The International Convention on Liability and
Compensation for Damage in Connection with the Carriage of Hazardous and
Noxious Substances by Sea (2010 HNS Convention) is set to enter into
force on 29 November 2027, marking a milestone for shipping’s global liability
and compensation regime as increasing volumes of chemicals and alternative
fuels are transported by sea.
The conditions for the treaty’s entry into force
were met on 29 May 2026, paving the way for the 2010 HNS Convention (the 1996
Convention as amended by the 2010 Protocol) to enter into force 18 months
later.
“The fulfilment of the conditions for
the entry into force of the HNS Protocol is a long-awaited milestone that
closes an important gap in the international liability and compensation regime
for shipping,” said IMO Secretary-General Arsenio Dominguez.
“This treaty will ensure that those
affected by hazardous cargo incidents involving ships can access fair and
timely compensation, while providing legal certainty for industry and
governments.”
Conditions for
entry into force met
Under article 21(1), the 2010 HNS Protocol will
enter into force 18 months after the following requirements have been
satisfied:
· at least 12 States
to express their consent to be bound, including four States each with not less
than 2 million units of gross tonnage; and
· the receipt, by the
IMO Secretary-General, of information confirming that contributing cargo in
those States amounted to at least 40 million tonnes in the preceding calendar
year.
There are currently 12 contracting States to the
2010 HNS Protocol, following ratifications by Belgium, Germany, the Kingdom of
the Netherlands and Sweden in April 2026. Nine of these States have more
than 2 million units of gross tonnage.
What the treaty covers
The 2010 HNS Convention complements existing IMO
liability and compensation regimes addressing oil pollution and hazardous
shipwrecks, extending similar protection to damage involving other hazardous
and noxious substances.
The Convention covers loss of life, personal
injury, property damage, economic loss, clean-up costs and environmental damage
arising from incidents involving more than 2,000 hazardous substances carried
by sea, including chemicals, oils, acids, fertilizers, alcohols, LNG and
LPG.
It is estimated that approximately 65,000 ships
will require HNS certificates of insurance or other financial security.
HNS Fund
The 2010 HNS Convention applies the “polluter pays”
principle by ensuring that the shipping and HNS industries provide compensation
for those who suffer loss or damage resulting from an HNS incident.
An HNS Fund will be established to provide
compensation once the shipowner’s liability is exhausted. The Fund will be
financed through contributions paid post-incident by receivers of HNS cargo in
contracting States.
Contracting States
The 12 contracting States to the HNS Convention, as
at 29 May 2026, are: Belgium, Canada, Denmark, Estonia, France, Germany, the
Kingdom of the Netherlands, Norway, Slovakia, South Africa, Sweden and Türkiye.