ECSA - European Community Shipowners' Associations asbl vzw

06/18/2026 | News release | Distributed by Public on 06/18/2026 01:11

European Shipowners | ECSA and ICS publish study on gaps between the EU Ship Recycling Regulation and the Hong Kong Convention, stressing the need for one international standard

European Shipowners | ECSA and ICS publish study on gaps between the EU Ship Recycling Regulation and the Hong Kong Convention, stressing the need for one international standard

European Shipowners | ECSA and the International Chamber of Shipping (ICS) are releasing today an independent study on the key areas of divergence between the EU Ship Recycling Regulation (EU SRR) and the International Maritime Organization (IMO) Hong Kong Convention (HKC). The study also examines the significant change that the new global standards have brought after the HKC entered into force.

Aiming to contribute to the IMO experience-building process on the HKC, ES|ECSA and ICS commissioned the study to highlight the main areas of divergence between the EU SRR and the IMO HKC and inform the discussions ahead. The study also looks at the remarkable progress made worldwide after HKC entered into force and the number of ship recycling facilities that have been certified as complying with the new global standard.

"The entry into force of the Hong Kong Convention on 26 June 2025, was a major milestone for the safe and environmentally sound recycling of ships worldwide. It has brought on significant and measurable change internationally and has already delivered more compliant facilities. Our study identifies concrete areas where we can build on the experience gained from the EU Ship Recycling Regulation to strengthen the Convention and raise global standards. The experience-building phase starting in 2027 is the right opportunity to discuss areas of improvement and ensure one ambitious international standard" said Sotiris Raptis, Secretary General of European Shipowners | ECSA. "In the meantime, we need to address current capacity challenges while promoting safe, environmentally sound ship recycling on a global scale. Facilitating the inclusion of non-OECD yards on the EU SRR list must be a priority for the EU" he added.

John Stawpert, Principal Director (Marine) at the International Chamber of Shipping, commented: "At ICS we welcomed the entry into force of the Hong Kong Convention in 2025. Global regulations and instruments such as these are critical to safe and sustainable shipping practices. This detailed independent study demonstrates the significant overlaps between the EU Ship Recycling Regulation and the Hong Kong Convention. The report highlights where there is divergence within the two instruments and by identifying three critical gaps gives a clear steer for areas to work on during the IMO experience building phase next year. We look forward to working with partners at IMO to further strengthen this crucial instrument."

The study underlines that HKC's far wider global scope is a major strength. Addressing the gaps identified would strengthen the Convention, raise global standards and ensure consistent implementation worldwide. To this end, the study highlights three key areas that could be addressed:

  • Authorisation of ship recycling facilities: HKC Parties should communicate their mechanisms for authorising facilities, including the mandatory criteria applied and the form and frequency of inspections, with clearer rules on the organisations to which authorisation may be delegated.
  • Downstream waste management: the international standards applicable to downstream waste management under the HKC should be specified, and Parties should communicate which standards they consider mandatory when authorising facilities.
  • Inventory of Hazardous Materials: the scope of the inventory under the HKC should be updated to cover the larger number of materials included under the EU SRR.

The full study is available here.

For press and media enquiries:

European Shipowners | ECSA: Luisa Puccio, [email protected], +32 492 733623

ICS: Edgar Durbin, [email protected], +44 7498 418 438

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