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Ships' Ballast Water
IMO Ballast Water Standards
Ballast Water
Performance and Ballast Water Exchange
by Paul Bruno
In order to reduce damage from
aquatic invasive species the International Maritime
Organization (IMO) developed the “International Convention for
the Control and Management of Ships' Ballast Water and Sediments”.
The BWM convention began with
the IMO’s Marine Environment Protection Committee (MEPC) in 1991. Since then
there have been many revisions.
Some of these revisions were
driven by advancing technology to remove unwanted organisms at flow rates that
would not severely impact operations.
Treatment of ballast water
with the latest technology can meet standards at a rate of 2500 cubic meters (660,430
US Gallons) per hour.
A large vessel may still take
several hours per exchange to flush her ballast tanks at this rate.
Flow rates and energy
consumption must be acceptable to operators while producing no harmful effects
on the environment.
Ballast Water Standards
There are two types of ballast
water standards in the convention. Their differences are significant and they
should not be directly compared.
The first, Ballast Water
Exchange, is based on specified distances and depths where a vessel may
discharge.
Ballast Water Performance is a
standard based on the number of viable organisms allowed per unit of treated
water.
Some areas are instituting
standards which exceed the IMO guidelines. Both California and the Great Lakes
region of the United States have adopted stringent local guidelines.
The US is one of many major
shipping nations that have not signed the convention.
Thirty nations who have a
combined merchant gross tonnage of thirty-five percent of the global tonnage
are needed to ratify the convention.
Ballast Water Exchange
The standard for ballast water
exchange is fairly simple. A vessel must discharge foreign ballasts at a
specified distance from shore and at a specified depth using a submerged
discharge device.
Regulation B-4 and D-1 of the
BWM convention gives us the specifics.
· Exchange may take place 200
Nautical Miles (NM) from shore at a depth of 200 meters. If that is not
possible for safety or other reasons then a vessel may use the next procedure.
· If neither of these scenarios
is possible then a vessel may exchange “in an area designated by the port
state”. While undertaking ballast water exchange a port state must not cause
deviation or delay of a ship.
· Efficiency of exchange should
be at least 95% of volume and must be repeated three times. Vessels which
demonstrate high-efficiency exchanges may reduce the number of exchange cycles.
· Ballast Water Exchange should
only be undertaken when the safety of the vessel and crew are guaranteed.
Ballast Water Performance
In the case of Ballast Water
Exchange, ship operators are flushing untreated ballast out of the tanks.
This is a practical if not
perfect way of allowing older vessels to operate without the expense and
logistical problems of ballast water treatment retrofits.
New and retrofitted vessels
are much less likely to transport unwanted species because the ballast water
treatment systems eliminate a large proportion of the viable organisms from the
ballast tanks before discharge.
Systems like these
significantly reduce the chances of unwanted species being introduced by
inefficient exchange practices or in the event of an untreated near shore
discharge for safety reasons.
The IMO uses the following
guidelines for the Ballast Water Exchange standard in regulation D-2.
· Ballast water must contain
less than 10 viable organisms which are greater than or equal to 50 microns in size per cubic meter (264 US
Gallons). For reference, 50 microns is about half the thickness of an average
human hair.
· In addition, ballast water
must contain less than 10 viable organisms that are less than 50 microns but
greater than or equal to 10 microns per milliliter(1/1000th of a liter).
· Indicator Microbes may not
exceed the following amounts; Vibrio Cholerae -
less than 1 CFU (colony forming unit) per 100 Ml, E. Coli – less than 250 CFU per 100Ml, Enterococci – less than 100 CFU per 100Ml.
Water treated to this standard
is considered pure enough to discharge in most ports. These steps to re-mediate
ballast water are only effective in the removal of unwanted organisms.
It is still possible to carry
toxins like copper and heavy metals often found in ports to other destinations
in ballast water and these pollutants may concentrate in ballast tank sediment.
Radioactive substances can
also be transported in ballast but any serious cases would likely be found
quickly by monitoring personnel.
Paul
Bruno
United
States Coast Guard licensed Ship Master with Passenger Certification.
A
marine contractor familiar with all ship systems who has worked in the industry
for more than 20 years.
Has
a USCG Master's License and a degree in Creative Nonfiction and
Technical Writing, from the University of Wisconsin.
Experience
Paul
Bruno is a former writer for ThoughtCo who contributed work for over five years
on the maritime industry. He has worked with a variety of vessels throughout
his maritime career, including various commercial ships as well as the Great
Lakes schooner reproduction "Dennis Sullivan." As a marine
contractor, Paul is familiar with all ship systems, and his lifelong passion
for electronics has led to a focus on marine hardware and software development.
When he is not working, Paul's favorite hobby is knot work, keeping busy with
the nearly 4,000 documented knots, splices, and eyes.
Education
USCG
Master's License, 1993
Creative
Nonfiction and Technical Writing, University of Wisconsin, Milwaukee and
University of Waikato, Hamilton NZ
Paul
Bruno
ThoughtCo
and Dotdash
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