The Republic of the Marshall Islands Maritime Administrator has issued a marine safety advisory on protective clothing.
This marine safety advisory was published on February 10th, 2023, and is addressed to all owners, operators, masters, nautical inspectors, and recognized organizations.
Port State Control (PSC) deficiencies are being issued by some Paris Memorandum of Understanding Member States for fire-fighting outfits. The findings are as follows:
- Not a fire entry suit;
- Not suitable for fire entry; or
- Outfit with buttons or latches piercing the suit allowing heat to be conducted to the inner side of the suit and causing burns to the wearer.
The Code 17 deficiency being cited is:
“may not provide the wearer sufficient thermal protection from the radiated heat if entering an enclosed space.”
The deficiency is being issued even though the subject fire-fighting outfits are certified or approved in accordance with the International Convention for the Safety of Life at Sea (SOLAS) or Fire Safety Systems Code (FSS Code).
This is because PSC Officers are utilizing European close proximity standards for fighting fires within enclosed spaces in addition to international standards.
Code 17 deficiencies are also being issued when the outfits as outlined above are used during enclosed space fire-fighting drills, or when the crewmember is not aware of the outfit’s limitations.
The Republic of the Marshall Islands Maritime Administrator advises that the fire teams should be aware of the outfit limitations during onboard familiarization (SOLAS Chapter II-2, Regulation 15).
These limitations should also be included in the ship-specific training manual and the record of the fire-fighting drill should not conflict with the limitations.
For more information, please see the document below (available only to subscribers):
RELEVANT DOCUMENTS:
Fire-fighting Outfits - Protective Clothing
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