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BANI
New Evidence
Confirm Star Cruises and Norwegian Cruise Lines Deceived German Authorities
to Dispose
of the Toxic Laden SS Norway to
Brussels;
New Delhi; 30 June 2006: The NGO
Platform on Shipbreaking, a global coalition of human rights and environmental
groups working to uphold environmental justice, released a report today
revealing new evidence that the third largest cruise operator in the world,
Star Cruises Ltd and its subsidiary, Norwegian Cruise Lines, withheld vital
information from German authorities, when they sought permission to allow their
toxic waste laden vessel, the SS Norway, to depart from the Port of Bremerhaven
on 25 May 2005 to Asia. The Report
reveals that as early as December 2004,
The Report entitled, “Star Cruises Ltd and Norwegian Cruise Lines:
Deceiving Germany and Violating International Law in the Export of the SS
Norway to India”, uncovered information disclosed in NCL’s 2005 Annual Report
submitted to the United States Securities and Exchange Commission on 28 March
2006, explaining how NCL reduced the value of the SS Norway by as much as US$14.5 million in a span
of months in 2004, diminishing the SS
Norway to a scrap value of US$12.3 million.
The public disclosure further reveals that by December 2004, NCL’s
management concluded that the sale of the SS Norway to a third party for re-use
was not likely.
Citing confidential
information from Pierre & Vacances, a French company, who in 2004 was able
to requisition a study of the asbestos content of the vessel using the SS
Norway’s ship plans and documents furnished by NCL, the Report confirms the
presence of at least 1,200 tonnes of asbestos in the SS Norway. The confidential information also affirmed
that at least EUR 17 million would be needed to partially decontaminate the
asbestos in the vessel, more than the SS Norway’s scrap value. These facts, the Report asserts, puts into
context the deception perpetrated by NCL and
“Lying to the German authorities in order to
pass on tonnes of toxic wastes to unsuspecting workers in India or Bangladesh,
and laying waste to the environment of South Asia is an indication of how
morally bankrupt the people running Star Cruises are”, says Ingvild
Jenssen, coordinator of the NGO Platform.
“The management and the Board of
Directors of these companies should be held criminally and civilly accountable
by the German government for their actions.”
This is not the first time that
NCL lied to government authorities to cover up an environmental crime. On
The European Commission also
recently sent a letter to
The
SS Norway, the third largest cruise ship in the world after the Queen Elizabeth
II and the ill-fated Titanic, was the jewel in the fleet of NCL until August of
2003, when an explosion in her boiler room killed 8 of her crew, injured 20
others, and left the vessel heavily damaged and without any propulsion. In March of 2004, NCL President, Mr. Colin
Veitch publicly announced that the SS Norway would no longer ply the North
American cruise market, precipitating the cat and mouse game that NCL and SCL
played with various government authorities.
The
NGO Platform raised concerns that the asbestos load of the SS Norway is only a
portion of the problem it presents.
Older vessels are known to contain the persistent organic pollutant,
polychlorinated biphenyls or PCBs, which are known to bioaccumulate in the food
chain and poison top predators such as humans.
PCBs are also known probable human carcinogens and are slated for
globally phase out under the
“The dangers posed by the SS Norway and
similar vessels are real. The level of
asbestos in the SS Norway is more than double of the French aircraft carrier
Clemenceau, and we still have no idea how much PCBs, lead, cadmium, mercury and
the other toxins are in the SS Norway,” says Gopal Krishna of Ban Asbestos
Network
-End-
For a copy of the Report go to:
http://www.ban.org/Library/Star_Cruises_Deception_Report_Final.pdf
For
more information:
Ban Asbestos Network
Basel Action Network, for information on Basel Convention application: Richard Gutierrez,
+1 (206) 652.5555 rgutierrez@ban.org
NGO
Platform on Shipbreaking, for overview: Ingvild Jenssen, coordinator +32 485
190 920 ingvild@bellona.org
[i] For more information on NCL’s 2002 criminal offense, visit: http://www.usdoj.gov/opa/pr/2002/July/02_enrd_441.htm.