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Verdrag inzake stabiliteitsvereisten voor passagiersschepen die geregelde internationale lijndiensten van en naar havens in Noord-West-Europa en de Baltische Zee onderhouden

Geldende tekst a fecha 1997-04-01

The Contracting Governments,

Being parties to the International Convention for the Safety of Life at Sea (SOLAS) 1974 as amended;

Recalling Article VII of the SOLAS Convention;

Mindful that the principal responsibility for establishing global safety standards rests with the International Maritime Organization (hereinafter referred to as “the Organization");

Noting the Organization's efforts in this area;

Noting in particular the adoption by the Conference of Contracting Governments to the International Convention for the Safety of Life at Sea 1974 held in London on 20, 27, 28 and 29 November 1995 of Conference Resolution 14 “Regional Agreements on Specific Stability Requirements for Ro-Ro Passenger Ships";

Recognising that the prevailing, often adverse, sea and weather conditions with low visibility, the low water temperatures, the need to maintain intensive all year round ro-ro passenger ferry services, the public dependence on such services, recent accidents and the density of ro-ro passenger ship movements and potentially conflicting shipping movements at particular locations require the application of specific stability requirements to all ro-ro passenger ships operating regular scheduled voyages between or to or from designated ports in North West Europe and the Baltic Sea;

Have agreed as follows:

Article 1. Definitions

For the purposes of the present Agreement:

Article 2. General Obligation

The Contracting Governments agree to apply the specific stability requirements to ro-ro passenger ships entitled to fly their flag and operating on regular scheduled international voyages carrying passengers

Article 3. Specific Stability Requirements

The Contracting Governments agree to apply the specific stability requirements no later than the dates prescribed in annex 2.

Article 4. Single Voyage Exemptions

A ro-ro passenger ship which is not normally engaged on regular scheduled international voyages between or to or from designated ports but which is required to undertake a single voyage between such ports or to or from such a port may be exempted from any or all of the specific stability requirements by a Contracting Government or by the ship's flag State, following consultations with the Contracting Government or Governments between or to or from whose ports the voyage is to take place. An exemption shall not be granted by the ship's flag State unless the ship complies with international safety requirements which in the joint opinion of the ship's flag State and the Contracting Government or Governments between or to or from whose ports the voyage is to take place are adequate for the intended voyage.

Article 5. Application to Ro-Ro Passenger Ships of Flag States Non-parties to the present Agreement
1.

The Contracting Governments agree that the specific stability requirements should apply to all ro-ro passenger ships operating on regular scheduled international voyages carrying passengers between or to or from designated ports, irrespective of flag and bearing in mind the necessity to ensure that no more favourable treatment should be given to ships entitled to fly the flag of States non-parties to the present Agreement.

2.

The Contracting Governments further agree to encourage the application of the specific stability requirements, on the timescale set out in annex 2, to ro-ro passenger ships entitled to fly the flag of States non-parties to the present Agreement and operating on regular scheduled international voyages carrying passengers between or to or from designated ports.

3.

Each Contracting Government undertakes to advise the other Contracting Governments, the Secretary-General and, with respect to States that are members of the European Union, the Commission of the European Communities of the steps it has taken to implement paragraph 2 of this Article.

Article 6. Mutual Acceptance of Documents
1.

Each Contracting Government shall provide each ship entitled to fly its flag and to which the present Agreement applies with a document indicating that the ship complies with the specific stability requirements.

2.

The Contracting Governments agree to accept a document provided under paragraph 1 as evidence that the ship to which the document relates complies with the specific stability requirements.

3.

When a State non-party to the present Agreement issues a document indicating that a ship complies with the specific stability requirements such a document will be accepted as prima facie evidence that the ship so complies.

Article 7. Signature, Ratification, Acceptance, Approval and Accession
1.

The present Agreement shall be open for signature at the Headquarters of the Organization from 1 July until 30 September 1996, and shall thereafter remain open for accession. States may become parties to the present Agreement by:

2.

Ratification, acceptance, approval or accession shall be effected by the deposit of an instrument to that effect with the Secretary-General.

3.

The Secretary-General shall inform the Governments of all States which have signed the present Agreement or acceded to it of any signature or of the deposit of any instrument of ratification, acceptance, approval or accession and the date of its deposit. When the conditions for entry into force have been met, the Secretary-General shall inform the Governments of these States of the date of entry into force of the Agreement.

Article 8. Notification and Entry into Force
1.

The present Agreement shall be notified by the Government of Sweden to the Secretary-General.

It shall enter into force

whichever is the later.

2.

Any instrument of ratification, acceptance, approval or accession deposited after the date on which the present Agreement enters into force shall take effect thirty days after the date of deposit.

Article 9. Denunciation
1.

Any Contracting Government may, by written notification addressed to the Secretary-General, denounce the present Agreement.

2.

A denunciation shall take effect twelve months after its receipt by the Secretary-General.

Article 10. Deposit and Registration
1.

The present Agreement shall be deposited with the Secretary-General.

2.

The Secretary-General shall, as soon as the present Agreement enters into force, transmit certified copies of the Agreement to

3.

As soon as the present Agreement enters into force the Secretary-General shall transmit a copy of the Agreement to the Secretariat of the United Nations for registration and publication in accordance with Article 102 of the Charter of the United Nations.

Article 11. Languages

The present Agreement is established in a single copy in the English, French, Spanish and Russian languages, each text being equally authentic.

Application

In accordance with this Agreement, passenger ships with ro-ro cargo spaces or special category spaces as defined in regulation II–2/3 of the International Convention for the Safety of Life at Sea, as amended, shall comply with the provisions of this Agreement not later than at the first yearly inspection following the date of compliance prescribed below, according to the value of A/Amax as defined in the annex to the Calculation Procedure to Assess the Survivability Characteristics of Existing Ro-Ro Passenger Ships When Using a Simplified Method Based Upon resolution A.265 (VIII), developed by the Maritime Safety Committee at its fifty-ninth session in June 1991 (MSC/Circ.574):

Value of A/Amax Date of Compliance
Less than 85% 1 April 1997
Less than 90% 31 December 1998
Less than 95% 31 December 1999
Less than 97.5% 31 December 2000
97.5% or higher 31 December 2001 but in any case not later than 1 October 2002
Stability Standard
1.

In addition to the requirements of SOLAS regulation II–1/8, ro-ro passenger ships shall comply, subject to the provisions of paragraph 2, if applicable, with the following:

2.

For assessing the effect of the volume of the assumed accumulated sea water on the damaged ro-ro deck in paragraph 1, the following provisions shall prevail:

1. Objectives

In the tests provided for in paragraph 1.4 of the stability requirements pertaining to the agreement, the ship should prove capability to withstand a seaway defined in paragraph 3 hereunder in the worst damage case scenario.

2. Ship model

2.1. The model should copy the actual ship for both outer configuration and internal arrangement – in particular of all damaged spaces, having an effect on the process of flooding and shipping of water. The damage should represent the worst damage case defined for compliance with paragraph 2.3.2 of SOLAS regulation II–1/8 (SOLAS 90). An additional test is required at a level keel midship damage, if the worst damage location according tot SOLAS 90 is outside the range ± 10% Lpp from the midship. This additional test is only required when the ro-ro spaces are assumed to be damaged.

2.2. The model should comply with the following:

3. Procedure for experiments

3.1. The model should be subjected to a long-crested irregular seaway defined by the JONSWAP spectrum with a significant wave height Hs, defined in paragraph 1.3 of the stability requirements and having peak enhancement factor γ and peak period Tp as follows:

3.2. The model should be free to drift and placed in beam seas (90° heading) with the damage hole facing the oncoming waves. The model should not be restrained in a manner to resist capsize. If the ship is upright in flooded condition, 1° of heel towards the damage should be given.

3.3. At least 5 (five) experiments for each peak period should be carried out. The test period for each run shall be of a duration such that a stationary state had been reached but should be run for not less than 30 min in full-scale time. A different wave realization train should be used for each test.

3.4. If none of the experiments result in final inclination towards the damage, the experiments should be repeated with 5 runs at each of the two specified wave conditions or, alternatively, the model should be given an additional 1° angle of heel towards the damage and the experiment repeated with 2 runs at each of the two specified wave conditions. The purpose of these additional experiments is to demonstrate, in the best possible way, survival capability against capsize in both directions.

3.5. The tests are to be carried out for the following damage cases:

4. Survival criteria

4.1. The ship should be considered as surviving if a stationary state is reached for the successive test runs as required in 3.3 but subject to 4.2.

4.2. Angles of roll of more than 30° against the vertical axis, occurring more frequently than in 20% of the rolling cycles or steady heel greater than 20° should be taken as capsizing events even if a stationary state is reached.

5. Test approval

5.1. It is the responsibility of the Administration to approve the model test programme in advance. It should also be borne in mind that lesser damages may provide a worst case scenario.

5.2. Test should be documented by means of a report and a video or other visual record containing all relevant information of the ship and test results. A copy of the video and report should be submitted to the Organization, together with the Administration's acceptance of the test.