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STCW: Standards of Training, Certification &
Watchkeeping
STCW Code History
The International Maritime Organization
(IMO) held a convention to improve the
worldwide standards for safety and
training of professional mariners in 1978.
The Standards of Training, Certification &
Watchkeeping for Seafarers (STCW)
Convention established a code adopted by
many nations on July 7, 1978 and was
named the Seafarers Training,
Certification, & Watchkeeping (STCW)
Code. Subsequent conventions were held
in 1991, 1994, 1995 & 1997 to update
& revise the code. The amended code
(STCW 95) is named for the year that
it was accepted by the IMO and it's
signatory countries.
Purpose of the STCW Code
The Code was established to set certain minimum international
training standards for professional mariners. The level of
certification and training you are required to have is based on the
capacity you serve in & the type of vessel you work on.
Frequently Asked Questions
Q. Who
does the STCW Code affect?
Q.
What about
unlicensed crewmembers?
Q. Which
courses do I need to obtain STCW compliance?
Q. Why was
the Code Revised?
Q. Why doesn't
one size fit all with STCW?
Q. Why don't all
STCW Certificates look the same, isn't this a standard?
Q. What is
the IMO?
Q.
What are
Port and Flag State Control?
Q.
What is
the "White List"?
Q. What
happens if a country is not on the "White List"?
Q. What was
revised/amended in 1995 & how does it differ from the 1978 convention?
Q.
Which
countries are on the "White List"?
Q.
Who does the STCW Code affect??
A. There are 133 IMO signatory countries in
the world. Every country will issue a
document showing the level of mariner
certification and the capacity and
limitations of each.
All professional mariner certifications
must be STCW 95 Compliant with the
exception of U.S. mariners working
exclusively on inland waters or domestic
near coastal waters on vessels up to 200
gross tons waters, which are exempt from
the STCW requirements.
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Q.
What about unlicensed crewmembers?
A. All professional mariners that have
designated safety or pollution prevention
duties (even if they are unlicensed/
non certificated) must have Basic Safety
Training. This would include everyone
listed on the emergency bill, also called the
muster list or station bill.
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Q.
Which courses do I need to obtain STCW compliance?
A. Please refer to the
Professional Certificates & Licenses section
of this website for detailed information on
the courses and sea service required to
obtain STCW Compliant Licenses and
Certificates of Competency. If you already
hold a USCG license, but have not taken
the training to obtain an STCW 95
Compliant Certificate, please contact the
admissions office for a current required
course list for your license level.
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Q.
Why was the Code Revised?
A. Flick through the pages of any of the
leading industry magazines today and you
will discover a wealth of technical
innovation designed to make ships more
efficient and safer. Everything from the
propulsion systems, through the hull
design to the navigation suite is the result
of intense research and development
activity. The only exception to this rule is,
ironically, the one key component on
which everything else so often depends –
the officers and crew.
It is widely quoted that 80 per cent of
transport accidents are due to human error.
It is the human element on board ship that
can either provide the skills that may
prevent a disaster, or the frailty or plain
lack of competence that can cause one.
And, while the capability, complexity and
sheer power of technology seems to be
accelerating exponentially, the human
element remains a basic component with
all its strengths and all its weaknesses.
That is why the international maritime
community has now evolved from an
approach, which traditionally seeks
technical solutions to safety-related
problems and is focusing instead on the
role of human factors in maritime safety.
The 1995 STCW Convention is one of
several key initiatives that underpin this
new philosophy at IMO. It seeks to
establish a baseline standard for the
training and education of seafarers
throughout the world and, by placing an
emphasis on quality control and
competence-based training, it establishes a
structure that can ensure not only that the
required standard is met, but that it is seen
to be met. (Excerpted from the IMO website).
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Q.
Why doesn't one size fit all with STCW?
A. When STCW was revised in 1995 we all
expected that the new standard would
harmonize the training requirements and
therefore allow mariners to complete their
training in various parts of the world based
on where they desired to go to school or
based on where the vessel is based.
Unfortunately, things just haven't worked
out that way with many countries. This is
especially difficult for mariners with
multiple licenses issued by various
administrations and for those who are
certificated by one country and work on a
vessel flagged in another country. The
reason for this problem is that in order to
be considered a "white list" or fully
compliant country, the IMO requires each
administration to guarantee that proper
oversight has been and is continuously
performed on each school issuing training
certificates. It is impossible for the USCG
to oversee schools in foreign countries and
vice versa. That is why MPT and some
other schools in this country have applied
to many different countries for
recognition. This is a very costly process
because it requires auditing by each
country on a regular basis. In addition,
some countries are not interested in
approving schools outside their
jurisdiction. This is why it is so important
to ensure that the school a mariner attends
for training is recognized by the country
issuing the license and also that the Flag
State of the vessel will accept a
license/CoC issued by that country.
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Q.
Why don't all STCW Certificates look the same, isn't this a standard?
A. Each country (administration) is tasked by
the IMO to incorporate a statement of
compliance with the STCW Code into
their Certificate of Competency (license).
Most countries do not have any CoCs that
are exempt from STCW and therefore have
incorporated their statement of compliance
right on the face of the CoC. Because of
the US Inland and Great Lakes mariners
being exempt from STCW, the USCG has
to issue a separate certificate of STCW
compliance only to those mariners who
qualify. Therefore, a USCG licensed,
STCW compliant mariner will have either
two or three documents: Their license,
their STCW Certificate from the USCG,
and often a separate Z-Card which is the
Merchant Mariners Document and lists
unlicensed capacities.
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Q.
What is the IMO?
A. The IMO (International Maritime
Organization) located in London, is a part
of the United Nations and has 133 signatory
countries. The IMO is not a British Agency,
just as the main United Nations building
being located in New York does not make
the UN an American Agency.
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Q.
What are Port and Flag State Control?
A. Port and Flag State Control are key elements
in fulfilling the revisions of the STCW
Code. Port State Control is the authority an
administration has over vessels operating
within their waters (jurisdiction) regardless
of Flag. In a nutshell, Port State Control is
the oversight and inspections conducted by
the administration of the port on a vessel
entering their port. Simply stated, in the
United States, when the USCG boards a
vessel and "checks it out", they are fulfilling
part of their port state control authority.
The revised Chapter I of STCW includes
enhanced procedures concerning the
exercise of port State to allow intervention
in the case of deficiencies deemed to pose
a danger to persons, property or the
environment (regulation I/4). This can take
place if certificates are not in order or if the
ship is involved in a collision or
grounding, if there is an illegal discharge
of substances (causing pollution) or if
the ship is maneuvered in an erratic or
unsafe manner, etc.
Flag State Control is the authority an
administration has over vessels with their
own registration (flag) regardless of where
they are operating. Therefore, when the USCG conducts an inspection on a US
flagged vessel, they are acting as Flag
State Control.
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Q.
What is the "White List"?
A. The White List identifies the countries that
have demonstrated a plan of full
compliance with the STCW Convention
and Code as revised in 1995. The White
List was developed by an unbiased panel
of "competent persons" at the IMO. The
criteria used to develop the list included
what system of certification (licensing)
each administration would have, the
process of revalidation for certificates,
training center oversight, port state
control, and flag state control.
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Q.
What happens if a country is not on the "White List"?
A. Since there is a white list, it would stand to
reason that any country not on the white
list could be considered "black listed".
This is not the case. There is no actual
black list although very often that is how
non-compliant countries are described.
Port State Control and Flag State Control
both play a role in handling a non-white
listed country. For instance, if a vessel is
flagged by a non-white list country, when
it desires to enter a white list port, it can be
denied entry, detained or inspected
vigorously.
On the other hand, if a mariner has
a Certificate of Competency (license)
from a non-white list country, they will
most likely be denied a Certificate of
Equivalency, they will be rejected as a
viable manning solution for white list
flagged vessels, and their sea time and
training may either be highly scrutinized
or not accepted at all towards a CoC from
a white list country.
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Q.
What was revised/amended in 1995 & how does it differ from the 1978
convention?
A. The 1995 amendments represented a major
revision of the Convention, in response
to a recognized need to bring the
Convention up to date and to respond to
critics who pointed out the many vague
phrases, such as "to the satisfaction of the
Administration", which resulted in
different interpretations being made.
Others complained that the Convention
was never uniformly applied and did not
impose any strict obligations on Parties
regarding implementation. The 1995
amendments entered into force on 1
February 1997. However, until 1 February
2002, parties were allowed to continue to
issue, recognize and endorse certificates,
which applied before that date in respect of
seafarers who began training or seagoing
service before 1 August 1998.
One of the major features of the revision
was the division of the technical annex into
regulations, divided into Chapters as
before, and a new STCW Code, to which
many technical regulations have been
transferred. Part A of the Code is
mandatory while Part B is recommended.
Dividing the regulations up in this way
makes administration easier and it also
makes the task of revising and updating
them more simple: for procedural and
legal reasons there is no need to call a full
conference to make changes to Codes.
Some of the most important amendments
adopted by the Conference concern
Chapter I - General Provisions.
They include the following:
Ensuring compliance
with the Convention
Parties to the Convention are required to
provide detailed information to IMO
concerning administrative measures taken
to ensure compliance with the Convention.
This represented the first time that IMO
had been called upon to act in relation
to compliance and implementation -
generally, implementation is down
to the flag States, while port State control
also acts to ensure compliance. Under
Chapter I, regulation I/7 of the revised
Convention, Parties are required to
provide detailed information to IMO
concerning administrative measures taken
to ensure compliance with the Convention,
education and training courses,
certification procedures and other factors
relevant to implementation.
By the 1 August 1998 deadline for
submission of information (established in
section A-I/7 of the STCW Code) 82 out of
the 133 STCW Parties had communicated
information on compliance with the
requirements of the revised Convention.
The 82 Parties which met the deadline
represent well over 90% of the world's
ships and seafarers.
The information is reviewed by panels of
competent persons, nominated by Parties
to the STCW Convention, who report on
their findings to the IMO Secretary-
General, who, in turn, reports to the
Maritime Safety Committee (MSC) on the
Parties which fully comply. The MSC then
produces a list of Parties in compliance
with the 1995 amendments.
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Q.
Which countries are on the "White List"?
A. Since this list does change, please refer to
the STCW Code book for this information
or call MPT's Admissions Office and we
will send you a copy.
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