Venice 'Blue Flag' Accord Signed

Press Release
Friday, March 29, 2013

Cruise ships agree to adopt the strictest measures to reduce air pollution when entering Italy's Venice Lagoon.

The agreement, known as “Venice Blue Flag II,” commits cruise lines to operate the main and auxiliary engines of their ships with marine fuel with sulphur content of no more than 0.1% (lower than the EU guidelines, which recently set restrictions at 0.5%) immediately upon passing the Lido harbour entrance and while travelling through the Lagoon’s marine canals.

It also charges the Coast Guard with using its own personnel to conduct adequate supervision in order to verify observance with the agreement. Fuel analyses will be provided under a specific agreement signed by the Coast Guard, Port Authority and Customs Office.

“An important step forwards: the establishment of a ‘green zone’ extending to the entire Lagoon is a fundamental, essential aspect of the process of dealing with the issue of large cruise ships in Venice.”

These were the words chosen by Venice’s mayor, Giorgio Orsoni, to welcome the voluntary agreement between cruise lines on the use of green fuel upon passing the entrance to the Lagoon harbour.



Following on from the first Venice Blue Flag agreement, signed in 2007, which called for the use of special, less polluting fuels when docked, the new agreement with the international association CLIA Europe, representing the major cruise lines, and with strong support from Mayor Orsoni, makes mandatory the use of ‘zero-impact’ fuel upon entering the Lagoon.


Categories: Cruise Ship Trends Environmental Legal Ports

Related Stories

Maraen Approves $40M Port of Nigg Upgrade After Rebrand

Russian Baltic Ports Pause Crude Loadings after Ukrainian Drone Attack

Explosion Forces Shutdown of Valero’s Port Arthur Refinery

Current News

Russian Oil Producers Threaten Force Majeure Over Baltic Port Attacks

BIMCO: 130 Container Ships Stranded in Persian Gulf

Hapag-Lloyd Earnings Down from Last Year

Transneft Looks to Redirect Oil From Attacked Baltic Ports

Subscribe for Maritime Logistics Professional E‑News