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  August 19th, 2008
RRB 425 Rescue Boat

The world's most competitive SOLAS approved rescue boat, type RRB 425.
NUTEC: A Customer's Appreciation Letter
Customer feedback is always important for us.
Stand for Safety at SMM 2008
Stand for Safety in Hall 5, stand 351, with NDM.

Titanic
Safety Of Life At Sea, or SOLAS for short, refers to the SOLAS Convention and forthcoming international treaty concerning the safety of people at sea. From this convention many guidelines, rules and regulations have spawned affecting all of us at sea. At Ned-Deck Marine we are dedicated to implementing all these regulations, yet maintain our basic philosophy of delivering cost-effective solutions that bring safety to life. To learn more about all our SOLAS approved products visit our product areas e.g. NDM Davits.

More about SOLAS can be found below or on the International Maritime Organization (IMO).

Introduction and history
The SOLAS Convention in its successive forms is generally regarded as the most important of all international treaties concerning the safety of merchant ships. The first version was adopted in 1914, in response to the Titanic disaster, the second in 1929, the third in 1948 and the fourth in 1960.

International Maritime OrganizationThe 1960 Convention - which was adopted on 17 June 1960 and entered into force on 26 May 1965 - was the first major task for IMO after the Organization's creation and it represented a considerable step forward in modernizing regulations and in keeping pace with technical developments in the shipping industry.

The intention was to keep the Convention up to date by periodic amendments but in practice the amendments procedure incorporated proved to be very slow. It became clear that it would be impossible to secure the entry into force of amendments within a reasonable period of time.

As a result, a completely new Convention was adopted in 1974 which included not only the amendments agreed up until that date but a new amendment procedure - the tacit acceptance procedure - designed to ensure that changes could be made within a specified (and acceptably short) period of time.

Instead of requiring that an amendment shall enter into force after being accepted by, for example, two thirds of the Parties, the tacit acceptance procedure provides that an amendment shall enter into force on a specified date unless, before that date, objections to the amendment are received from an agreed number of Parties.

As a result the 1974 Convention has been updated and amended on numerous occasions. The Convention in force today is sometimes referred to as SOLAS, 1974, as amended.

 

 


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