|
The Seafaring
and Manning Sector (March 29, 2004)
THE Seafaring
and Manning Sector must urgently face the challenge
posed by other seafaring countries that are trying
to supplant the Filipino seafarer and take over
the pre-eminent position occupied by the Philippines
as the number one supplier of seafarers for the
world's fleet.
To respond to
the challenge, the sector has identified goals
and consequent benefits to the economy if the
proper legal and economic environment is provided
to the sector. History Out of the overseas shipping
sector grew the seafaring sector. Seafarers who
could not serve on our own tonnage were deployed
on vessels of other countries.
Foreign ship owners
recognized the competence and competitiveness
of our seafarers and steadily accepted and increased
deployment of Filipino seafarers on their vessels.
The National Seaman's Board Filipino seafarers
were recognized by the Government as a special
class of overseas workers because they had to
comply with the stringent requirements imposed
by international convention. They were originally
under the jurisdiction of a specialized agency
called the National Seaman's Board that supervised
and administered their deployment.
The Philippine
Overseas Employment Administration. The phenomenon
of the 1980s, wherein an upsurge in placement
of overseas Filipino contract workers for land-based
work was experienced, prodded government to abolish
the specialized agency for seafarers and create
the Philippine Overseas Employment Administration.
This office presently oversees the recruitment
and placement of land-based workers and the hiring
and deployment of sea-based workers.
Policies of the
office, however, provide little distinction between
land-based and sea-based employment despite distinct
differences in their terms and conditions of employment.
The International Maritime Organization Sea-based
workers are required to meet the standards of
international conventions formulated and implemented
by the International Maritime Organization (IMO).
The IMO is an agency of the United Nations in
charge of overseeing a wide variety of international
maritime concerns, such as safety of life at sea,
classification requirements for vessels, marine
pollution, use of aquatic resources and other
similar concerns.
Seafarers enjoy
contractual employment following world standards
and practices. They are covered by employment
contracts that mandate that they should serve
on board for a maximum of 12 months only for any
given time and must have regular paid shore leaves
of at least two months in a year. They are re-deployed
once they complete their mandated shore leave.
In recognition
of the competence, skill and proficiency attained
by our seafarers in meeting the Standards for
Training, Certification and Watchkeeping (STCW),
the Philippines was included in the IMO's "White
List" in 2000. The White List catalogues the list
of countries from which qualified seafarers may
be sourced.
Challenges faced
by the Filipino seafarer. Today, we currently
deploy 200,000 seafarers who serve on 20% of the
total world fleet. We have become the single biggest
ethnic group serving the world fleet. Total official
remittances received through allotments to families
of seafarers amount to more than US $1 billion.
Estimates for unofficial remittances indicate
that total dollar inflow from the seafaring sector
is US$2 billion.
The multiplier
effect on support industries indicates the generation
of another P6 billion from schools, training centers,
medical arts, tourism and other allied services.
World
Fleet Size as March 2003
|
| |
No. |
DWT |
Bulker
|
8,641
|
311,234,329
|
Combination
|
179
|
12,343,551
|
Container
|
3,035
|
84,823,346
|
| Dry Cargo |
7,533 |
47,301,302 |
| Miscellaneous |
6,870 |
16,229,752 |
| Offshore |
3,360 |
25,261,765 |
| Pass./ Ferry |
3,097 |
5,278,623 |
| Reefer |
1,782 |
8,866,174 |
| RORO |
1,998 |
18,300,430 |
| Tanker |
8,749 |
339,191,427 |
| Total |
45,244 |
868,830,699 |

The Philippines
today is the premier supplier of seafarers. The
Filipino seafarer, however, is in danger of losing
this pre-eminent position to foreign competition.
In the period from 1996 to 2000, the increase
in deployment of seafarers was only 14%. The increase
includes new deployment of hotel personnel on
cruise vessels. This means that there has been
a decrease in deployment for seafarers in the
deck and engine departments over the last five
years.
The decline has
been the source of grave concern to the seafaring
sector as it translates to a loss of jobs for
our seafarers who have little opportunity for
alternative employment locally. What needs to
be done? We must find ways to remain competitive
against emerging competition and be able to attract
foreign ship owners who have started to look for
alternatives in other seafaring countries.
We must urgently
reverse the emerging reputation of the Filipino
seafarer as a troublemaker who does not honor
the terms and conditions of his contract. This
reputation has come about because of the practice
some Filipino seafarers have resorted to at the
instigation of unscrupulous foreign lawyers who
have influenced our seafarers to renege on their
contracts and file cases in other jurisdictions
when such cases properly fall within the jurisdiction
of Philippine courts.
To ensure the
competitiveness of the Filipino seafarer, the
Seafaring and Manning Sector has identified the
following program of action which requires legislative
and executive attention:
* Enactment of
the Overseas Seafarers Code that will set the
rules for sea-based employment and separate it
from the land-based OFW.
*Separation of
OWWA fund contributions of sea-based workers from
land-based workers.
*
Implementation of e-documentation and a one-stop-shop,
applicable to both our domestic and overseas seafarers,
to reduce the cost of doing business in the Philippines
and to have data available to chart our progress
and benchmark our growth and competitiveness.
* Development
of a special integrated program where the domestic
shipping industry can work with the schools to
take on students on the third year of college
for on board training.
* Development
of the expertise of our seafarers to become ship
managers.
* Adoption of
standards for the training of domestic maritime
manpower, the implementation of programs for their
continued training and upgrading, and the compliance
of domestic seafarers with standards set for the
training of seafarers, in order to create a pool
of trained manpower.
* Compliance of
domestic seafarers with the QDC requirements by
June 2003
* Implementation
of more stringent rules for schools and the close
monitoring of its compliance with international
standards.
* Exemptions from
tariff for importations of the industry.
* Adoption of
an aggressive internal and external promotions
campaign.
* Major improvement
of the quality of our seafarers education, values
and work ethics.
* Reversal of
the tendency of our seafarers to be litigious.
* Review and
improvement of medical claims system.
Back
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Cabotage
in other jurisdictions (March 15, 2004)
COUNTRIES all
over the world recognize the need to exercise
sovereign control over movements of trade and
commerce, and preserve national security within
their territorial waters. They have each imposed
certain restrictions on the entry of foreign vessels
in their territory.
The following
charts show a sampling of countries' posture towards
cabotage and the authority of foreign vessels
to ply coastwise routes.
Comparison of
cabotage in ASEAN:
| Country |
Is
the Cabotage in for Restriction |
|
| Indonesia |
Yes |
Domestic
Owners may charter foreign flagged vessels
to carry dometic cargo subject to approval
of the Directorate General of Sea Communications
|
| Malaysia |
Yes |
Only Malaysian
flagged vessels are allowed to engage in
domestic trade
|
| Myanmar |
Yes |
Trade
by foreign vessels in coastal waters is
restricted and controlled by the Ministry
of Commerce
|
| Thailand |
Yes |
Only Thai
registered ships owned by Thai citizens
or by companies 70% of the capital trade
in Thai territorial waters
|
| Vietnam |
Yes |
Priority
is given to Vietnamese sea-going vessels
in the carriage of passengers and cargo
between Vietnamese seaports. Foreign vessels
are allowed only when approved by the Minister
of Transport.
|
Singapore
|
No |
|
Comparison of cabotage in other
Asian countries:
| China |
Yes |
Foreign
vessels are not permitted to operate maritime
transport and haulage within ports of the
People’s Republic of China without
the approval of the relevant transport departments
under the State Council; only Chinese nationals
are allowed to own vessel
|
| Japan |
Yes |
Transport
of goods or passengers between Japanese
ports shall be open only to Japanese ships
and only Japanese ships shall be allowed
to call at any port that is not open to
foreign commerce and navigation.
|
Comparison of cabotage in the
United States of America, Canada and Australia:
| United
States |
Yes |
No
vessel shall be allowed to operate in the
coastwise trade unless the same is owned
by citizens of the United States or by corporations
75% of the capital is owned by citizens
of the United States. Coastwise laws of
the U.S. shall extend to its island.
|
| Canada |
Yes |
No foreign
ship or non-duty paid ship shall engage
in coasting trade except in accordance with
the license issued to it.
|
| Australia |
Yes |
Only Australian
flagged vessels manned by Australian nationals
are allowed to engage in coastwise trade.
Australian flagged vessels may be owned
and operated by foreign nationals or foreign
companies without restriction.
|
Back
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Cabotage
and the Philippine maritime industry (March 1,
2004)
Definition
of cabotage.
Cabotage is taken from the Spanish "cabotaje".
Its root word is "cabo" meaning "cape",
"promontory" or "headland".
"Cabotage" in Spanish refers to "sailing
from cape to cape".
In French, its
root word is "caboter" which means "sailing
along the coast".
In Black's Law
Dictionary, cabotage has been defined as "a
nautical term from the Spanish denoting strictly
navigation from cape to cape along the coast without
going out into the open sea. In international
law, cabotage is identified with coasting trade
so that it means navigating and trading along
the coast between ports thereof."
In Webster's International
Dictionary, cabotage refers to "1. trade
or transport in coastal waters or between two
points within a country especially by other than
domestic carriers; 2.a. the right to engage in
cabotage; b. restriction of the right of cabotage
to domestic carriers."
How it
applies to RP law?
Under Philippine law, trade within Philippine
territorial waters and its inland rivers is restricted
to vessels owned by Filipinos or to partnerships
wholly owned by Filipinos or to corporations 60%
of the capital of which is owned by Filipinos.
This restriction is found in Section 16 (a) of
the Public Service Act of 1936 and in Section
11, Article XII of the 1987 Philippine Constitution.
It has been carried over from the 1935 Constitution
to the 1973 Constitution to the present constitution.
The restriction
imposed by cabotage is jointly enforced by the
Maritime Industry Authority (MARINA) and the Bureau
of Customs (BOC). The restriction, however, is
not absolute. Our Legislature has given both agencies
a degree of discretion to determine foreign vessels
may trade in Philippine territorial waters.
MARINA licenses
vessels for the domestic trade provided the vessel's
operator meets the ownership requirements imposed
by the Public Service Act and the Philippine Constitution.
It grants special permits to determine when foreign
vessels may trade in our territorial waters.
The BOC clears
foreign vessels for entry into the Philippines
and authorizes it to carry passengers and cargo
from its port of entry to its Philippine port
of destination. Conversely, the BOC clears the
foreign vessel so that it can pick up export cargo
from the Philippine port of origin, through any
Philippine port to the port of foreign destination.
Historical
antecedent.
The present restriction on cabotage in Philippine
law, though less restrictive than its legal antecedent,
was borrowed from American law, particularly,
the Jones Act of 1920.
But even before
the Jones Act, Philippine law already had in place
a restriction on cabotage. Act 2761 of the Philippine
Legislature required that Philippine or US citizens,
or companies wholly owned by Philippine or US
citizens shall be the only ones authorized to
operate vessels in Philippine domestic trade.
This was similar to the pre-Jones Act provision
of American law that required vessels in the domestic
trade to be operated by US citizens or by companies
wholly owned by citizens of the United States.
The Jones Act
of 1920, which continues in force in the United
States today, served to strengthen domestic trade
within the continental United States and between
the United States mainland and its territories
and possessions. The primary reason for the law
was premised on national defense considerations,
the United States having just come out of World
War I.
Further, the US
wanted to ensure "the proper growth of its
foreign and domestic commerce", "owned
and operated under the United States flag by citizens
of the United States" and mandated that it
must have "the best-equipped and most suitable
types of vessels sufficient to carry the greater
portion of its commerce and serve as a naval or
military auxiliary in times of war or national
emergency, ultimately owned and operated privately
by citizens of the United Sates" (Section
861, Chapter 24, Title 46, US Code, Merchant Marine
Act, 1920 and Section 1101, Chapter 27, Title
46, US Code, Merchant Marine Act of 1936).
A later amendment
to the US Code included the carriage of passengers
in the restriction on cabotage.
The American fleet
was built on government capital and was privatized
only after particular routes had attained a degree
of viability sufficient to attract the private
ownership of vessels plying the route.
The Jones Act
of 1920 was initially applied to trade between
the United States and the Philippine archipelago
while regulatory power over sea transport between
ports and places within the Philippines was delegated
to Philippine authorities.
The Public Service
Act of 1936 as well as the Tariff and Customs
laws institutionalized by the Philippine Commonwealth
adopted the provisions of the Jones Act and, thus,
made permanent the citizenship and ownership restrictions
on vessels in the inter-island trade.
Why cabotage
was adopted?
Cabotage, as a policy of the State, was adopted
by the Philippine legislature during the pre-Commonwealth
days. They considered steamship lines as vital
arteries of commerce to an archipelago like the
Philippines and its viability and continued operation
was crucial to the country's geography.
It was implemented
to protect national security and prevent foreign
interlopers who might take advantage of the Filipino's
lavish hospitality to chart Philippine waters,
to obtain valuable information for unfriendly
foreign powers, to stir up insurrection or to
prejudice Filipino commerce.
Cabotage was enforced
as a means to regulate the transportation of merchandise
and passengers in Philippine waters, encourage
trade and navigation by Filipinos, develop Philippine
shipping, institute a measure of protection against
fraud upon revenue in coastwise trade, safeguard
the country’s commerce and promote its prosperity.
The restriction
of cabotage stems from the sovereign power of
a State to control its domestic affairs and to
direct its relation with other states.
This sovereign
power of the State to control its domestic affairs
includes the power to regulate trade and commerce
within its territory. The use of our territorial
waters is considered a privilege that may be permitted
under conditions imposed by our Legislature.
In regulating
our trade and commerce and the use of our territorial
waters, our Legislature deemed it proper to nationalize
our shipping industry. Thus, it imposed a limit
to foreign ownership of vessels to be operated
in the domestic trade, and required vessels of
foreign ownership to be subject to certain restrictions
if it must carry passengers or merchandise through
our territorial waters. The provisions of our
Public Service Act as well as our Tariff and Customs
mirror these restrictions.
In controlling
domestic trade, the Public Service Act requires
that vessels to be operated in the domestic trade
must be owned by Filipinos, or by partnerships
wholly owned by Filipinos, or by corporations
60% of the capital of which is owned by Filipinos.
In regulating
the operation of foreign vessels in Philippine
territorial waters, the Tariff and Customs Code
requires that the BOC must clear all foreign vessels
for entry into the Philippines. Further, the BOC
must give requisite authority to such foreign
vessel for it to carry passengers and cargo from
its port of entry to its Philippine port of destination,
and to clear such foreign vessel so that it can
pick up export cargo from the Philippine port
of origin, through any other Philippine port to
its port of foreign destination.
Under the Tariff
and Customs Code, foreign vessels may call at
ports of entry or ports open to foreign commerce
and navigation. The BOC has enlarged the number
of ports of entry. This has resulted in increased
ship calls and more of our export cargo being
carried directly by foreign lines.
Today, about
80% to 90% of our export cargo is carried directly
by foreign lines.
Back
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Roll
on-roll off system (February 16, 2004)
The roll on-roll
off (RORO) system is a method of handling cargo
wherein vessels are designed with a ramp at a
stern, which may be lowered at the pier, to allow
the acceptance and discharge of cargo moving through
their own motive power. The vessel ramp is powered
by hydraulic cylinders and ramp hinges.
Lifts as well
as other deck equipment are provided to allow
vehicles access to upper and lower vehicle decks.
Vessels equipped with a ramp are more commonly
called "RORO vessels". RORO vessels may either
be pure RORO vessels or multi-purpose RORO vessels.
Pure RORO vessels usually refer to pure car carriers
and are smaller in size, while multi-purpose RORO
vessels pertain to vessels with the capacity to
carry heavy vehicles, equipment, containers and
other heavy loads. Vehicles shipped through RORO
vessels may be owner-driven, or self-propelled
but not owner-driven. In the first instance, the
owner retains control over the vehicle and accompanies
the vehicle to its destination. In the latter
instance, the vehicle is turned over to the shipping
company as unaccompanied cargo.
RORO operations
RORO operations catering to owner-driven vehicles
require the provision of large vehicle terminal
waiting areas where vehicles may park while waiting
for the ferry. Traffic management systems are
needed to ensure the smooth ingress and egress
of vehicles. Connection to established road networks
must be considered in establishing the location
of the RORO port. There should be regular vessel
frequencies to develop customer trust. The corresponding
terminal fee and related charges will have to
be collected for the maintenance of the traffic
management system as well as for terminal maintenance,
terminal security, wharf management and port management
services.
On-board cargo
handling or stevedoring services will be necessary
to secure vehicles. Cargo handling and stevedoring
services include car lashing and the fixing of
wheel chocks to make sure that vehicles do not
roll during the voyage. Self-propelled but non-owner
driven vehicles require on-dock as well as on-board
stevedoring. The corresponding fees for these
services will be collected from the shipper at
origin and the consignee at destination. What
must be done? The RORO system is just one of the
means to link our islands.
There is an urgent
need to work on an Overall Master Plan for the
complete development of our national transport
system, which will include:
*
The road-RORO network to serve as a seamless highway
to bridge the islands;
* The main ports to service the long haul routes;
* The feeder or hub ports to service import and
export traders;
* The tramp, liner and RORO operators in the bulk
and container trades serving other areas.
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Cebu-Manila
Door-to-Door Shipment- One TEU (February 2, 2004)
Cebu-Manila
Door-to-Door Shipment-
One TEU
|
Trucking |
|
|
|
|
|
|
| (warehouse to
pier) |
1,850.00 |
6% |
1,850.00 |
7% |
i,850.00 |
8% |
Arrastre
(Cebu)
Wharfage (Cebu)
Documentary StampTax
Freight
Wharfage (Manila)
Arrastre (Manila)
|
|
526
73
10
23,174.23
69
823.35
|
2%
0%
0%
77%
0%
3%
|
526
73
10
18,515.73
69
823.35
|
2%
0%
0%
73%
0%
3%
|
526
73
10
15,077.22
69
823.35
|
2%
0%
0%
69%
0%
4%
|
Trucking
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
| (pier to consignee) |
|
3,450.00
|
12% |
3,450.00
|
15% |
3,450.00
|
17% |
| |
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
Total
|
|
P29,975.58
|
100% |
P25,317.08
|
100% |
P21,878.57
|
100% |
| |
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
Summary
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
Trucking
Shipping
Arrastre
Port Charges
Total
|
|
5,300.00
23,174.23
1,349.35
142
P29,975.58
|
18%
77%
5%
0%
100%
|
5,300
18,515.73
1,349.35
142
P25,317.08
|
22%
73%
5%
0%
100%
|
5,300
15,077.22
1,349.35
142
P21,878.57
|
25%
69%
6%
0%
100%
|
Back to Top
Unbundling
sea freight, port charges and other service fees
(January 19, 2004)
Seafreight
The shipping company's
role is to transport cargo from the port of origin
to the port of destination.
* Free In-Free Out: Seafreight contracted may
be "free in-free out" or FIO. Under
FIO terms, the shipper pays the seafreight to
the shipping company and the cost for loading
the cargo onto a vessel, or stevedoring costs,
to the terminal operator. The consignee, or receiver
of the cargo, must pay for stevedoring charges
for discharging the cargo from the vessel. The
stevedoring fees due at loading and discharging
ports are paid directly to the stevedores separately
from sea freight. This arrangement is more commonly
used for the carriage of bulk cargoes, non-containerized
general cargo and oil products.
* Liner Terms: Sea freight can also be contracted
under liner terms. Under liner terms, the shipper
pays to the shipping company the sea freight,
the cost of loading cargo onto a vessel or stevedoring
costs and the cost for discharging the cargo from
the vessel to the shore. The shipping company
takes responsibility for remitting payment to
the terminal operator or stevedores. Another cost
called on-dock stevedoring, or the movement of
cargo from shipside onward, was paid for by the
shipper at origin and the consignee at destination,
whether the carriage was "free in-free out"
or on "liner terms".
Evolution
of Liner Terms
Before containerization,
most shipping services were done on FIO basis
with the shipper and consignee paying for costs
outside of seafreight.
At the time container
operations were introduced, port operators did
not have the equipment needed to support container
operations. The shipping companies were forced
to provide the equipment, like forklifts and stackers,
and absorb all the related handling costs for
the movement of containers from the terminal gate
at origin to the vessel and from the vessel to
the terminal gate at destination.
Containerization translated to a marked improvement
in service through shorter vessel port stay, streamlined
labor requirements for stevedoring and cargo handling,
increased frequencies, and lower breakage and
pilferage of cargo.
The fee charged to the shipper was called the
"basic service rate" and included the
freight rate, as well as the on-board and on-dock
stevedoring needed to bring the container to the
terminal gate. The shipping company also offered
to provide the trucking service at both ends of
shipment to ensure the quick turnaround of containers.
Shipments on these terms were originally called
"liner terms".
As container shipping evolved, "liner terms"
became restricted to sea freight and on-board
stevedoring. Work for on-dock stevedoring and
for trucking services were paid for separately
from sea freight by the shipper at origin and
the consignee at destination.
Terminal Handling Charge
About ten years ago, international shipping companies
introduced the "terminal handling charge"
or THC. The THC was created in order to simplify
the freight structure, veer away from "liner
terms" and revert to the traditional practice
of port-to-port terms. Further, it was set up
to address the impact brought about by the "floating
exchange system" for world currencies by
charging THC in the local currency.
The Terminal Handling Charge covers all fees pertaining
to cargo handling whether on-board or on-dock,
including loading and discharging rates for on-board
stevedores, local lift on-lift off rate to move
the cargo, on-dock stevedoring work, cost for
heavy equipment, cost for crane hire, management
service fee, local statutory fees, government
taxes and charges as well as other similar fees.
THC is collected by the shipping company from
the shipper or consignee and is paid to the terminal
operator or port authority.
Cargo Handling Costs
Items which form part of cargo handling costs
and is recovered through the Terminal Handling
Charge include the following:
* On board stevedoring
* Lift on-lift off service
* Trucking service
* Heavy equipment use
* Stuffing and stripping
* Sorting and stacking
* Crane hire
* Terminal maintenance
* Terminal security
* Wharf management
* Port management services
* Other services done on the cargo either on dock
or on board
* Applicable taxes, fees and other government
charges.
2004
Q2 |2004 Q1
2003 Q4
l 2003
Q3 l 2003 Q2 l 2003 Q1
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|