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Cielo di Milano tanker

d’Amico Shipping to Pay $4 Million Fine for Illegal Discharges and Cover-Up

Mike Schuler
Total Views: 162
April 18, 2019

MT Cielo di Milano. MarineTraffic.com

Italy-based shipping company d’Amico Shipping will pay a $4 million fine and serve probation in the United States after admitting to investigators that one of its ships discharged oily waste and other pollutants into the sea and they then tried to cover it up.

The company pleaded guilty on Wednesday before U.S. District Judge Susan D. Wigenton in Newark federal court to an information charging it with violating the Act to Prevent Pollution from Ships.

Under terms of the plea agreement, d’Amico will pay a $4 million penalty and be placed on probation for four years.

The charge to which d’Amico pleaded guilty related to the deliberate concealment of vessel pollution from its oil tanker MT Cielo di Milano, which visited ports in New Jersey multiple times, as well as ports in Maryland and Florida, according to documents and statements made in court.

The company admitted that the ship’s crew intentionally bypassed required pollution prevention equipment by discharging machinery space bilge water and oily waste from the vessel’s engine room through its sewage system into the sea. The company also admitted that crew members falsified the vessel’s Oil Record Book, a required log regularly inspected by the Coast Guard; made false statements to the Coast Guard during its inspection of the MT Cielo di Milano in January 2015; and destroyed the vessel’s sounding log after the Coast Guard had boarded the vessel.

The company admitted the following in a detailed joint factual statement filed in Court:

From August 2014 through January 2015, the M/T Cielo di Milano used two different methods to illegally dispose of oily waste, both of which involved discharging it from the vessel’s sewage holding tank into the sea.

Some of the discharges took place within the exclusive economic zone, that is, within 200 nautical miles of the United States.

Two different chief engineers were involved in the illegal discharges and the intentional falsification of the Oil Record Book to cover up those discharges.

One chief engineer falsified the Oil Record Book to state that bilge water had been processed through the vessel’s pollution control equipment when, in fact, it had not.

The crew routinely hid equipment used to conduct the discharges when the vessel entered port.

During a Coast Guard inspection of the vessel in Bayonne, New Jersey, in January 2015, the chief engineer and second engineer lied to inspectors and told lower-level crew members to lie as well.

After the Coast Guard departed the vessel, the chief engineer destroyed a notebook containing tank soundings by burning the pages in the vessel’s boiler flame in order to conceal the notebook from the Coast Guard.

The proposed $4 million penalty includes $1 million in organizational community service payments to restore the coastal environment of New Jersey.

During probation, the company will be subject to the terms of an environmental compliance program that requires outside audits by an independent company and oversight by a court-appointed monitor.

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