issues in the context of the recent events in Russia and Ukraine, China’s emerging sanctions programme and the effect these two geopolitical giants have in forming alliances across the globe

Let’s recognise the courage of crews risking their lives in Ukraine

Third engineer Hadisur Rahman became the first seafarer to die in the fighting. Let us hope he is the last, although as things stand, that cannot be guaranteed, says Lloyd’s List

International sanctions and the marine insurance industry

Christopher Jones, of IUMI, takes a look at sanctions from an insurance perspective

Vague terms remain in speed and consumption clauses

Prokopios Krikris, charterparties claims expert, takes a look at the use of a performance clause

Shipowners must carry out constant due diligence to manage sanctions risk

In a view from a P&I Club, Ursula O’Donnell, of the Standard Club, considers the impact of the EU and Chinese Blocking Regulations.

Data-informed decisions driven from a clearer risk picture

By bringing together data from across their fleet operations, ship managers and charterers can make better decisions to increase safety and efficiency, writes Gurinder Singh, of ABS

Measures to prevent the smuggling of drugs

Mike Carroll and David Thompson, of Signum Services, warn of the risks of being caught up in drug smuggling

Let’s recognise the courage of crews risking their lives in Ukraine

Third engineer Hadisur Rahman became the first seafarer to die in the fighting. Let us hope he is the last, although as things stand, that cannot be guaranteed, says Lloyd’s List

Maritime trade needs to monitor rapidly developing sanctions situation

Regulators, geopolitics and sanctions - Hill Dickinson’s Siiri Duddington, Trudie Protopapas and Charlie Fraser examine these complex issues in the context of the recent events in Russia and Ukraine, China’s emerging sanctions programme and the effect these two geopolitical giants have in forming alliances across the globe

Implication of BIMCO clauses and IMO 2023

Alessio Sbraga, Joseph Malpas and Isabel Philips, at HFW, discuss navigating the decarbonisation wave and the risk implications of reducing shipping’s carbon footprint

The EU Blocking Regulation in practice

Sebastiaan Moolenaar, at AKD, provides more detail on the EU Blocking Regulation and the recent ECJ ruling from a European perspective

It’s the little things that matter

Small interventions lead to big changes in crew welfare, suggests Peter Hult, at Vikand

Can digitised documents transform international trade flow?

Jacco De Jong, of Bolero, looks at the way digitised documents are changing the way maritime trade is transacted

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