On 30 November 2016, the limits of a ship owners’ liability for a maritime claim in the UK will rise by 51%, when the amended 1996 Protocol to the Convention on Liability for Maritime Claims 1976 comes into force in the UK.

Member States voted to increase limits in April 2012, after high profile bunker spill cases like the “PACIFIC ADVENTURER” in Queensland in 2009 led Member States to conclude that the existing limits were insufficient to cover likely claims.


The “tacit acceptance” provisions of the Protocol provided that the increased limits came into force in Member States on 8 June 2015. However, the Protocol required secondary legislation to take effect in the UK. The new limits are as follows:

 Physical Damage

 Vessel Tonnage

 1976 LLMC Limit (SDR)

 1996 Protocol Limit (SDR)

 Amended Protocol Limit (SDR)

 GT: 2,000

 417,000

 1,000,000

 1,510,000

 GT 30,000

 5,095,500

 12,200,000

 18,422,000

 GT 100,000

 12,583,500

 30,200,000

 45,602,000

 

 Physical Injury

 Vessel Tonnage

 1976 LLMC Limit (SDR)

 1996 Protocol Limit (SDR)

 Amended Protocol Limit (SDR)

 GT: 2,000

 1,038,000

 2,000,000

 3,020,000

 GT 30,000

 10,574,500

 24,400,000

 36,844,000

 GT 100,000

 25,584,000

 60,400,000

 91,204,000

 

These new limits apply to incidents occurring on or after 30 November. There will be no increase to the limits under the 1996 Protocol for vessels of less than 300 GT.

In March 2016, CTRL Marine Solutions published an article on the UK Government consultation on the increasing limits of liability which took place between December 2015 and February 2016. As part of that consultation, the UK government proposed removing owners’ right to limit liability for passenger claims under the LLMC. We pointed out that not all owners would be able to limit liability for passenger claims under the Athens Convention, potentially leaving owners operating on inland and coastal waters exposed. The increased limits to liability will be brought into force in the UK through Statutory Instrument 2016 No. 1061 which amends the Merchant Shipping Act 1995. However, the Government have decided not to remove the right of ship owners to limit their liability under the LLMC for passenger claims. They have concluded that this is a complex area which will require a more detailed assessment than that originally proposed.


The amendments and hence new limits are applicable only to those States which have adopted the 1996 Protocol but are binding on those States. Each may however require national legislation to bring the amendments into force. In the event a State has not enacted legislation by the time the amendments come into force, this could lead to a transitional period when the current limits will apply until the new legislation is enacted.


The increased limits will not of course affect States which are party only to the 1957 Limitation Convention or to States which are party to the 1976 Convention but which have not adopted the 1996 Protocol. Details of which States are party to the various conventions are maintained by the IMO and can be found under the page entitled “Status of conventions” by using the following link:

 http://www.imo.org/About/Conventions/StatusOfConventions/Pages/Default.aspx

If Members have any queries regarding these changes they should contact the Managers.