Global investors call for end to seafarers marooned at sea due to Covid

A group of investors called for an end to a crisis involving hundreds of thousands of seafarers stuck on ships for months due to Covid, warning the situation was creating bigger risks every day

Topics
Coronavirus | global investors | seafarers

Reuters  |  LONDON 

Representative image
Representative image

By Jonathan Saul

LONDON (Reuters) - A group of leading investors on Wednesday called for an end to a crisis involving hundreds of thousands of stuck on ships for many months due to COVID-19, warning that the situation was creating bigger risks every day.

About 90% of world trade is transported by sea, and restrictions in many jurisdictions are affecting supply chains.

In December the U.N. General Assembly urged all countries to designate and other maritime personnel as key workers. The non-binding resolution came after an earlier call in June by U.N. chief Antonio Guterres.

In a letter sent to Guterres in late December, the investor group, which represents over $2 trillion in assets, said that it was "no longer solely a shipping industry problem".

Shipping industry officials say many sailors are at breaking point and many have been at sea for longer than an 11-month limit laid out in a maritime labour convention.

This is the first time that such a group of investment companies have joined the efforts to ensure do not have to exceed their maximum working limit, whilst also calling for key worker status to accelerate their transfers from ships even during lockdowns.

Vincent Kaufmann, chief executive of the Ethos Foundation, which includes Swiss pension funds, described the situation involving an estimated 400,000 merchant sailors as "a humanitarian tragedy as well as a major supply chain risk for many companies".

"If nothing is done, it's just a matter of time before something disastrous happens," Jenn-Hui Tan, with Fidelity International which is leading the investor group, told Reuters separately.

"The performance of some of the companies we invest in will ultimately be linked to the safety of cargoes being handled by seafarers. Ensuring that the rights and interests of seafarers are represented helps lower the operational risks."

 

(Reporting by Jonathan Saul; editing by Jonathan Oatis)

(Only the headline and picture of this report may have been reworked by the Business Standard staff; the rest of the content is auto-generated from a syndicated feed.)

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First Published: Wed, January 13 2021. 07:01 IST
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