Delegates from northern Europe attending the KIMO International conference
last week, hosted by Aberdeenshire and Aberdeen City Councils, were told
how the organisation’s lobbying and projects continued to drive environmental
awareness in the maritime sector and help clean up our seas.
Scottish Environment and Climate Change Minister Stewart Stevenson MSP
opened the Conference by praising the work KIMO is undertaking on projects
such as Fishing for Litter and its leading role in bringing issues such as
marine pollution to the fore.
He said,
“The Fishing for Litter scheme in
Scotland is an excellent example of what can be achieved through
imaginative solutions and partnership working. It is a credit to KIMO, the
fishing industry and its other partners that 160 Scottish vessels in 18 harbours
participate in the scheme.”
During the 2002-2004 Save the North Sea project KIMO helped to pioneer
environmental awareness courses for crew on commercial ships, participants
in Aberdeen were told how these courses had now been ratified by the
International Maritime Organisation under the SCTW Convention, which
meant that they would now be a mandatory training requirement worldwide.
More recently KIMO has been lobbying the European Parliament, EU
governments and shipping companies to reduce the number of containers lost
at sea. The meetings heard that the International Maritime Organisation (IMO)
were now calling for measures to reduce the number of lost containers from
shipping, a call that mirrored many demands made by KIMO.
This web site will no longer be updated save to correct errors.