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DAILY NEWS ANALYSIS

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27 Jun, 2025

7 Min Read

Hong Kong Convention for Safe Ship Recycling – IMO Treaty & India’s Ship Recycling Law | UPSC GS-3 Environment

GS-III : Environmental Conservation International Agreements & Groupings

Hong Kong Convention for Safe Ship Recycling UPSC GS-3 ENVIRONMENT PT-MAINS

The Hong Kong International Convention, 2009 is an IMO treaty that ensures ships are recycled safely without unnecessary risk to human health, worker safety and the environment.

Why in News?

The Hong Kong Convention entered into force on 26 June 2025, making global standards for safe and environmentally sound ship recycling legally operational. It is important for India because India is one of the major ship-recycling countries and has aligned its domestic law through the Recycling of Ships Act, 2019.

Core issue

Old ships often contain hazardous materials such as asbestos, heavy metals, hydrocarbons and ozone-depleting substances. If dismantled without safety standards, ship recycling can harm workers, coastal ecosystems and nearby communities. The Convention tries to regulate this entire process through international safety and environmental rules.

About the Convention

  • Full name: Hong Kong International Convention for the Safe and Environmentally Sound Recycling of Ships, 2009
  • Adopted under: International Maritime Organization
  • Adopted at: Hong Kong, China
  • Year: 2009
  • Entered into force: 26 June 2025
  • Focus: safe dismantling, hazardous waste management, worker safety and environmental protection

Key objectives

The Convention aims to ensure that ships reaching the end of their operational life are recycled in a safe and environmentally sound manner.

  • Reduces risk to human health
  • Protects yard workers
  • Prevents pollution of coastal and marine ecosystems
  • Regulates handling of hazardous materials
  • Creates common global standards for ship recycling yards

Major provisions

The Convention places obligations on shipowners, shipbuilding yards, ship recycling facilities, flag States, port States and recycling States.

  • Ships must maintain an Inventory of Hazardous Materials
  • Ship recycling yards must be authorised
  • Yards must prepare a Ship Recycling Facility Plan
  • A ship-specific Ship Recycling Plan is required before dismantling
  • Rules cover ship design, construction, operation and final preparation for recycling
  • Certification, inspection, reporting and enforcement mechanisms are included

India’s position

India approved accession to the Convention in 2019 and enacted the Recycling of Ships Act, 2019.

  • The Act received Presidential assent on 13 December 2019
  • It provides a legal mechanism to enforce international ship-recycling standards
  • India has aligned its domestic framework with Hong Kong Convention requirements
  • Indian yards, especially in the ship-recycling sector, are expected to follow safer and greener practices

Significance for India

India is a major player in global ship recycling, so compliance improves both environmental credibility and industrial competitiveness.

  • Supports green ship recycling
  • Improves safety for workers in yards such as Alang
  • Helps India attract more responsible ship-recycling business
  • Reduces environmental damage from hazardous waste
  • Strengthens India’s role in sustainable maritime economy
  • Aligns with the Blue Economy and circular resource recovery approach

Challenges
Implementation remains the main test.

  • High cost of upgrading recycling yards
  • Safe handling of hazardous materials
  • Worker training and protective equipment
  • Monitoring of informal or unsafe practices
  • Need for strong inspection and enforcement
  • Possible differences between EU ship-recycling norms and Hong Kong Convention standards

Way forward

India should use the Convention to modernise ship recycling into a safer, greener and globally competitive sector.

  • Upgrade ship-recycling yards with proper waste-treatment systems
  • Ensure strict worker safety and health protocols
  • Improve monitoring of hazardous material inventories
  • Strengthen port-state and flag-state inspections
  • Promote recycling as part of India’s Blue Economy
  • Build global trust in Indian ship-recycling facilities through full compliance

The Hong Kong Convention shifts ship recycling from a hazardous dismantling activity to a regulated, safer and environmentally responsible industry, with major relevance for India’s maritime economy and coastal environmental protection.


FAQ

1. What is the Hong Kong Convention related to?

It is related to the safe and environmentally sound recycling of ships.

2. Which organisation adopted it?

It was adopted under the International Maritime Organization.

3. When did it enter into force?

It entered into force on 26 June 2025.

4. Why is it important for India?

India is a major ship-recycling country, and the Convention helps improve worker safety, environmental protection and global credibility of Indian ship-recycling yards.

5. Which Indian law supports its implementation?

The Recycling of Ships Act, 2019 supports implementation of international ship-recycling standards in India.

Source: The Hindu

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