ITF Australia coordinator Dean Summers has warned of potential environmental damage in Melbourne, Australia due to an unsafe vessel inspected in the port.
The Australian Maritime Safety Authority found that the Greek-operated, Indonesian-owned Sat Nunki was too unclean to carry grain, as its hatches had previously been filled with phosphate and coal.
Dean Summers warned that the operation to clean up the vessel while in the port of Melbourne was too rushed, and could even represent a possible threat to the local marine environment.
“Normally cleaning would occur well out to sea, and would be done with proper safety and environmental protocols," he said. "Instead we are seeing a rushed job … without proper environmental safeguards.
“We believe that if the waste from inside the vessel’s holds are not cleared away properly this material could lead to devastating environmental consequences for the surrounding area."
He also reported that the ship's Chinese and Burmese crewmembers were owed US$60,000 in unpaid wages.
Mr Summers urged immediate action "to prevent the shipowners and operators from continuing to cut corners with workplace and environmental safety".
Pollution warning on unclean ship in Melbourne
Notícias
EM CAMPO
Notícias
Mudanças na presidência da ETF
Nesta semana, durante sua reunião em Split, na Croácia, o Comitê Executivo da Federação Europeia dos Trabalhadores em Transportes (ETF) elegeu Giorgio Tuti como o novo presidente da ETF.
Notícias
Análise da mesa redonda sobre o setor de transportes do Catar
A Federação Internacional dos Trabalhadores em Transportes (ITF) e o Ministério do Trabalho do Estado do Catar realizaram uma mesa redonda com a participação de empresas locais e internacionais de
Notícias
Neste Primeiro de Maio, trabalhadoras e trabalhadores em transportes unem-se por um mundo melhor
A Federação Internacional dos Trabalhadores em Transportes (ITF) une-se a trabalhadoras e trabalhadores de todo o mundo para celebrar o Primeiro de Maio – um dia de solidariedade, luta e compromisso