Maritime Education
RMU–WMU Partnership Signals New Era for Maritime Education in West Africa

RMU–WMU Partnership Signals New Era for Maritime Education in West Africa
MoU Signed on Sidelines of IMO Technical Cooperation Committee Session in London
By Okeoghene Onoriobe | Waterways News
The Regional Maritime University (RMU), headquartered in Accra, Ghana, has formalised a landmark Memorandum of Understanding (MoU) with the World Maritime University (WMU), the International Maritime Organization’s premier postgraduate institution based in Malmö, Sweden — a development that signals a new chapter in Africa’s push to build world-class maritime human capital.
The agreement was concluded on the sidelines of the 76th Session of the IMO Technical Cooperation Committee in London, one of the IMO’s principal bodies charged with overseeing global maritime capacity development and institutional support to developing states. The setting was deliberate: the Technical Cooperation Committee is the forum through which the IMO coordinates the activities of its recognised partner institutions, including WMU and the IMO International Maritime Law Institute (IMLI), making it the natural stage for this kind of inter-institutional commitment.
Scope of the Agreement
Under the terms of the MoU, RMU and WMU will deepen cooperation across a broad spectrum of academic and institutional activities. These include joint research initiatives, faculty and student exchange programmes, academic capacity building, curriculum development, and expanded access to WMU’s world-class learning resources and postgraduate programmes.
The agreement also opens a structured pathway for RMU staff and faculty to participate in WMU academic programmes — an avenue that could meaningfully close the gap between African maritime education standards and the best the global industry currently offers.
WMU has trained over 6,600 alumni from 171 countries and territories, many of whom now serve as senior maritime officials in government ministries, heads of shipping companies and ports, directors of naval organisations, and national representatives at the IMO. For RMU students and faculty to formally plug into that global network carries considerable professional weight.
A Strategic Milestone for RMU
Speaking at the signing ceremony, RMU’s Acting Vice Chancellor, Dr. Jethro W. Brooks Jr., described the partnership as a significant milestone in the university’s strategic growth agenda, and reaffirmed RMU’s commitment to forging strong international alliances that advance teaching, innovation, and professional development.
RMU was established in 1983 as the Regional Maritime Academy before being elevated to university status in 2007. Located in Accra, it is affiliated with the University of Ghana and operates as a branch of the WMU, with a mandate to promote regional cooperation in the maritime industry through training and capacity development. This new MoU deepens what was previously an informal institutional relationship into a structured framework of mutual academic obligation — a step up in ambition that reflects growing confidence in RMU’s ability to operate at the highest international level.
The university draws students from across the Economic Community of West African States (ECOWAS) subregion, making it a pivotal institution not just for Ghana but for the broader West African maritime ecosystem — including Nigeria, which supplies a significant share of the subregion’s seafarers, port professionals, and maritime administrators.
A Pattern of WMU Engagement With Africa
The RMU–WMU agreement fits within a wider pattern of WMU’s accelerating engagement with African maritime institutions. In February 2026, WMU signed a similar MoU with the Dar es Salaam Maritime Institute (DMI) in Tanzania, covering joint Africa-Europe training initiatives, maritime education data systems, research on maritime safety, academic exchanges, and curriculum enhancement. Taken together, these moves suggest WMU is executing a deliberate continental strategy — using formal institutional partnerships to extend its reach and deepen the pipeline of qualified African maritime professionals entering the global industry.
Nigeria Watch
For Nigerian maritime stakeholders, the RMU–WMU partnership carries implications that go beyond the borders of Ghana.
Nigeria remains the largest source of maritime human capital in West Africa, yet the country’s maritime training institutions — including those providing STCW-compliant seafarer education — continue to face challenges in gaining the kind of international academic recognition that opens doors to global shipping careers and regulatory roles. A stronger, internationally accredited RMU, operating under a formal framework with WMU, raises the overall credibility of West African maritime certification — something that benefits Nigerian seafarers and shipping professionals seeking employment with international carriers or classification societies.
More significantly, Nigeria’s own maritime institutions — including the Maritime Academy of Nigeria (MAN), Oron, and the emerging capacity-building frameworks under NIMASA — should be watching this development closely. The pattern of WMU formalising MoUs with African maritime institutions, from Dar es Salaam to Accra, raises the question of whether Nigeria, as Africa’s largest maritime economy, will move to secure a similar arrangement. Nigeria’s ambition to position itself as the hub of the Gulf of Guinea’s blue economy cannot be fully realised without a credentialed, internationally networked maritime education sector to back it up.
The Federal Ministry of Marine and Blue Economy and NIMASA’s leadership would do well to initiate direct engagement with WMU, whose mandate is explicitly to enhance capacity-building in developing states and to contribute to safe, secure, environmentally sound, and sustainable shipping through institutional cooperation. The door, it appears, is open.
Waterways News | Maritime Education
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UK Nautical Institute Certifies NSML’s Bonny Island Training Hub, Lifting Nigeria’s Maritime Standing

UK Nautical Institute Certifies NSML’s Bonny Island Training Hub, Lifting Nigeria’s Maritime Standing
NLNG Shipping and Marine Services Limited has secured a landmark international certification for its Maritime Centre of Excellence, signalling a new chapter for seafarer training in West Africa.
By Okeoghene Onoriobe | Waterways News Correspondent
Nigeria’s maritime training landscape has taken a significant step forward with the certification of the NLNG Shipping and Marine Services Limited (NSML) Maritime Centre of Excellence (MCoE) by the United Kingdom’s Nautical Institute — a move that industry stakeholders say will elevate the country’s standing in global shipping and offshore operations.
The MCoE, situated on Bonny Island in Rivers State, was designed from the outset as a comprehensive hub for maritime training, research, and professional development. The facility — equipped with advanced simulators and modern training infrastructure — serves seafarers and maritime professionals across Nigeria, West Africa, and beyond.
Speaking at a media briefing in Lagos, NSML Managing Director and Chief Executive Officer, Abdulkadir Ahmed, described the Nautical Institute certification as the first of its kind for the Centre and a strong endorsement of the quality and rigour of training delivered there.
“It confirms that the MCoE meets internationally accepted standards for competence development and operational excellence,” Ahmed said.
The Centre already holds accreditation from DNV under ISO 9001:2015 for Quality Management Systems, as well as the DNV-ST-0029 standard for Maritime Simulator and Training Centres. Building on that foundation, the MCoE is now licensed by the UK Nautical Institute to deliver Dynamic Positioning (DP) programmes — including induction, simulator, revalidation, and vessel maintenance training — making it one of a handful of institutes in West Africa to hold this level of DP accreditation.
Ahmed also confirmed that the Centre offers a suite of courses accredited by the UK Maritime and Coastguard Agency (MCA), covering Gas Tanker Operations, Dynamic Positioning, Human Element Leadership and Management, Electronic Chart Display and Information Systems (ECDIS), and High Voltage Training at both operational and management levels.
For Nigeria’s waterways and shipping sector, the implications are far-reaching. Ahmed noted that internationally recognised qualifications will broaden the mobility and employability of Nigerian seafarers, enabling them to compete for roles across global fleets and offshore operations. He also stressed the milestone’s importance for local capacity building — demonstrating that world-class maritime education can be delivered within Nigeria, reducing the sector’s dependence on foreign training institutions.
“Our ambition is clear — to build a maritime institution that Nigeria is proud of and one that is respected across the global maritime community,” Ahmed said.
Beyond workforce development, the NSML chief highlighted the wider economic dividend of a stronger maritime workforce, noting that enhanced professional competence feeds directly into trade, shipping, offshore operations, and Nigeria’s growing blue economy.
The MCoE’s UK Nautical Institute certification comes as Nigeria pushes to assert itself as a serious player in regional and global maritime affairs, with training standards increasingly seen as a key pillar of that ambition.
NIGERIA WATCH: Tracking the story to the Ministries, Departments and Agencies that matter
Federal Ministry of Marine & Blue Economy — As the primary ministry responsible for Nigeria’s maritime sector, the Ministry holds direct policy oversight over maritime training standards, seafarer certification, and the country’s blue economy agenda. The MCoE’s international certification aligns squarely with the Ministry’s mandate to grow Nigeria’s maritime competitiveness globally.
Nigerian Maritime Administration and Safety Agency (NIMASA) — As the statutory authority for maritime labour, seafarer certification, and the regulation of training institutions in Nigeria, NIMASA is the key agency with regulatory interest in the MCoE’s accreditation milestones. The development supports NIMASA’s broader campaign to raise the profile of Nigerian seafarers in international shipping.
Nigerian Content Development and Monitoring Board (NCDMB) — Given that the MCoE is a facility tied to Nigeria’s oil and gas marine services sector, and that its training programmes include Gas Tanker Operations and Dynamic Positioning relevant to offshore operations, the NCDMB has a direct stake in ensuring this capacity is harnessed to deepen Nigerian content in the energy sector’s maritime value chain.
Maritime Academy of Nigeria (MAN), Oron — As Nigeria’s foremost federal maritime training institution, MAN Oron operates in the same space as the MCoE. The Nautical Institute certification of a private-sector training hub raises the bar for all maritime training providers in Nigeria and presents an opportunity — and a challenge — for MAN to pursue comparable international accreditations.
National Board for Technical Education (NBTE) — The NBTE has oversight responsibility for technical and vocational training institutions in Nigeria. The MCoE’s growing portfolio of internationally accredited programmes touches on the Board’s mandate to standardise and quality-assure technical education across the country.
Waterways News | Maritime Training & Capacity Development
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The Rulebook of the Seas: How IMO Documents Govern Every Ship That Sails

The Rulebook of the Seas: How IMO Documents Govern Every Ship That Sails
By Okeoghene Onoriobe | Waterways News | Maritime Education Desk
Every vessel that departs a Nigerian port — whether a crude oil tanker clearing the Escravos terminal, a container ship leaving Apapa Quays, or a product carrier loading refined fuel from the Dangote jetty — does so under a dense framework of international rules. These are not merely bureaucratic formalities. They are the binding legal and operational architecture of global shipping, developed, adopted, and periodically revised under the authority of the International Maritime Organization (IMO), the United Nations’ specialised agency for maritime affairs.
For Nigerian maritime professionals — from deck officers and port state control inspectors to terminal operators and shipping company managers — fluency in IMO documentation is not optional. It is the price of participation in international trade. This piece unpacks the key documents that govern global shipping and explains what each means for those navigating the industry from Nigerian waters.
What Is the IMO and Why Do Its Documents Matter?
Founded in 1948 and operational since 1958, the IMO serves as the global standard-setting body for the safety, security, and environmental performance of international shipping. Its headquarters in London produces a body of conventions, codes, and guidelines that member states — including Nigeria — are obligated to domesticate and enforce through their own legal systems.
In Nigeria’s case, the Nigerian Maritime Administration and Safety Agency (NIMASA) is the primary implementing body for most IMO instruments. Port State Control inspections conducted by NIMASA officers aboard foreign-flagged vessels in Nigerian ports are, in effect, enforcement of IMO standards. When a vessel is detained in Lagos, Port Harcourt, or Warri, it is almost always for non-compliance with one or more of the documents outlined below.
Understanding this framework, therefore, is essential not just for seafarers, but for every stakeholder in Nigeria’s maritime sector.
SOLAS — The Cornerstone of Maritime Safety
The International Convention for the Safety of Life at Sea (SOLAS) is arguably the most important instrument in international maritime law. Its origins trace back to the sinking of the RMS Titanic in 1912, which exposed catastrophic failures in safety regulation. The modern SOLAS Convention, now in its 1974 consolidated form with successive amendments, establishes minimum safety standards for the construction, equipment, and operation of ships.
SOLAS covers an extraordinarily broad range of subjects: fire protection and firefighting systems, lifesaving appliances including lifeboats and immersion suits, radio communications, navigation safety, the carriage of dangerous goods, the management of ship stability, and more. For a Nigerian seafarer sitting their flag state examination or preparing for a NIMASA-administered competency certificate, SOLAS is foundational reading.
Beyond certification, SOLAS has direct operational implications for Nigerian ports. Terminal operators at Apapa, Tin Can Island, and the Lekki Deep Sea Port must ensure that vessels calling their facilities meet SOLAS requirements — and that shore-side interfaces, particularly in areas of fire safety and emergency response, are aligned with the Convention’s expectations.
MARPOL — Protecting the Ocean Nigeria Depends On
The International Convention for the Prevention of Pollution from Ships (MARPOL), in its combined 1973/1978 Protocol form, is the IMO’s principal environmental instrument. It governs pollution from ships across six Annexes, covering oil, noxious liquid substances, harmful packaged substances, sewage, garbage, and air emissions.
For Nigeria, MARPOL carries particular weight. The Niger Delta — one of the world’s most significant oil-producing regions — has suffered decades of environmental degradation from oil pollution, much of it onshore. Against this backdrop, the enforcement of MARPOL’s Annex I provisions, which govern the discharge of oil and oily mixtures from ships, is not merely a compliance exercise but a matter of ecological and economic survival.
The alleged unauthorised discharge of fuel recently investigated at Tin Can Island Port is a reminder that MARPOL violations do occur in Nigerian waters — and that NIMASA and the Nigerian Customs Service must remain vigilant. Globally, MARPOL’s Annex VI, dealing with air pollution and greenhouse gas emissions, is rapidly becoming one of the most consequential regulatory fronts, as the IMO pushes shipping toward decarbonisation targets that will reshape vessel operations well into the 2030s and 2040s.
STCW — Certifying the People Who Run the Ships
Regulations for ships mean little without trained and competent seafarers to operate them. The International Convention on Standards of Training, Certification and Watchkeeping for Seafarers (STCW), adopted in 1978 and substantially revised by the Manila Amendments of 2010, sets the global benchmark for seafarer education and certification.
STCW establishes minimum competency standards for masters, officers, and ratings across different vessel types and operating contexts. It mandates training in basic safety, advanced firefighting, medical first aid, survival craft, and — for officers — a host of operational and management-level competencies. The Convention also introduced the STCW Code, which provides detailed guidance on the standards countries must maintain in their maritime training institutions.
Nigeria has a direct stake in STCW compliance. The Maritime Academy of Nigeria (MAN) in Oron, Akwa Ibom State, as well as several private maritime training institutes, must maintain syllabi and certification processes that meet STCW requirements. Nigerian seafarers working on internationally trading vessels — and there are many thousands of them — hold certificates whose acceptability by foreign administrations depends on Nigeria’s whitelist status under STCW. Any lapse in the quality of Nigerian maritime training could jeopardise that status, with severe consequences for the employability of Nigerian seafarers worldwide.
COLREG — The Rules of the Road at Sea
The Convention on the International Regulations for Preventing Collisions at Sea (COLREG), adopted in 1972, is essentially the maritime equivalent of road traffic law. It sets out the rules that vessels must follow to avoid collisions — covering right of way, lighting requirements, sound signals, and navigation in restricted visibility.
Every officer of the watch on any internationally trading vessel is required to know COLREG by heart. The rules apply universally: in the open ocean, in port approaches, in traffic separation schemes, and in narrow channels. In congested waterways such as the approaches to Lagos Harbour — among the busiest in West Africa — strict adherence to COLREG is critical to preventing incidents that could cost lives, damage vessels, and disrupt port operations.
For Nigeria’s inland waterways sector, the principles embedded in COLREG also inform domestic navigation regulations, even where the IMO Convention itself applies only to internationally trading vessels.
The ISM Code — Managing Safety Ashore and Afloat
The International Safety Management (ISM) Code, which entered into force through a 1994 amendment to SOLAS, represents a paradigm shift in how the shipping industry approaches safety. Rather than simply prescribing technical requirements for vessels, the ISM Code requires shipping companies to establish, implement, and maintain a Safety Management System (SMS) — a documented framework of policies, procedures, responsibilities, and audit processes designed to prevent accidents and manage emergencies.
Under the ISM Code, every company operating qualifying vessels must hold a Document of Compliance (DOC), and every ship must carry a Safety Management Certificate (SMC). These documents are issued by flag state administrations after audits of both the company’s shore-based operations and the vessel itself.
For Nigerian shipowners and operators, ISM compliance is both a legal obligation and a commercial necessity. Vessels lacking valid ISM documentation will be detained by port state control authorities worldwide. Conversely, robust ISM systems are increasingly demanded by charterers and cargo owners as evidence of operational reliability — making ISM compliance a commercial differentiator in an increasingly discerning shipping market.
The ISPS Code — Security in the Post-9/11 Maritime World
Adopted in December 2002 in the aftermath of the September 11 attacks, the International Ship and Port Facility Security (ISPS) Code introduced a comprehensive security framework for international shipping that had never previously existed. It entered into force in July 2004.
The Code requires ships and port facilities to conduct security assessments, develop and implement security plans, and designate trained security officers — both aboard vessels (the Ship Security Officer, or SSO) and within port facilities (the Port Facility Security Officer, or PFSO). Vessels are required to maintain a continuous record of their movements, known as the Continuous Synopsis Record (CSR), and must display an International Ship Security Certificate (ISSC).
In the Gulf of Guinea context — one of the world’s most piracy-afflicted maritime regions — the ISPS Code has taken on added urgency for Nigeria. NIMASA’s administration of port facility security assessments and its collaboration with the Nigerian Navy and the Deep Blue Project assets must be anchored in ISPS compliance. The credibility of Nigeria’s maritime security framework in the eyes of international partners and shipping lines depends significantly on the quality of its ISPS implementation.
FAL Convention Forms — Cutting Through the Paperwork
The Convention on Facilitation of International Maritime Traffic (FAL Convention), adopted in 1965, addresses the administrative burden that can accompany a ship’s arrival and departure from port. Through the standardisation of forms — covering matters such as crew lists, passenger declarations, cargo declarations, and health requirements — the FAL Convention seeks to reduce delays caused by excessive documentary requirements at ports.
The FAL forms are of direct relevance to ongoing reforms in Nigerian ports. The Nigeria National Single Window initiative — now live and supported by a dedicated Apapa assistance centre — is in part an expression of the FAL Convention’s facilitation objectives, translating international commitments into a digital, streamlined system for the submission and processing of trade documents. Efficient FAL compliance reduces vessel turnaround times, lowers costs for importers and exporters, and strengthens Nigeria’s competitiveness as a maritime hub.
The GMDSS Manual — Communications in Crisis
The Global Maritime Distress and Safety System (GMDSS) is an internationally mandated communications framework for maritime distress and safety purposes. The GMDSS Manual, published and regularly updated by the IMO, provides the operational guidance that seafarers require to use the system effectively.
GMDSS replaced the old Morse code-based distress system with a constellation of satellite and terrestrial radio technologies — including INMARSAT, EPIRB (Emergency Position-Indicating Radio Beacon), NAVTEX, and DSC (Digital Selective Calling) radio — that enable vessels in distress to send automated alerts containing their identity and position to rescue coordination centres anywhere in the world.
For Nigerian seafarers and shipping companies operating in the Gulf of Guinea, where piracy incidents can escalate rapidly, a thorough understanding of GMDSS procedures and equipment is not merely a certification requirement — it is a life-saving competency.
The Sum of the Parts: Why the IMO Framework Matters to Nigeria
Taken together, these documents constitute a system of governance for international shipping that is without parallel in complexity or global reach. For Nigeria — a nation whose prosperity is materially linked to the sea, whether through crude oil exports, imported food and manufactured goods, or the potential of its blue economy — the IMO framework is not an external imposition but a framework for opportunity.
Nigerian seafarers certified under STCW can work on vessels worldwide. Nigerian ports compliant with ISPS and FAL can attract quality shipping lines. Nigerian flag state administration aligned with SOLAS and MARPOL can support a credible ship registry. And Nigerian maritime institutions that teach these instruments fluently can produce the next generation of professionals capable of competing at the highest levels of the global industry.
The IMO rulebook is long, technical, and continuously evolving. But for every maritime professional in Nigeria, it repays careful study many times over.
Waterways News | Nigeria’s Maritime and Blue Economy Publication
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The Four Pillars of Maritime Governance: Understanding the Conventions That Hold Global Shipping Together

The Four Pillars of Maritime Governance: Understanding the Conventions That Hold Global Shipping Together
By Raymond Gold O. | Waterways News Maritime Education Desk
The global maritime industry does not run on goodwill alone. Behind every vessel that departs a port, every seafarer who stands watch through the night, and every cargo consignment that crosses an ocean lies a complex and carefully constructed framework of international regulations.
These rules — forged through decades of maritime disasters, environmental catastrophes, labour abuses, and hard-won diplomatic consensus — exist to ensure that ships are safe, seas are clean, workers are treated with dignity, and the men and women who crew the world’s vessels are professionally competent.
At the centre of this regulatory architecture stand four landmark international conventions, commonly referred to in maritime circles as the four pillars of maritime governance: SOLAS, MARPOL, MLC, and STCW. Individually, each addresses a critical dimension of maritime operations. Collectively, they represent the most comprehensive attempt in human history to bring order, safety, and accountability to one of the world’s oldest and most vital industries.
For Nigerian maritime professionals — from seafarers sailing under foreign flags to port operators managing berths at Apapa and Tin Can Island, from freight forwarders at Lekki Deep Sea Port to marine engineers aboard coastal vessels — a thorough understanding of these conventions is not merely academic. It is a professional and legal obligation.
SOLAS: The Convention Born From Tragedy
The Safety of Life at Sea Convention — known universally as SOLAS — stands as the oldest and arguably the most consequential of the four pillars.
Its origins are rooted in catastrophe. On the night of 14 April 1912, the RMS Titanic struck an iceberg in the North Atlantic and sank, claiming the lives of more than 1,500 people. The disaster exposed glaring inadequacies in the safety standards of the era — insufficient lifeboats, no standardised distress communication protocols, and no international framework compelling shipowners to prioritise passenger safety.
The first SOLAS convention was adopted in 1914, directly in response to the Titanic disaster. The current version, adopted in 1974 under the International Maritime Organization (IMO) and significantly amended over subsequent decades, remains the primary treaty governing ship safety worldwide.
SOLAS establishes minimum standards for the construction, equipment, and operation of merchant ships. Its chapters cover an extraordinarily wide range of subject matter: the structural integrity of hulls, the reliability of fire detection and suppression systems, the standards and quantity of lifesaving appliances (lifeboats, life rafts, immersion suits, and emergency position-indicating radio beacons), navigation equipment requirements, radio communications systems, and the management of cargo — including dangerous goods.
One of SOLAS’s most significant modern contributions is the International Safety Management (ISM) Code, which requires shipping companies to implement documented safety management systems onboard every vessel. Under the ISM Code, companies must identify risks, establish procedures for emergencies, conduct regular drills, and maintain records that demonstrate compliance.
For Nigerian shipping companies operating internationally, ISM certification is not optional — it is a prerequisite for trading.
SOLAS also incorporates the International Ship and Port Facility Security (ISPS) Code, introduced after the September 2001 terrorist attacks in the United States. The ISPS Code mandates security assessments, security plans, and the designation of security officers at both ship and port facility levels — a framework that directly affects all terminals and port facilities operating under the Nigeria Ports Authority (NPA).
For Nigerian seafarers, compliance with SOLAS is a daily reality. Every fire drill, every muster at lifeboat stations, every inspection of firefighting equipment, every voyage data recorder check — these are the tangible expressions of a convention that has, over more than a century, driven a profound transformation in maritime safety culture.
MARPOL: Defending the Oceans From the Ships That Use Them
The International Convention for the Prevention of Pollution from Ships — MARPOL — addresses one of the most pressing environmental challenges of the modern age: the damage that shipping can inflict on the world’s oceans.
MARPOL was born from a dual catastrophe. The first MARPOL convention was adopted in 1973, and was subsequently modified by a Protocol adopted in 1978 following a series of devastating tanker accidents. Today, the combined instrument — formally known as MARPOL 73/78 — is administered by the IMO and is structured around six technical Annexes, each targeting a different category of ship-generated pollution.
Annex I regulates the discharge of oil and oily mixtures. Every maritime professional familiar with the sight of oil slicks in Lagos Harbour or around Apapa anchorage understands the destructive power of petroleum contamination on marine ecosystems, fisheries, and coastal livelihoods. Annex I requires ships to maintain Oil Record Books, mandates the use of Oil Water Separators for bilge water, and establishes strict discharge limits — with outright prohibitions in designated Special Areas and Emission Control Areas.
Annex II addresses noxious liquid substances carried in bulk — the hazardous chemicals transported by tankers that, if discharged at sea, can cause severe ecological damage.
Annex III covers harmful substances in packaged form, governing the labelling, documentation, and stowage of hazardous cargoes.
Annex IV regulates sewage discharge from ships, prohibiting the release of untreated sewage within specified distances from land — a provision of direct relevance to the passenger ferries, water taxis, and ro-ro vessels operating on Lagos waterways.
Annex V governs garbage management. It prohibits the disposal of plastics into the sea entirely, and imposes strict controls on the dumping of other waste materials. Ships are required to maintain Garbage Management Plans and Garbage Record Books. Given Nigeria’s ongoing challenges with plastic pollution in coastal and riverine environments, the principles embedded in
Annex V have particular resonance for inland waterway operators.
Annex VI, arguably the most consequential annex for the current era of shipping, regulates air pollution from ships — specifically sulphur oxide emissions, nitrogen oxide emissions, and the use of ozone-depleting substances. The 2020 global sulphur cap — which reduced the permitted sulphur content in marine fuel from 3.5% to 0.5% — sent shockwaves through the global bunkering industry and accelerated the adoption of scrubber technology and alternative fuels such as LNG.
For Nigeria, with its major bunkering operations and the enormous implications of the Dangote Refinery for marine fuel supply, the requirements of MARPOL Annex VI are of direct commercial and strategic significance.
MLC: The Seafarers’ Bill of Rights
If SOLAS protects ships and MARPOL protects oceans, the Maritime Labour Convention — MLC 2006 — exists to protect the human beings who make global shipping possible.
Adopted by the International Labour Organization (ILO) in Geneva in February 2006 and entering into force in August 2013, the MLC is the most comprehensive international treaty ever developed for the welfare of workers in any industry. It consolidates more than 65 pre-existing ILO instruments on maritime labour into a single, enforceable framework. Informally but fittingly, it is known as the Seafarers’ Bill of Rights.
The MLC is structured around five Titles, each addressing a fundamental aspect of seafarer welfare:
Title 1 covers minimum requirements to work on a ship — including minimum age (no seafarer below 16 years of age), medical fitness requirements, and the mandatory provision of seafarer employment agreements (SEAs).
Title 2 addresses conditions of employment — including wages, working hours and rest periods, paid annual leave, repatriation rights, and compensation in the event of a ship’s loss or foundering. The MLC mandates that seafarers receive a minimum wage established periodically by the ILO’s Joint Maritime Commission, and that wage payments are made regularly and documented.
Title 3 sets standards for accommodation, recreational facilities, food, and catering. It establishes minimum cabin sizes, noise and vibration limits, air conditioning requirements, and standards for the quality and nutritional value of food provided to crew.
Title 4 addresses health protection, medical care, and social security. Every vessel subject to the MLC must carry a medicine chest, have access to medical advice by radio, and maintain arrangements for the medical evacuation of seriously ill seafarers. Flag states and port states are jointly responsible for ensuring that injured or sick seafarers receive prompt medical treatment ashore where necessary.
Title 5 provides the enforcement architecture — establishing the inspection and certification regime through which flag states and port state control authorities (such as NIMASA, in the Nigerian context) verify compliance.
For Nigerian seafarers — who number in the tens of thousands, with many serving on foreign-flagged vessels in international trade — the MLC provides a floor of rights that cannot be bargained away. Abusive employment practices, the withholding of wages, inadequate living conditions, and the refusal to repatriate stranded crew members are not merely ethical failures; they are violations of a binding international legal instrument that port state control officers are empowered to enforce.
The MLC also has direct implications for Nigerian shipping companies seeking to operate internationally and for the ongoing work of the Maritime Workers’ Union of Nigeria (MWUN) in advocating for the welfare of its members.
STCW: Building Competent Seafarers for a Complex Industry
The International Convention on Standards of Training, Certification and Watchkeeping for Seafarers — STCW — is the convention that answers a deceptively simple question: how do we know that the people operating ships are actually qualified to do so?
Adopted in 1978 and significantly revised by the Manila Amendments of 2010, STCW establishes the global minimum standards for the training, certification, and watchkeeping of officers and ratings aboard seagoing ships. It applies to seafarers serving on ships engaged in international voyages and sets out the competencies that must be demonstrated before a seafarer can be certified at any level — from Able Seaman to Master Mariner or Chief Engineer.
The STCW Convention is complemented by the STCW Code, which contains the mandatory and recommended standards of competence in detail. Seafarers and maritime training institutions alike are required to align their programmes and assessments with the competency frameworks established in the Code.
Among the most widely recognised STCW certifications are those covering:
Basic Safety Training (BST): Personal survival techniques, firefighting and fire prevention, elementary first aid, and personal safety and social responsibilities — the foundation upon which every seafarer’s career is built.
Proficiency in Survival Craft and Rescue Boats (PSCRB): Advanced training in the operation of lifeboats and rescue boats.
Advanced Firefighting: For officers and others with responsibility for fire-fighting operations.
Medical Care and Medical First Aid: For those designated to provide medical assistance onboard.
Bridge Resource Management (BRM) and Engine Room Resource Management (ERM): Competencies in team coordination, situational awareness, and decision-making under pressure.
GMDSS (Global Maritime Distress and Safety System): Certification for radio operators managing ship-to-shore and ship-to-ship communications in emergencies.
The Manila Amendments of 2010 introduced important additions, including requirements for training in security awareness, leadership and teamwork, and updated standards for electro-technical officers — reflecting the increasing complexity of modern ship systems.
In Nigeria, STCW certification is administered through the Nigerian Maritime Administration and Safety Agency (NIMASA), which accredits maritime training institutions and issues Certificates of Competency. Institutions such as the Nigerian Merchant Navy Officer Cadet Training Scheme and various maritime academies across the country provide STCW-aligned programmes. However, concerns about the quality and currency of training provision, alignment with the Manila Amendments, and the international recognition of Nigerian seafarer certificates have been persistent topics of debate within the industry — debates that go directly to the heart of Nigeria’s ambitions to expand its pool of internationally certified maritime professionals.
The Four Pillars as a Unified System
It is important to understand that SOLAS, MARPOL, MLC, and STCW do not operate in isolation. They are interrelated and mutually reinforcing. A vessel that complies with SOLAS safety standards but whose crew is inadequately trained — in violation of STCW — is still an unsafe vessel. A ship whose engineers are brilliant but who are denied rest hours — in violation of MLC — creates the conditions for fatigue-induced accidents that SOLAS exists to prevent. A vessel that meets every environmental standard under MARPOL but lacks certified personnel to manage its oil water separators correctly is a vessel awaiting an environmental incident.
Port state control regimes — including the Tokyo MOU, Paris MOU, and the Abuja MOU, which covers the West and Central African region — inspect vessels against the requirements of all four conventions simultaneously. A deficiency in any pillar can result in detention.
For Nigerian port state control officers operating under the Abuja MOU framework and supervised by NIMASA, these four conventions constitute the primary inspection checklist against which every foreign vessel calling at Nigerian ports is measured.
Nigeria Watch: Why This Matters for Nigeria
Nigeria’s maritime industry is at a critical juncture. The country possesses one of the largest exclusive economic zones in Africa, a vast network of inland waterways, significant offshore oil and gas operations, and increasingly busy commercial ports at Apapa, Tin Can Island, Onne, Calabar, and the Lekki Deep Sea Port. The Federal Ministry of Marine and Blue Economy has articulated ambitious development goals, and the Nigerian content agenda continues to push for greater participation of Nigerian seafarers, vessels, and companies in the country’s maritime trade.
In that context, the four pillars of maritime governance are not abstract international obligations. They are the terms and conditions upon which Nigeria participates in global shipping — and the standards against which the competence and professionalism of Nigerian maritime actors will be judged by the international community.
Every maritime professional in Nigeria — whether studying at a maritime academy, working on an offshore support vessel, operating a passenger ferry on the Lagos waterways, managing a freight forwarding business, or sitting in a regulatory office at NIMASA or the NPA — has both a stake in these conventions and a responsibility to understand and uphold them.
The sea does not forgive ignorance. Neither, ultimately, does the international regulatory framework that governs it.
Waterways News is Nigeria’s foremost maritime, shipping, ports, and blue economy publication, dedicated to informing and educating maritime industry stakeholders across Nigeria and the wider Gulf of Guinea region.
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