Code: | C188 |
Work in Fishing Convention, 2007 | |
Adopt: | June 14, 2007 |
Classify: | Fishermen |
Subject: | Fishermen |
Prev: | Promotional Framework for Occupational Safety and Health Convention, 2006 |
Next: | none |
Work in Fishing Convention (2007) C 188, was adopted at the 96th International Labour Conference (ILC) of the International Labour Organization ILO in 2007. The objectives of the Convention is to ensure that fishers have decent conditions of work on board fishing vessels with regard to minimum requirements for work on board; conditions of service; accommodation and food; occupational safety and health protection; medical care and social security. It applies to all fishers and fishing vessels engaged in commercial fishing operations. It supersedes the old Conventions relating to fishermen.
The following subject areas, among others, are addressed: the responsibilities of fishing vessel owners and skippers for the safety of the fishers on board and the safety of the vessels; minimum age for work on board fishing vessels and for assignment to certain types of activities; medical examination and certification required for work on fishing vessels, with the possibility of exceptions for smaller vessels or those at sea for short periods; manning and hours of rest; crew lists; fishers’ work agreements; repatriation; recruitment and placement of fishers, and use of private employment agencies; payment of fishers; on board accommodation and food; medical care at sea; occupational safety and health; social security; and protection in the case of work-related sickness, injury or death (through a system for fishing vessel owners’ liability or compulsory insurance, workers’ compensation or other schemes).
Article 8 of the convention provided the liability of owners of fishing vessels. The owner of the fishing vessel had the full responsibility for the master is possessing the resources and equipment necessary to fulfil the obligations of the convention.[1]
Work in Fishing Recommendation 2007 (No. 199) provides additional guidance on the matters covered by the Convention.
The convention could come into force 12 months after it had been ratified by 10 states, eight of which had to be coastal countries. Following Lithuania's ratification of the convention on 16 November 2016, the convention had come into force on 17 November 2017.As of February 2023, the convention has been ratified by 20 states:
Country | Date | Status |
---|---|---|
Angola[2] | 11 Oct 2016 | In Force |
Antigua and Barbuda[3] | 28 Jul 2021 | In Force |
Argentina[4] | 15 Sep 2011 | In Force |
Bosnia and Herzegovina[5] | 04 Feb 2010 | In Force |
Congo[6] | 14 May 2014 | In Force |
Denmark[7] | 03 Feb 2020 | In Force |
Estonia[8] | 3 May 2016 | In Force |
France[9] | 28 Oct 2015 | In Force |
Kenya[10] | 04 Feb 2022 | In force |
Lithuania[11] | 16 Nov 2016 | In Force |
Morocco[12] | 16 May 2013 | In Force |
Namibia[13] | 20 Sep 2018 | In Force |
Netherlands[14] | 19 Dec 2019 | In Force |
Norway[15] | 08 Jan 2016 | In Force |
Poland[16] | 17 Dec 2019 | In Force |
Portugal[17] | 26 Nov 2019 | In Force |
Senegal[18] | 21 Sep 2018 | In Force |
South Africa[19] | 20 Jun 2013 | In Force |
Thailand[20] | 30 Jan 2019 | In Force |
United Kingdom of Great Britain and Northern Ireland[21] | 11 Jan 2019 | In Force |