XINDE MARINE NEWS
Hundreds of seafarers still stuck in Ukraine despite grains corridor Reuters 2022-09-16 10:17

Around 82 ships with 418 seafarers remain stuck around Ukrainian ports despite the opening of a U.N.-backed sea corridor to ship grains with efforts to get the mariners sailing still stuck, shipping industry officials said on Thursday.
 
The agreement reached in July, creating a protected sea transit corridor, was designed to alleviate global food shortages, with Ukraine’s customers including some of the world’s poorest countries.
 
However, the initiative only involved dry bulk ships around three Ukrainian ports with dozens of other vessels including oil tankers not able to access the corridor and awaiting approval to leave while waterways remain controlled by Russia and other ports are blocked by Ukraine.
 
According to analysis by the International Chamber of Shipping (ICS) six ships, which had been stuck since Moscow’s Feb. 24 invasion of Ukraine, had been able to leave Ukraine before the corridor was announced in July.
 
“The corridor was made only for the purpose of loading the grain to leave,” ICS Chairman Emanuele Grimaldi told a news briefing.
 
“You can understand they (Ukraine) are at war and there are mines around.”
 
At the start of the conflict in late February approximately 2,000 seafarers from all over the world were stranded aboard up to 94 vessels in Ukrainian ports.
 
Grimaldi said the ICS, which represents over 80% of the world’s merchant fleet, had discussions this week with U.N. shipping agency the International Maritime Organization (IMO) to speed up matters.
 
“It is not easy and a complicated matter,” he said.
 
There was no immediate IMO comment.

Source: Reuters

The opinions expressed herein are the author's and not necessarily those of The Xinde Marine News.

Please Contact Us at:

media@xindemarine.com


展开全文

Related Posts

Attention Distraction: A Major Threat to Maritime Safety

xinde marine news2025-10-17

U.S.-China Port-Fee Clash Sparks Boardroom Upheaval in Shipping

xinde marine news2025-10-16

Washington Escalates, Brussels Backstops: IMO's Net-Zero Framework Faces Moment of Truth in London

Xinde Marine News Chen Yang2025-10-15

Inclusion remains at the heart of powering shipping's future

WISTA International2025-10-10

GCMD and International Association of Ports and Harbors (IAPH) forge Coalition partnership to drive d

GCMD2025-10-09

BIMCO adopts annex addressing methanol bunkering

BIMCO2025-10-09