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Compulsory Insurance and Compensation for Bunker Oil Pollution Damage

By: Zhu, Ling [author.].
Contributor(s): SpringerLink (Online service).
Material type: materialTypeLabelBookSeries: Hamburg Studies on Maritime Affairs: 5Publisher: Berlin, Heidelberg : Springer Berlin Heidelberg, 2007.Description: XVIII, 242 p. online resource.Content type: text Media type: computer Carrier type: online resourceISBN: 9783540459033.Subject(s): Law | Private international law | Conflict of laws | International law | Comparative law | Public law | Law | Private International Law, International & Foreign Law, Comparative Law | Public LawDDC classification: 340.9 | 340.2 Online resources: Click here to access online
Contents:
Pollution from Ships’ Bunkers and the Advent of the Bunkers Convention -- The Birth of Compulsory Insurance for Oil Pollution Liability -- Strict Liability and Insurance -- Insurance and the Quest for Adequate Compensation -- Limitation of Liability and the Limit of Insurance -- Direct Action against the Insurer and its Limited Effect -- Outlook on Insurance and Compensation for Bunker-Oil Pollution Liability -- Summary of Study.
In: Springer eBooksSummary: Oil tankers are not the only vessels that have caused oil pollution at sea. Numerous spills in the past have been of heavy fuel oil from non-tankers. However, the international liability and compensation regime covered only oil pollution damage caused by oil tankers. There was thus a need to bring the law on marine oil pollution responsive to oil pollution damage caused by non-tankers. In March 2001, the International Convention on Civil Liability for Bunker Oil Pollution Damage was adopted following a diplomatic conference at the International Maritime Organization. Though this convention has not yet come into force, its various aspects should already be considered as they will surely affect the maritime industry as a whole and the non-tanker sector, in particular. This book provides a timely and comprehensive study on the concept of compulsory insurance, its main purpose of ensuring compensation and its interrelations with other features such as the rule of strict liability and the limitation of liability under the convention.
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Pollution from Ships’ Bunkers and the Advent of the Bunkers Convention -- The Birth of Compulsory Insurance for Oil Pollution Liability -- Strict Liability and Insurance -- Insurance and the Quest for Adequate Compensation -- Limitation of Liability and the Limit of Insurance -- Direct Action against the Insurer and its Limited Effect -- Outlook on Insurance and Compensation for Bunker-Oil Pollution Liability -- Summary of Study.

Oil tankers are not the only vessels that have caused oil pollution at sea. Numerous spills in the past have been of heavy fuel oil from non-tankers. However, the international liability and compensation regime covered only oil pollution damage caused by oil tankers. There was thus a need to bring the law on marine oil pollution responsive to oil pollution damage caused by non-tankers. In March 2001, the International Convention on Civil Liability for Bunker Oil Pollution Damage was adopted following a diplomatic conference at the International Maritime Organization. Though this convention has not yet come into force, its various aspects should already be considered as they will surely affect the maritime industry as a whole and the non-tanker sector, in particular. This book provides a timely and comprehensive study on the concept of compulsory insurance, its main purpose of ensuring compensation and its interrelations with other features such as the rule of strict liability and the limitation of liability under the convention.

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