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  September 4th, 2018 | Written by

Singaporean shipping company to pay $1 million fine

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  • Singaporean shipping company to serve two year of probation for failure to maintain accurate oil record book.
  • Under plea agreement company’s vessels will comply with environmental compliance plan.
  • Ship management company will be subject to regular inspections by an independent auditor.

United States District Judge Helen Gillmor has sentenced Hai Soon Ship Management, a Singaporean shipping company, to pay a fine of $1 million and serve a two-year term of probation for charges stemming from its the failure to maintain an accurate oil record book in violation of the Act to Prevent Pollution from Ships (APPS), and false statements concerning the illegal dumping of oil contaminated bilge water at sea.

The company pleaded guilty to the charges on June 14, 2018. Pursuant to its plea agreement with the US Attorney’s Office, Hai Soon Ship Management’s vessels operating in US waters will be required to comply with a comprehensive environmental compliance plan that provides for regular inspections under the supervision of an independent auditor.

According to court documents and information presented in court, Hai Soon Ship Management is the operator of the 3,878 gross ton oil tank vessel called the Hai Soon 39. The Hai Soon 39 provided refueling services to fishing vessels operating at sea. International and US law require that vessels like the Hai Soon 39 use pollution prevention equipment to prevent the discharge of oil-contaminated bilge into the sea. Should any overboard discharges occur, they must be recorded in an oil record book, a log that is inspected by the US Coast Guard. In October of 2017, the Chief Engineer of the Hai Soon 39, along with other engine room staff, constructed a hose in the engine room to bypass the ship’s pollution prevention equipment, including its oil water separator, and pump oily waste directly overboard. The resultant discharges were never recorded in the ship’s oil record book, as required by APPS, and the Chief Engineer made false entries in the oil record book to make it appear that the discharges had been routed through the oil water separator when in fact they had not.

“The marine environment that surrounds the Hawaiian Islands is unique, and part of the Islands’ natural beauty,” said US Attorney Kenji M. Price. “This Office will continue to work with the US Coast Guard and use every tool at its disposal to bring to justice those who violate the law by polluting the sea.”

As part of its sentence, Hai Soon Ship Management will be placed on a two-year term of probation that includes the environmental compliance plan to ensure, among other things, that all of the ships the company operates that come to the United States fully comply with all applicable marine environmental protection requirements established by national and international laws. The compliance plan will be implemented by an independent auditing company and supervised by a court-appointed monitor.