Thousands of Seafarers Stranded by Pandemic Plead for Relief

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Thousands of Seafarers Stranded by Pandemic Plead for Relief

Industry groups call for urgent government actions to replace 150,000 exhausted sailors

Filipino seafarers stranded amid the coronavirus pandemic in Manila on April 29, 2020. The Philippines has some 385,000 sailors, almost a quarter of the world’s 1.6 million seafarers. Photo: francis r. malasig/epa/Shutterstock

By   May 7, 2020 Wall Street Journal

JJ Del Rosario had a six-month contract to start work this week on a bulk carrier moving iron ore to China, but the career shipmate is stuck in the Philippines with no way to reach the ship.

“I got a wife and three kids and haven’t paid this month’s rent,” said Mr. Del Rosario, whose flight on Tuesday to Singapore to meet the vessel was canceled after flights from Manila were halted due to coronavirus concerns.

“Then I was told they found someone else. It’s crazy, I don’t know what to do,” he said.

Mr. Del Rosario is one of 150,000 seafarers who fly around the globe each month to connect with ships to replace colleagues that have been at sea for months at a time. The widespread travel restrictions countries have imposed to rein in the spread of the coronavirus have made their travel nearly impossible and have stranded thousands of sailors at sea while their replacement crews are stuck on land without work.


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The International Maritime Organization, the United Nations body that regulates global shipping, said Thursday that the inability to rotate crews has emerged as the biggest challenge facing maritime operators, and called on governments to recognize seafarers as essential workers for global supply chains and exempt them from travel barriers.

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“We manage a total of 44,000 sailors and by the end of June we will have more than 11,000 on ships who are due for relief after working up to three months beyond their contracts,” said Graham Westgarth, chief executive of U.K.-based V Group, one of the world’s biggest crewing companies. “An equal number can’t travel to replace them and they are now out of work. We’ve never seen anything like this.”

Filipino seafarer Florencio Consuelo rests in a dormitory in Manila on April 29, 2020. Photo: francis r. malasig/epa/Shutterstock

Sudden airport closures such as the recent action in the Philippines, a country that provides about a quarter of the world’s 1.6 million seafarers, have strained ocean cargo operations from the bulk carriers that transport raw industrial materials to factories to the container ships that handle most of the world’s retail and manufactured goods.

Manila banned all flights on April 30 to help curb the spread of the novel coronavirus. Passenger air operations are scheduled to gradually resume on Saturday.

Travel restrictions in other countries have left thousands of sailors, including those who have disembarked vessels, stranded in at least 30 port cities around the world, according to shipping executives.

Operators of container ships, tankers and bulk vessels have been postponing crew changes since February, when the pandemic engulfed China and dozens of ships were stuck in waters off Chinese ports such as Shanghai and Ningbo.

Mr. Westgarth said Singapore, Fujairah in the Middle East and Rotterdam in the Netherlands are among the main ports for crew changes.

“We call the crews every week and explain what’s going on. They continue to do the things they should be doing, but it’s clear that they are getting very tired. And when you get tired you make mistakes which can be dangerous,” he said.

Ocean carriers say they are taking steps such as adjusting work schedules on ships to provide breaks but there is not much they can do to minimize the hard life at sea.

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