I
doubt there is a soul on God’s green earth that doesn’t know what COVID-19 is,
now a worldwide pandemic. Folks a lot smarter than me and you consider it a
virtual wartime situation. I certainly hope there is no argument regarding the
gravity of all this. If there is any among you who disagree, consider the
following: if this is all completely overblown and we act with alacrity anyway,
well no harm, no foul. If the gravity of this is not properly considered and we
do too little too late then it is possible we face the greatest calamity since
WWII.
Unsung Heroes; too many to mention
Since
this crisis has developed and evolved, many unsung heroes have emerged like
hospital workers, all of them, not just doctors and nurses. How about the folks
working to keep our store shelves lined with goods? Too many to mention;
unsung, essential workers of all kinds, including professional mariners.
Letter of Warning
Lloyd’s
List columnist Anastassios Adamopoulos reported in a March 19 column a letter
sent by The International Chamber of Shipping (ICS) and the International
Transport Federation (ITF) to the heads of the United Nation’s stressing the
importance of seafarers in the circulation of global trade.
Each
month, approximately 100,000 seafarers need to switch crews on the ships they
work with to comply with the relevant international maritime regulations so
that they can continue to transport global trade safely, according to the
letter.
About
90% of global trade is transported by commercial marine freight, which
transports food, energy, and raw materials in the world, as well as goods and
manufactured components – including biomedical supplies, and many products sold
in supermarkets. And the necessary materials (due to complex supply chains) to
maintain many jobs in the manufacturing sector – without which modern society
simply cannot function.
At this time of global crisis, more
important than ever to keep supply chains open and to keep the trade going
At
this time of global crisis, it is more important than ever to keep supply
chains open and to keep the trade and maritime transport movement going.
Immediate solutions must be found to the many challenges facing seafarers,
including the exchange of crews and the movement of seafarers in the ports, and
allowing commercial vessels to reach the ports.
Vital need merchant seafarers granted
appropriate exemptions
“We
therefore wish to emphasize the vital need for the world’s professional
merchant seafarers to be granted appropriate exemptions from any national
travel restrictions, when joining or leaving their ships, in order to keep the
world’s maritime supply chains functioning,” the letter stated.
Seafarers be treated as ‘key workers’
Seafarers
should be treated as “key workers” such as airline crews and medical personnel.
As such they should be afforded special consideration and treated with
pragmatism and understanding when traveling to and from their ships.
No instances of COVID-19 on merchant
ships anywhere in the world; ship crews not problem so far; the crisis
shore-based
Defeating
the virus is the absolute first priority but somehow global trade must continue
or the world faces disaster. Russia and Australia have recently decided to
quarantine all arriving ships for up to 14 days (maybe longer) before allowing
them to enter any ports. I have two comments regarding that. First, to my
knowledge, outside of cruise ships, there have been almost NO instances of
COVID-19 on merchant ships anywhere in the world, albeit so far. Second, the
cure may be worse than the disease. The old saying ‘don’t cut off your nose to
spite your face’ comes to mind. What’s the point of a decision that could bring
a country to its knees if it doesn’t materially improve the crisis that
prompted the decision in the first place? Truth be told, ship crews just aren’t
a problem so far, the crisis is shore-based.
New Paradigms, Common Purpose and
Leadership
As
I wrote last month, the world is facing new paradigms. Adapt or fail, but
adapting requires common sense and common purpose, something lacking in political
leadership these days. While both the Left and the Right in the U.S. Congress
haggle over petty biases and politics our country and the world drift toward a
lee shore in the face of a hurricane west wind. The function of leadership is
to guide or direct, if that isn’t being done, it’s not leadership.
We
have faced worse and thank God we had the leadership to guide us through the
rocks and shoals to safe harbor.
With malice toward none, with charity
for all: Abraham Lincoln
With
malice toward none, with charity for all, with firmness in the right as God
gives us to see the right, let us strive on to finish the work we are in, to
bind up the nation’s wounds, to care for him who shall have borne the battle
and for his widow and his orphan, to do all which may achieve and cherish a
just and lasting peace among ourselves and with all nations’
Abraham
Lincoln, March 4, 1865
(Captain
George Livingstone is a San Francisco Bar Pilot, co-author of ‘Tug Use
Offshore’, contributing author of ‘IMPA On Pilotage’ and a regular contributor
to gCaptain.) |