Maersk should be employing New Zealand seafarers for its new local service

An international shipper is threatening the future of New Zealand coastal shipping by exploiting legal loopholes.
Glob­al ship­ping giant Maer­sk has announced a new ser­vice called Sir­ius Star which will use two over­seas flagged Maer­sk ships with an entire­ly for­eign crew rotat­ing through five New Zealand ports and two in Fiji.
Mar­itime Union of New Zealand Nation­al Sec­re­tary Craig Har­ri­son says Maer­sk should be crew­ing these ships with New Zealand sea­far­ers.
The ships will be mov­ing con­tain­ers around New Zealand ports to assist with the port con­ges­tion at Ports of Auck­land after a series of man­age­ment fail­ures.
Mr Har­ri­son says under the Mar­itime Trans­port Act, over­seas flagged ves­sels can car­ry domes­tic goods between New Zealand ports, as long as it is part of an inter­na­tion­al ser­vice.
He says Maer­sk are using the Fiji leg of the oper­a­tion to get around the intent of the law, because most of the car­go involved will be domes­tic New Zealand freight.
“Maer­sk makes a large prof­it out of its inter­na­tion­al ship­ping oper­a­tions to and from New Zealand, and has a social respon­si­bil­i­ty to ensure New Zealand has a trained and skilled sea­far­ing work­force.”
He says there is now only one New Zealand flagged and crewed coastal con­tain­er ship, Moana Chief, which is oper­at­ed by Paci­fi­ca Ship­ping, part of the Swires Group.
Mr Har­ri­son says the Gov­ern­ment has com­mit­ted to rebuild­ing New Zealand coastal ship­ping, which is a low-car­bon trans­port mode that would con­tribute to reduc­ing emis­sions, but there need­ed to be imme­di­ate action.
He says it is unrea­son­able that New Zealand domes­tic ship­ping was levied under the New Zealand Emis­sions Trad­ing Scheme for car­bon cred­its and that inter­na­tion­al ship­ping work­ing on the New Zealand coast was not.
The Mar­itime Union is cam­paign­ing to rebuild the New Zealand domes­tic coastal ship­ping fleet.
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