Ship Oil Pollution Emergency Plan (SOPEP)
What is Ship Oil Pollution Emergency Plan (SOPEP)?
If you
are a maritime professional working on ships, SOPEP locker (room) is one of the
important places which you would be asked to familiarise with in the first few
days of joining a ship. Let’s understand the importance of knowing SOPEP- Ship
Oil Pollution Emergency Plan for a maritime professional.
Related
reading: Procedure for ship familiarisation for new crew members on
ship
When
an oil spill occurs at sea, it tends to spread over the surface of the sea
water, leaving a deadly impact on marine mammals, birds, the shoreline, and
most importantly the ocean and the environment.
The
cost to clean up an oil spill depends on
the quantity and quality of oil discharged in the sea and is calculated on the
basis of factors such as legal claims, money paid as penalties, loss of oil,
repairs and cleanups, and the most important – loss of marine life and the
effects on human health which cannot be measured against any amount.
Related
reading: How to avoid oil pollution at sea from ships?
As
prevention is better than cure, in order to avoid the above mentioned monitory
losses and primarily to avoid marine pollution and losses of marine species, a
prevention plan is carried on board by almost all cruise and cargo vessels.
This plan is known as SOPEP or ship oil pollution emergency plan.
What
is SOPEP ?
As
mentioned earlier, Sopep stands for Ship oil pollution emergency plan and as
per the MARPOL 73/78 requirement under Annex I, all ships with 400 GT and above
must carry an oil prevention plan as per the norms and guidelines laid down
by International Maritime Organization under
MEPC (Marine Environmental Protection Committee) act.
The
Gross tonnage requirement for an oil tanker, according to SOPEP, reduces to 150
GT as oil itself is a kind of cargo which doubles the risk of oil pollution.
Related
Reading: Solas And Marpol Convention: A General Overview
Master
of the ship is the overall in charge of the SOPEP, along with the chief officer
as subordinate in charge for implementation of SOPEP on board. SOPEP also
describes the plan for the master, officer and the crew of the ship regarding
ways to tackle various oil spill scenarios that can occur on a ship. For oil
tankers, action plan differs according to the cargo handling and cargo tanks
containing huge quantities of oil.
The
essential SOPEP requirements for a ship are:
1. The
Ship Oil Pollution Emergency Plan must be written following the provisions of
regulation 37 of Annex I of MARPOL
2. The
approved plan guides the Master and officers on board the ship concerning the
steps to be taken when an oil pollution incident has occurred or a ship is at
risk of one.
3. It
is a requirement under MEPC circular no. 256 that the SOPEP contains all the
information and operational instructions related to the emergency procedure and
SOPEP equipment provided in the SOPEP kit.
Related
Reading: 10 Methods For Oil Spill Clean-up At Sea
4. The
plan must contain important telephone, telex numbers, names etc., of all the
important contacts to be contacted in the event of an oil pollution
5. A
recognised authority has approved the SOPEP, and there are no changes or
revisions made without the prior approval of the Administration.
6. If
there are any changes in the plan which is non-mandatory, it generally does not
require approval from the administration. The owner and ship manager must
update the appendices about the non-mandatory changes done in the plan.
Contents
of SOPEP – Equipment List
SOPEP
contains the following things:
- The action plan
contains the duty of each crew member at the time of the spill, including
emergency muster and actions.
- SOPEP contains
the general information about the ship and the owner of the ship etc.
- Steps and
procedure to contain the discharge of oil into the sea using SOPEP
equipment
- It contains the
inventory of the SOPEP material provided for pollution prevention such as
oil absorbent pads, sawdust bags, booms etc.
- Onboard
reporting procedure and requirement in case of an oil spill is described.
- Authorities to
contact and reporting requirements in case of an oil spill are listed in
SOPEP. Authorities like port state control, oil clean up team etc are to
be notified.
- Authorities to
contact and reporting requirements in case of an oil spill are listed in
SOPEP. Authorities like port state control, oil clean up team etc. are to
be notified.
- SOPEP includes
drawing of various fuel lines, along with other oil lines on board vessel
with the positioning of vents, save all trays etc.
- The general
arrangement of the ship is also listed in SOPEP, which includes the
location of all the oil tanks with capacity, content etc.
- The location of
the SOPEP locker and contents of the locker with a list of inventory.
- Guidance to
keep the records of the pollution incident (for liability, compensation
and insurance purpose).
- Material for
Reference from essential organisations (guidelines issued by ICS, OCIMF,
SIGTTO, INTERTANKO, etc.).
- Procedures for
testing various plan described in the SOPEP.
- Procedure to
maintain the record as required by the authorities
- Details of when
and how to review the plan.
General
duties of ship’s crew under SOPEP:
MASTER: He/she
is overall in charge of any incident related to the oil spill and should
informing the authorities about it. He/she needs to ensure all crew members are
complying with the plan and records are maintained for the incident.
Chief
Engineer: He/she will be the in charge of the bunkering operation and will instruct the
subordinates to prepare SOPEP KIT prior to any oil related operation (Sludge
transfer, lube oil bunkering, fuel oil bunkering etc.).
Chief
engineer should keep the Master informed and updated on the situation, and the
results from action taken to limit oil outflow.
Related
reading: Responsibility of chief engineer under SOLAS
Chief
Officer: He/she will be the in charge of complete deck
operation to prevent any oil spill or in the event of a spill, the Chief officer must keep the master in the
loop at all times and update the situation and action taken to stop or reduce
an oil outflow.
Related
Reading: How to become an effective chief officer on board ships?
Deck
Duty Officer: To Assist the chief officer in deck watch and
Alert
and inform Chief Officer/ Chief Engineer on any potential oil spill situation.
Related
reading: 23 important points for vetting checklist for ships third
officer
Duty
Engineer: To assist Chief Engineer for any oil transfer
operation which includes preparation of SOPEP material and readiness of
firefighting equipment.
Duty
Rating(s): To assist and alert the duty officer and engineer for
detection of potential oil leakage and to immediately assist by all possible
means to restrict and clean an ongoing spill. He/she should bring the
additional SOPEP material to the location for preventing oil from reaching the
ship’s railing.
SOPEP does not only provide details for preventing and fighting an oil spill, but it also acts similar to any other regulation of SOLAS as it also has the details to save the ship and crew in the event of mishap such as fire, collision, listing etc. and other related incident related to oil.
What is Ship Oil Pollution Emergency Plan (SOPEP)? (marineinsight.com)
20180227_184504_zec_ZMMO_._SOPEP_Sample_Plan - Guset User Flip PDF | AnyFlip
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