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Magic pipe

Trick in a ship's waste-handling equipment to circumvent pollution regulations

Magic pipe

Trick in a ship's waste-handling equipment to circumvent pollution regulations

A magic pipe is a surreptitious change to a ship's oily water separator (OWS), or other waste-handing equipment, which allows waste liquids to be discharged in contravention of maritime pollution regulations. Such equipment alterations may allow hundreds of thousands of gallons of contaminated water to be discharged untreated, causing extensive pollution of marine waters.

Manipulation techniques

A marine oily water separator

The pipe may be improvised, aboard ship, from available hoses and pumps, to discharge untreated waste water directly into the sea. As ships are required to keep records of waste and its treatment, magic pipe cases often involve falsification of these records. The pipe is ironically called "magic" because it bypasses the ship's oily water separator and goes directly overboard. Hence, it can make untreated bilge water "magically disappear".

Often the pipe can be easily disconnected and stored away into a different location aboard the ship so state and regulatory officers can not detect its usage. The use of magic pipes continues to this day, as well as efforts to improve bilge water treatment to make the use of magic pipes unnecessary.

Motivation and responsibility

The problem is worsened by a lack of facilities in developing countries; some port reception facilities do not allow for oily water to be discharged easily and cost effectively. Crew members, engineers, and ship owners can receive huge fines and even imprisonment if they continue to use a magic pipe to pollute the environment.

Conclusively, some engineers use the magic pipe manipulation technique because of:

  • Lack of training
  • Lack of shore side assistance with regard to bilge water treatment
  • Simple disregard of the ocean environment.

Proper process

The oily bilge waste comes from a ship's engines and fuel systems. The waste is required to be offloaded when a ship is in port and either burned in an incinerator or taken to a waste management facility. In rare occasions, bilge water can be discharged into the ocean but only after almost all oil is separated out.

References

References

  1. Case, III, Clifford P.. (January–February 2007). "Beware of the 'Magic Pipe'". Elaborate Communications Ltd.
  2. (1 January 2006). "Magic pipe incident draws huge fine". Simmons-Boardman Publishing.
  3. (13 December 2010}}{{dead link). ""Magic pipe" cases continue in US – so do severe fines and banning of vessels". Baltic and International Maritime Council.
  4. Kantharia, Raunek. (24 October 2019). "Magic Pipe: The Mystery of the Illegal Activity Still Continues on Ships". Marine Insight.
  5. (2 December 2016). "The $40m 'magic pipe': Princess Cruises given record fine for dumping oil at sea". The Guardian.
  6. (13 December 2010). "Lemissoler magic pipe case collapses". Lloyd's List Intelligence / Informa plc.
  7. (June 2021). "Environmental Crimes Bulletin; United States v. Gilbert Fajardo Dela Cruz, et al.". U.S. Department of Justice.
  8. (20 April 2021). "First Engineer Of International Commercial Cargo Tanker Convicted Of Falsifying Records And Obstructing Justice In Scheme To Dump Oily Bilge In International Waters". U.S. Attorney for the Northern District of California.
  9. (6 April 2019). "Carnival Cruise Lines Hit With $20 Million Penalty For Environmental Crimes". NPR.
  10. Blenker, Nick. (21 June 2019). "Bulker operator cops plea in "magic pipe" case". Simmons-Boardman.
  11. Moore, Kirk. (8 November 2018). "German bulk carrier company fined $3.2 million for 'magic pipe' oil discharges". Diversified Communications.
  12. (18 February 2013). "A corrupt corporate culture". Mercator Media Ltd.
  13. Walker, Jim. (19 June 2019). "Caribbean Princess, Star Princess, Grand Princess, Coral Princess and Golden Princess?". Walker & O’Neill, P.A..
Info: Wikipedia Source

This article was imported from Wikipedia and is available under the Creative Commons Attribution-ShareAlike 4.0 License. Content has been adapted to SurfDoc format. Original contributors can be found on the article history page.

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