IBF deal done: 250,000 seafarers pay boosted by 6%
Seafarers’ unions and maritime employers have signed a four-year agreement that will see significant wage increases and dozens of workplace protections and improvements for over 250,000 seafarers’ serving on more than 10,000 vessels.
The
International Bargaining Forum (IBF), the forum that negotiates the
world’s largest global collective bargaining agreement, agreed terms for
the 2024-2027 IBF Framework Agreement last week
in Berlin, Germany.
Seafarers
covered by the agreement will receive a 6 percent wage increase over
the next two years (4 per cent wage and
compensations increase from 1 January 2024 and 2 per cent wage and
compensations increase from 1 January 2025). The 2026-27 pay deal and
cost items will be negotiated in 2025.
In
addition, the agreement includes reference to ILO Convention 190 on
Violence and Harassment to reinforce a joint commitment
to provide safe workplaces free of violence, discrimination and
harassment for all seafarers. There was also a joint recognition of the
importance of safe working practices in cargo lashing in the common
fight against malpractice.
A
new working group was also established that will focus on the future of
seafaring and major challenges that the industry
faces including the impact of new technology, the introduction of
alternative fuels, and ensuring a just transition as the industry
responds to climate change. Concerns around seafarers’ hours of work,
crewing levels, fatigue and duration of employment will
also fall under the remit of the working group.
Under
the agreement, the JNG also committed to remind their members of the
importance of respecting national cabotage provisions
and committed to working together with the ITF on a strategy to work
towards more and more seafarers receiving a reasonable amount of
internet access free of charge.
ITF
spokesperson and ITF Seafarers’ Section Chair Mr David Heindel said:
“This has been a particularly complicated set
of negotiations coming out of the Covid pandemic, which has taken a
great deal of effort and compromise on both sides to get this right for
the times. This is a fair deal. We have agreed a working group that will
look at the future needs of a changing industry
with an eye on the needs of seafarers, with a focus on recruiting.
ITF
President and Dockers’ Section Chair Paddy Crumlin said: “The pay deal
locked into this agreement provides concrete
financial recognition for the critical contribution that seafarers make
to the global economy and also recognises the sacrifice that seafarers
have carried over the past few years and throughout the pandemic. The
relationship between ITF and the JNG remains
in good shape despite the challenges that these negotiations faced.
ITF
General Secretary Stephen Cotton said: “Over the four years of this
agreement, we have a lot of important issues to
discuss so that we can continue to enhance the living and working
conditions of all seafarers on IBF covered vessels. The biggest
challenges we all face is the just transition and the move to
alternative fuels. How the industry recruits and motivates our seafarers
and ensures they have the skills for the future, this is firmly on our
forward-looking agenda.”
Spokesperson
for the Joint Negotiating Group of maritime employers (JNG) and
Chairman of IMEC, Captain Belal Ahmed said:
”Once again the resilient partnership between JNG and ITF produced an
outstanding outcome in the latest IBF round which both sides and their
constituents will be happy to bring to their respective members,
seafarers were rewarded for the sacrifices they made
during the Covid pandemic when they stood out as key workers. Post
Covid joint initiatives by JNG and ITF to face together the new and
unprecedented challenges for our industry will now take centre stage. I
believe this partnership is key to address the issues
affecting seafarers’ welfare and training today towards the ultimate
aim of decarbonising and achieving net zero shipping by 2050 whilst
resolving seafarers’ shortages.”
Also
from the employers’ side of the table, Chairman of JNG and IMMAJ Mr
Toshihito Inoue added: “The negotiations were
particularly tough this time, due to the challenges the pandemic
brought about both on seafarers and employers. Nevertheless, we managed
to dialogue in good faith, proving the strong partnership we have
developed over the past twenty years lives on. I was
also pleased that we had a chance to talk about the future of our
industry, including ways to attract seafarers going forward, the
environmental challenges that await us and the technological solutions
that will both help us and at the same time demand that
we change with the times.”
About the ITF
The
International Transport Workers’ Federation (ITF) is a democratic,
affiliate-led federation recognised as the world’s leading transport
authority. We fight passionately to improve
working lives; connecting trade unions from 147 countries to secure
rights, equality and justice for their members. We are the voice for
nearly 20 million working women and men in the transport industry across
the world.
About the JNG
The Joint Negotiating Group (JNG) allows for the coordination of the views of employers from across the world in the maritime industry. The JNG today consists of the International Maritime Employers' Council (IMEC), the International Mariners Management Association of Japan (IMMAJ), the Korean Shipowners Association (KSA) and Taiwan-based company Evergreen.
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