SHIPPING AND THE LAW CONFERENCE Xth Edition: “The Shock of the New”

 

PRESS RELEASE

SHIPPING AND THE LAW Xth Edition: “The Shock of the New” 

9th and 10th October 2019, Naples

The 10th edition of the international Shipping and the Law conference “The Shock of the New” has ended Shipowners, institutions, financial experts have met in Naples to look at the great challenges of maritime transport At Shipping and the Law the launch of new infrastructure construction in Naples and Civitavecchia ports was announced . The young shipowners on the fight against climate change: we are at the forefront but we also need commitment from the authorities At Shipping and the Law Shipowners accept the green economy challenge New sustainable fuels and ships. Soon ships will be able to shut down their engines in port.

 

The X edition of the International Shipping and the Law conference, the conference which brings together every year in Naples the top world organizations of shipowners and an international parterre of legal and finance experts in the maritime sector, was held this year on 9 and 10 October in the 14th century Sala dei Baroni of the ‘Maschio Angioino’ castle, the symbol of the city of Naples which overlooks its port. The event had as its theme “The Shock of the New” linked to the challenges of our time that also the maritime industry is facing.   Among the many participants were the heads of the shipowners’ associations: the president Esben Poulsson and the vice-president Emanuele Grimaldi of the International Chamber of Shipping (ICS), the world assembly of shipowners; the president elect of the European Community Shipowners Associations (ECSA) and member of the Stena group Claes Berglund, the German Thomas Rehder and the former president of the Greek and European shipowners John Lyras; the president of Confitarma Mario Mattioli and that of the Young Shipowners Group Giacomo Gavarone.   “This year in its tenth anniversary – said Francesco S. Lauro, maritime lawyer and creator of the event – Shipping and the Law has dealt with numerous and high-impact issues: from the evolution of balances and political structures to the new protectionist barriers that characterize the international scenarios: from the increasingly rapid development of science and technology to the introduction of new regulations aimed at defending the environment, limiting emissions and fighting climate change ”.   Shipowners accept the green economy challenge to Shipping and the Law. New sustainable fuels and ships. Soon ships will be able to shut down their engines in port.   “We are entering the fourth industrial revolution that is different from the previous ones because it is also based on communication and connectivity as well as on technology. There are many challenges that await us, starting with the enormous change in the rules on emissions starting from January that brings us to the road to 2050, when the maritime trade sector has committed to halving its CO2 emissions “. This is the scenario described by Esben Poulsson, president of the International Chamber of Shipping, the world association of shipowners, at the opening of the tenth anniversary conference that this year also gathered in Naples the peak of the global maritime sector.   Poulsson also stressed the choice made by the UN to establish large marine protected areas in the oceans and that “the challenges on the environment – he said – involve not only the shipowners, but also the ports and we must ask ourselves what to do from the infrastructure point of view. If we want to get ready for the 2050 deadline, we have no time to lose”.   The theme of the environment was central in this year’s conference: “The world of shipping – explained Francesco S. Lauro– has three horizons before it: from January 2020 there is the reduction of sulfur emissions, to 2030 we must look to the changes in the world economic scenario that Hamish McRae, a futurologist and professor at Oxford, illustrated to us here in Naples, while in 2050 there is the goal of halving the emissions of the sector. During our forum in Naples we discussed on how to develop solutions, knowing that not all ideas coincide but that from this debate new ways would emerge for the maritime industry to face the challenges. The environment is today a central theme and for this reason we have shown here also at Shipping and the Law the whole recent speech in New York by Greta Thurnberger”.   A challenge immediately captured by the shipowner Emanuele Grimaldi who announced the production of new ships that will respect the ports’ environment, turning off the engines when they are docked and stopping the columns of smoke that rise from the ships in port: “We have ordered – explains the ‘shipowner – 12 new ships and 5 car carriers. The car carriers are the most efficient ever built, they can carry 7-8000 cars and consume less fuel than their predecessors which carried only 1,500 cars, so they are much bigger and 4-5 times more efficient than in the past. The ferries in production are among the first hybrids in the world, with a very high battery power that allows them to stand still with zero emission while the shafts, the transmission shafts, which are on the main engine pick up the power peaks that recharge the batteries. When it arrives in port, therefore, the ship can completely shut down the engines and have all the necessary electricity from the batteries, which also recharge even when the ship is not stationary thanks to solar panels. This news means Naples will soon have some of the most advanced ships in the world and this should encourage a new Neapolitan pride “.     The young shipowners on the fight against climate change: we are at the forefront but we also need commitment from the authorities   Strong challenges in the debate, which was also attended by Giacomo Gavarone, president of the Confitarma youth group, also come on security, as underlined Claes Berglund, president-elect of the European shipowners’ association: “We come from a summer in which many ships” – he said – “have suffered attacks and have been stopped or diverted by the governments of some countries for political reasons. These actions cannot be tolerated and the European institutions must be at the forefront to protect ships”. The global pressure for the fight against climate change has also involved the Italian maritime sector which has therefore taken up the challenge, even with the associated risks, as explained by Mario Mattioli, president of Confitarma: “Using fuels – he said – which have a percentage sulfur content of 0.5% compared to the previous 3.5% limit means a reduction in the sulfur component of 85%, emissions will drop but shipowners will also have to use more expensive fuels that have not yet been fully tested, a major concern in the sector. For this reason, many shipowners are looking at LNG (liquefied natural gas) for gas propulsion which has less harmful emissions. Battery-powered ships are also being developed, which are loaded during the journey and when they enter in the ports they have zero emissions, using the accumulated electricity. The commitment is there, even if I always remember that every ton of goods transported by sea emits much less than if carried by air, rail or road“.     At Shipping and the Law the launch of new infrastructure construction in Naples and Civitavecchia ports was announced.   The second day of Shipping and the Law was then dedicated to “The Shock of the New: Maritime Infrastructure Fit for the Future”: the session chaired by Francesco S. Lauro, who was in the nineties president of the Port authority of Naples, opened with a reflection on the future of port infrastructures, with interventions by Francesco di Majo, president of the Central-Northern Tyrrhenian System Authority, Pietro Spirito, president of the Central Tyrrhenian Authority and Umberto Masucci, president of the F2i Holding Portuale.   These include the new pier for the connection between Rome and Barcelona and the temporary ticket office at the Beverello pier in Naples. Small interventions that however give way to important infrastructural works in the ports of central-southern Italy and which were announced during Shipping and the Law, which dealt with port infrastructures.   The first project to start is the renovation of the Molo Beverello in Naples which will start with the construction of a temporary structure that will be used in the construction phase of the maritime station, to be able to proceed with the demolition of the current ticket offices and start with the construction of the new terminal, which will be a modern structure of 2,400 square meters, in which will be present the services for the passengers: from the reception for embarkation-disembarkation, to the ticket offices, from the stop to the restaurant and to the information, for an investment of 18 million EUR. “The preparatory activities for the start-up of the site are underway – explained Pietro Spirito, president of the Central Tyrrhenian Authority – and we are also having an interview with operators and companies working at Beverello to share decisions. In October we will open the construction site of the temporary ticket offices and so we will be able to free the current maritime station for demolition and the start of the new building “. Spirito also underlined the difficulties for port managers in keeping up with a world, such as that of maritime trade, which changes very rapidly: “Despite the crisis and the opinion of experts – he declared – the size of the fleets is in the commercial sector but that is growing also in the passenger sector. This means that the port infrastructures must adapt to the new fleets, a very difficult task because the administrative procedures in Italy are not in step with the times for the challenges we face”. Even on funding for infrastructure projects Spirito has emphasized that in the future “private individuals will increasingly have to be involved in port investments. The public sector must remain the financing of those investments that do not bring profits, for others we must play a role growing the number of private operators”.   In the port system of Rome, instead, the construction of the new pier at Civitavecchia is about to start, which will be dedicated to the connection with Barcelona, a twin project with the Catalan city, which realizes one in turn. “It is a work of eight million of euros – explains Francesco Di Majo, president of the Central-Northern Tyrrhenian System Authority – partly financed by the European Union and presented together in Barcelona. Work will begin next week. The biggest development project is but that of the commercial port of Fiumicino, which provides for an overall investment of 500 million euros. For now we have a loan from the Bei 100 million for Fiumicino and we begin with the first small piece, the construction of the fishing dock, which will allow them to no longer dock in the canal port: in the area of the new dock some shipyards that are in the city will also be relocated. We are in the executive planning phase now and for 2021 the tender will start “. Di Majo also stressed that the port of Civitavecchia had from the EU the ok and the funds on the 4 million euro project for the last mile of connection on rail that will help the logistics of the commercial port.   The theme of the environment was at the center of the discussion at Shipping and the Law also on the last day of work: a challenge that even the young shipowners have collected,  but asking for a commitment on the part of all those involved. “We are already the greenest carriers in the world – explains Giacomo Gavarone, president of the Confitarma youth group – but we have an ever greater commitment, as shown by the cutting of sulfur emissions that comes into force in January. Shipowners invest but we cannot continue without infrastructure. I am thinking of Liquefied Natural Gas, which in Italy does not yet have a refueling point. I know it is not easy for the authorities to set it up, but for example in Barcelona they are doing it. You cannot expect the shipowners who are already investing in spite of the crisis: I remember that mounting a scrubber, which reduces the emissions of ships, costs a million and a half euros, yet the owners are doing it, showing that they are ready for every effort but cannot pay for the ticket alone. in the companies there are also investment funds, which they want useful: it can be explained to them that from the fight against climate change there will certainly be no gains, but it becomes difficult to envisage a financial bloodbath”.   As per tradition, Shipping and the Law ended with the analysis of the moment on the maritime trade from the legal point of view, in a country like Italy where, underlined Francesco S. Lauro“it is absolutely necessary to intervene to unlock the ratification of international conventions with respect to which Italy participated in the drafting, it then adhered but “forgot” to complete its ratification. For example, the failure to deposit the instrument of ratification of the London Convention on Limitation of Liability for Maritime Credits is inconceivable , an act that the maritime world has been waiting for for years and that in 2012, with the introduction in Italy of the legislation on the insurance of shipowners for maritime credits that presupposes the ratification of the Convention, leaves Italian shipowners in a position of great uncertainty and inferiority compared to those of other countries. Failure to ratify does not, in my opinion, depend on a political will in this sense but simply by forgetfulness, slowness, in short by the usual negligence. It is a masochistic delay that seriously damages the country and its maritime industry on which the current government must act immediately”.   The final session of the conference, “The Shock of the New, Legal Responsibility: AI, Future Fuels, Brexit and Others” then examined the legal developments in the sector but also the problems connected with the imminent breakthrough of the Sulfur Cap, the limit to emissions of sulfur launched by the International Maritime Organization and that the ships will have to respect from January 2020. The topic was introduced by a keynote speech by prof. Mans Jacobsson, historic director of International Oil Pollution Compensation Funds (IOPC), who addressed the issue of legal challenges posed by unmanned ships. The round table was chaired by Clive Aston, past president of the Association of London Maritime Arbitrators (LMAA) and by Jonathan Lux, mediator, arbitrator and barrister. It saw the contributions of: the Italian Association of Maritime Law (AIDM) president Giorgio Berlingieri who spoke about the 120 years of the Association and of the shipping law journal ‘Il Diritto Marittimo’; James Leabeater QC, barrister of 4 Pump Court, which examined the legal challenges deriving from Brexit; Robert Mayer of SMIT, who talked of the (legal) challenges with the transboundary movement of hazardous waste and disposal arising from the Maersk Honam salvage; Tiejha Smyth, deputy director (FD&D) of the North of England P&I Association, who discussed the theme of the new challenges deriving from the new Sulfur Cap.Shipping and the Law organizer and founder, Francesco S. Lauro, introduced the theme of the incomplete ratification of the Liability Limitation of Maritime Claims Convention (LLMC) , “An Old Story soon to be New’”. Particularly interesting resulted the interventions by: Bruno Castellini, partner of Jones DayDay, who discussed challenges presented to commercial law and business lawyers by the development of new technologies; of Mark Clough QC, of counsel of the Studio Legale Lauro, who emphasised the need for ports and terminal operators to understand the rights and obligations provided by new EU regulation including state aid in the context of terminal licenses and leases, and the challenges resulting from the ever growing market power of PRC China in this sector; by David McInnes, partner of BDM Law who gave a presentation on the future of international maritime dispute resolution; and by David Pitlarge, partner of Hill Dickinson LLP, who commented on the shifts in the handling and processing of legal claims and on the changing shape of law firms.

 

Website  www.shippingandthelaw.org
CONTACTS:  info@shippingandthelaw.org – info@studiolegalelauro.it
tel.+39 0815800199 – fax +39 0815800195

SHIPPING AND THE LAW IX edizione: Napoli, 15 e 16 Ottobre. Interviene il presidente della Camera Roberto Fico

COMUNICATO STAMPA

“Il futuro è adesso”, armatori da tutto il mondo a confronto a Napoli

Le sfide tecnologiche, l’ambiente, il neo protezionismo, l’impoverimento della flotta italiana ad opera del turbocapitalismo. 

Torna Shipping and the Law

Shipping and the Law, IX edizione
Napoli, 15 e 16 ottobre 2018 

Complesso monumentale di San Lorenzo Maggiore

“Il futuro è adesso”. E’ questo il tema su cui si confronteranno a Napoli il 15 e 16 ottobre gli armatori di tutto il mondo e i vertici delle associazioni internazionali della categoria, in occasione della nona edizione di “Shipping and the Law”, la due giorni di convegno organizzata dall’avvocato marittimista Francesco Saverio Lauro, che all’apertura vedrà anche un intervento del Presidente della Camera dei Deputati Roberto Fico.

 

Tra i partecipanti alla conferenza figurano i vertici dell’industria marittima internazionale e italiana, come il presidente dell’Associazione Europea degli Armatori (Ecsa) Panos Laskaridis, il vicepresidente dell’International Chamber of Shipping Emanuele Grimaldi, il presidente emerito Ecsa e degli armatori greci John C. Lyras, il presidente di Confitarma Mario Mattioli ma anche esperti come Leo Drollas, direttore del think tank dell’ ex ministro del petrolio saudita sceicco Yamani o Fredrick Kenney, in rappresentanza della Organizzazione Marittima Internazionale dell’ ONUl’amministratore Delegato del RINA Ugo Salerno e Lorenzo Matacena di Catour, che parlerà del suo nuovo traghetto alimentato a gas

Al centro del dibattito di quest’anno l’accelerazione e le sfide poste ai traffici marittimi dal tumultuoso sviluppo di tecnologie avveniristiche e le sempre più stringenti regole internazionali sulle emissioni delle navi, che chiamano gli armatori a nuove sfide e investimenti: restano infatti soltanto un anno e pochi mesi di tempo per adeguare le flotte, e i vertici mondiali degli armatori faranno dunque il punto della situazione in questa occasione a Napoli.

Innanzitutto si discuterà circa la reperibilità di prodotti petroliferi che rientrino nei nuovi limiti stabiliti dell’Organizzazione Marittima Internazionale, che richiederanno combustibili che soddisfino le nuove stringenti regole, e dell’introduzione di innovazioni tecnologiche di avanguardia (batterie, propulsione a gas, cellule a idrogeno). Ma si farà il punto anche sulle problematiche connesse al rapido farsi strada della digitalizzazione e a un ricorso all’automazione sempre più spinto, mentre nuove pressioni arrivano da più parti: dai cambiamenti radicali nella situazione geopolitica internazionale (in particolare dopo i provvedimenti del governo Trump), dalle guerre commerciali, dal neoprotezionismo e dal loro influsso sui traffici marittimi e sui futuri investimenti e, infine, dalla crisi del multilateralismo con le possibili ricadute sul WTO e sulle agenzie facenti capo all’ ONU.

Alcuni si chiedono se vi sia il pericolo che ciò possa creare un’inversione di tendenza per le norme su sicurezza e ambiente: sul fronte degli scenari economici globali certi segnali lasciano presumere che il boom economico attuale possa addirittura condurci ad una crisi ancora più rovinosa delle precedenti, mentre altri inducono a un maggiore ottimismo.

Durante la conferenza sarà esaminato anche il tema della scelta del “porto rifugio”, un luogo di rifugio per le navi in caso di incidenti potenzialmente catastrofici, ovvero un porto o una baia marittima circoscritta in cui condurre le petroliere che rischiano di affondare  per contenere la fuoriuscita di petrolio, scelta che in Italia è di competenza diretta della Protezione Civile, che al convegno vedrà l’intervento di un suo rappresentante. Il tema sarà analizzato da Mans Jacobsson, storico fondatore e direttore degli International Oil Pollution Compensation Funds, nella sua analisi dal titolo “Porto di rifugio, la prospettiva legale”, che darà il via a un panel moderato da Mauro Iguera al quale parteciperanno i rappresentanti dei maggiori assicuratori e soccorritori marittimi.

Ma il futuro dello shipping è anche nelle mani dei giovani armatori che raccoglieranno le sfide a Napoli e che nel corso di Shipping and the Law saranno rappresentati in un incontro con Giacomo Gavarone, presidente del Gruppo Giovani Armatori Confitarma.

Federico Deodato e Francesco Saverio Lauro modereranno poi un panel sul futuro dei temi normativi nel settore, con particolare riferimento all’arbitrato, alla mediazione ma anche alle nuove normative per regolare gli sviluppi tecnologici e le nuove sfide della concorrenza ma anche all’influsso dei nuovi nazionalismi e protezionismi sul diritto internazionale.

A Shipping and the Law si guarderà poi agli aspetti economici del trasporto marittimo con le soluzioni alla crisi finanziaria in un dibattito moderato dall’amministratore delegato di Venice Shipping and Logistics Fabrizio Vettosi, con esponenti del mondo creditizio che si confronteranno con armatori e con i vertici di importanti banche e fondi d’investimento.

In un’ottica italiana, che tuttavia si inserisce nel fenomeno globale del cosiddetto turbocapitalismo, spicca al centro del dibattito quale tema dolente la decimazione della flotta italiana, che ha recentemente perso oltre cento navi e molte migliaia di addetti diretti e dell’indotto, a causa della vendita di crediti in presunta sofferenza da parte delle maggiori banche italiane e straniere a fondi di investimento e operatori finanziari esteri: si tratta di un fenomeno che sta provocando un’irreparabile perdita di occupazione e di know-how all’interno del settore italiano. Per far sì che questo prezioso patrimonio non venga ulteriormente disperso è dunque imperativo che si rinvengano soluzioni urgenti in collaborazione tra le banche e i gruppi armatoriali italiani, attraverso provvedimenti legislativi e del governo.

Durante i lavori, infine, verrà ricordato il professor Francesco Berlingieri, leggendario giurista e presidente del Comitè Maritime International recentemente scomparso, che ha rappresentato per decenni l’Italia nelle trattative che hanno portato alla formazione e all’aggiornamento delle convenzioni internazionali tese ad uniformare il Diritto del Mare.

Link programma: http://www.shippingandthelaw.org/programme-2018-3/

 

Last places available for SHIPPING AND THE LAW 9th edition 15th – 16th October 2018 NAPLES REGISTER NOW!

“The Future is Now”

San Lorenzo Maggiore monumental complex

 

                                             PROGRAMME

Studio Legale Lauro is pleased to inform you that the 9th edition of Shipping and the Law will be held on 15th and 16th October 2018.

The conference annual appointment will take place in San Lorenzo Maggiore, a monumental complex built around XIII-XVIII century and overlying the archaeological excavations of the Greek and Roman Neapolis.

Shipping and the Law, which Studio Legale Lauro hosts each year in October under the support of ICS and Confitarma and the patronage of Regione Campania, provides an important forum of debate among some of the most important leaders, decision makers of the European shipping scene and institutional personalities.

                                                                        

This year the conference will bear the title “The Future is Now” to reflect the accelerating pace of change in the maritime world. New pressures are arriving from new external challenges posed by increasing upheaval in the geopolitical terrain, typified by Donald Trump and the need to tackle global warming raises questions about traditional, growth-at-all-costs, economics.

Meanwhile shipowners also are grappling with digitalization, automation and new financing while freight markets remain fragile and will investigate some among the hottest current topics of shipping which is going to be revolutionized in the near future by issues as for instance the forthcoming new environmental IMO regulations and the new technologies required to tackle climate change by phasing out high sulfur fuels and setting tough carbon goals, the present and future geopolitical challenges, the owners’ views on automatisation and digitalization, the search for the best new fuel of the future. 

The shipowners who will discuss these topics shall include: ICS Vice President Emanuele Grimaldi, President of ECSA and Vice President of Union of Greek Shipowners Panos Laskaridis, former President ECSA and Union of Greek Shipowners John C. Lyras and the Confitarma President Mario Mattioli.

                                                                  PROGRAMME

Leo Drollas, Sheik Yamani’s Chief Economist and Executive Director for the Centre for Global Energy Studies, Chairman and CEO RINA Ugo Salerno, IMO’s Frederick Kenney, Caronte & Tourist’s Lorenzo Matacena, WIN GD Volkmar Galke, Andrea Del Manso of Unione Petrolifera and other speakers will bring examples of innovative solutions to these problems. These panels will be moderated by Lloyd’s List David Osler and Tradewinds Terry Macalister.

 

The conference will later look at the Place of Refuge legal framework which is under ever increasing pressures from the Mediterranean migration crisis with an eye on the best ways to protect the needs of the maritime industry. These issues will be discussed by  Mans Jacobsson, historical Director of the International Oil Pollution Compensation (IOPC) Funds, in his keynote speech “Places of refuge – the legal perspective” in a panel moderated by CR Marine CEO Mauro Iguera including Gard’s Andreas Brachel and Leendert Muller.

A further panel will see the participation of the President of the young Italian shipowners Giacomo Gavarone and young Owners, Valeria NovellaAndrea GarollaMaria Laura Dell’Abate and Filippo Gavarone.

Federico Deodato and Francesco S. Lauro will moderate a panel on future shipping legal issues with particular reference to innovation, arbitration, mediation and competition  the participation of the Standard Club head James BeanMario Riccomagno, Jonathan Lux and Studio Legale Lauro’s expert on completion Mark Clough QC.

Other topics will involve the legally viable and financially feasible solutions to the financial crisis; senior bankers will figure out,  in a panel moderated by CEO Venice Shipping and Logistics Fabrizio Vettosi, with Giuseppe Bottiglieri, Angelo D’Amato and Charles Spetka, managing director of Fortress, BPM Massimo Racca and Prof. Arturo Capasso will discuss the evolving role of the financial system in the shipping industry and will discuss how to prevent the losses of a relevant human capital embodied in those entrepreneurial and managerial skills of shipping companies, preserving their national imprinting even if the shareholder capital had necessarily to be opened to foreign investors.

 

Giorgio Berlingieri, Tom Birch Richardson and Francesco S. Lauro will pay a tribute to Francesco Berlingieri’s life spent for Maritime Law.

                                                                         

Further information may be found by clicking www.shippingandthelaw.org.

(ENG) SHIPPING AND THE LAW 9th edition 15th – 16th October 2018 NAPLES REGISTER NOW!

 

“The Future is Now”

9th edition of Shipping and the Law

Naples, 15th and 16th October 2018

San Lorenzo Maggiore monumental complex

 

Studio Legale Lauro is pleased to inform you that the 9th edition of Shipping and the Law will be held on 15th and 16th October 2018.

The conference annual appointment will take place in San Lorenzo Maggiore, a monumental complex built around XIII-XVIII century and overlying the archaeological excavations of the Greek and Roman Neapolis.

Shipping and the Law, which Studio Legale Lauro hosts each year in October under the support of ICS and Confitarma and the patronage of Regione Campania, provides an important forum of debate among some of the most important leaders, decision makers of the European shipping scene and institutional personalities.

This year the conference organised by the maritime law firm Studio Legale Lauro will bear the title The Future is Now and will investigate some among the hottest current topics of shipping which is going to be revolutionized in the near future by issues as for instance the forthcoming new environmental IMO regulations and the new technologies required to tackle climate change by phasing out high sulfur fuels and setting tough carbon goals, the present and future geopolitical challenges, the owners’ views on automatisation and digitalization, the search for the best new fuel of the future.

 

The speakers who will discuss these topics shall include: ICS Vice President Emanuele Grimaldi, Confitarma President Mario Mattioli and former President ECSA and Union of Greek Shipowners John C. Lyras, Leo Drollas, Sheik Yamani’s Chief Economist and Executive Director for the Centre for Global Energy Studies, President & Managing Director of Wärtsilä Italia Guido Barbazza, Chairman and CEO RINA Ugo Salerno, Director, Legal and External Affairs IMO Frederick Kenney.

 

The conference will later look at the Place of Refuge legal framework which is under ever increasing pressures from the Mediterranean migration crisis with an eye on the best ways to protect the needs of the maritime industry. These issues will be discussed by  Måns Jacobsson, historical Director of the International Oil Pollution Compensation (IOPC) Funds, in his keynote speech ““Places of refuge – the legal perspective”.

A further panel will see the participation of the President of the young Italian shipowners Giacomo Gavarone and other young shipowners from Italy while Director Cartour Lorenzo Matacena will discuss about the LNG investments.

Other topics will involve the legally viable and financially feasible solutions to the financial crisis; senior bankers will figure out,  in a panel moderated by CEO Venice Shipping and Logistics Fabrizio Vettosi, the evolving role of the financial system in the shipping industry and will discuss how to prevent the losses of a relevant human capital embodied in those entrepreneurial and managerial skills of shipping companies, preserving their national imprinting even if the shareholder capital had necessarily to be opened to foreign investors.

 

An important panel will be dedicated to the memory of Francesco Berlingieri, a globally recognized personality of the Maritime Law world.

Further information may be found by clicking www.shippingandthelaw.org

ITA) SHIPPING AND THE LAW IX edizione 15 – 16 Ottobre 2018 NAPOLI

SHIPPING AND THE LAW IX edizione
15 – 16 Ottobre 2018 NAPOLI
REGISTRATI ORA!

“The Future is Now”
Shipping and the Law IX edizione
Napoli, 15 e 16 ottobre 2018
Complesso monumentale di San Lorenzo Maggiore

La IX edizione di Shipping and the Law organizzata dallo Studio Legale Lauro, si terrà il 15 e 16 ottobre 2018 a Napoli presso San Lorenzo Maggiore, un complesso monumentale eretto tra il XIII e il XVIII secolo sovrastante gli scavi della Neapolis greca e romana.

La conferenza patrocinata, tra gli altri, dalla Regione Campania, dalla Camera Internazionale dello Shipping e da Confitarma avrà come sempre tra i suoi protagonisti molte fra le maggiori personalità dell’industria marittima internazionale e delle istituzioni.

Quest’anno il titolo della manifestazione organizzata dall’ avvocato marittimista Francesco S. Lauro è The Future is now e verterà su diversi temi, tra i quali spiccano la sfida costituita dall’entrata in vigore delle nuove regolamentazioni ambientali IMO e le nuove tecnologie richieste per affrontare i cambiamenti climatici e per eliminare gradualmente i combustibili ad alto tenore di zolfo, le sfide geopolitiche presenti e future, la visione degli armatori sui temi dell’automazione e digitalizzazione, la ricerca del miglior carburante del futuro.

Ne discuteranno, tra gli altri: il vice presidente della International Chamber of Shipping Emanuele Grimaldi, il presidente di Confitarma Mario Mattioli; John C. Lyras, già presidente della Union of Greek Shipowners e dell’ECSA; Leo Drollas, direttore e chief economist del Center for Global Energy Studies fondato dallo Sceicco Yamani; il Presidente di Wärtsilä Italia Guido Barbazza, il Presidente e CEO RINA Ugo Salerno e il Direttore degli Affari Legali IMO Frederick Kenney.

La conferenza affronterà inoltre i temi scottanti del Porto di Rifugio che è sempre più sotto pressione dalla crisi migratoria mediterranea, con uno sguardo particolare alle migliori soluzioni da adottare per proteggere gli interessi dell’industria marittima. Questa sessione sarà presentata da Mäns Jacobsson, storico direttore degli International Oil Pollution Compensation (IOPC) Funds, il quale terrà un keynote speech dal titolo “Places of refuge – the legal perspective”.

La conferenza vedrà inoltre la partecipazione del Presidente del gruppo Giovani Armatori Giacomo Gavarone e di altri giovani armatori italiani, mentre l’ Amministratore Cartour Lorenzo Matacena parlerà degli investimenti sull’ Lng.

Altri argomenti al centro di Shipping and the Law in questa edizione saranno le soluzioni legali e possibili dal punto di vista finanziario alla crisi economica; banchieri senior affronteranno, nella sessione moderata dal CEO Venice Shipping and Logistics Fabrizio Vettosi, il ruolo in evoluzione del sistema finanziario nel settore marittimo e discuteranno delle strategie tese ad evitare le perdite di capitale umano rilevante con riferimento alle scelte imprenditoriali e manageriali delle compagnie di navigazione, anche quando il capitale degli azionisti è stato necessariamente aperto a investitori stranieri.

Durante i lavori sarà ricordato l’ impegno del Prof. Francesco Berlingieri, scomparso recentemente, a favore del Diritto del Mare.

Tutte le informazioni su www.shippingandthelaw.org.

(ENG) SHIPPING AND THE LAW 9th edition 15th – 16th October 2018 NAPLES REGISTER NOW!

SHIPPING AND THE LAW 9th edition
15th – 16th October 2018 NAPLES
REGISTER NOW!
 

9th edition of Shipping and the Law

Naples, 15th and 16th October 2018
San Lorenzo Maggiore monumental complex

Studio Legale Lauro is pleased to inform you that the 9th edition of Shipping and the Law will be held on 15th and 16th October 2018.

The conference annual appointment will take place in San Lorenzo Maggiore, a monumental complex built around XIII-XVIII century lying over the archaeological excavations of the Greek and Roman Neapolis.

Shipping and the Law, which Studio Legale Lauro hosts each year in October under the support of ICS and Confitarma and the patronage of Regione Campania, AIDM, ATENA and the International Propeller Clubs, provides an important forum of debate among some of the most important leaders, decision makers of the European shipping scene and institutional personalities.

This year the conference organised by the international shipping lawyer Francesco S. Lauro will bear the title The Future is Now and will investigate some among the hottest current topics of shipping which is going to be revolutionized in the near future by issues as for instance the forthcoming new environmental IMO regulations and the fuel and technologies required, a fast implementation of automatisation or will just face more down-to-earth challenges, such as national barriers for people and goods plus new international trade embargoes and the Port of Refuge’s choice in the event of shipping accidents that might cause significant environmental pollution.

As to the people who have confirmed their attendance this year, some of the personalities will include: ICS President Esben Poulsson and ICS Vice President Emanuele Grimaldi; Confitarma President Mario Mattioli and former President ECSA and Union of Greek Shipowners John C. Lyras; Leo Drollas, Chief Economist and Deputy Executive Director for the Centre for Global Energy Studies founded by Sheik Yamani; CMI Vice-President Giorgio BerlingieriMans Jacobsson, over twenty years Director of the International Oil Pollution Compensation (IOPC) Funds and President of the young Italian shipowners Giacomo Gavarone.



register now

Further information may be found by clicking www.shippingandthelaw.org

 

 

CONTACTS:  info@shippingandthelaw.org  –  info@studiolegalelauro.it  

tel.+39 0815800199 – fax +39 0815800195

(ITA) SHIPPING AND THE LAW IX edizione 15 – 16 Ottobre 2018 NAPOLI

 

 

 

 

SHIPPING AND THE LAW IX edizione
15 – 16 Ottobre 2018 NAPOLI
REGISTRATI ORA!

Shipping and the Law IX edizione

Napoli, 15 e 16 ottobre 2018 

Complesso monumentale di San Lorenzo Maggiore

 

La IX edizione di Shipping and the Law organizzata dallo StudioLegale Lauro, si terrà il 15 e 16 ottobre 2018 a Napoli presso San Lorenzo Maggiore, un complesso monumentale eretto tra il XIII e il XVIII secolo sovrastante gli scavi della Neapolis greca e romana.

Quest’anno il titolo della manifestazione organizzata dall’avvocato marittimista Francesco S. Lauro è The Future is now e verterà su diversi temi, tra i quali spiccano la sfida costituita dall’entrata in vigore delle nuove regolamentazioni ambientali IMO e le tecnologie ed i combustibili che risponderanno più efficacemente ad essa, la rapida implementazione dell’automazione, l’insorgenza di nuove barriere al movimento di persone e cose, l’ingresso dei fondi di investimento nello shipping, i poteri decisionali relativi alla scelta del Port of Refuge in caso di incidenti navali a rischio di inquinamento.

Ne discuteranno, tra gli altri: il presidente e il vice presidente  della International Chamber of Shipping  Esben Poulsson ed Emanuele Grimaldi, il presidente di Confitarma Mario MattioliJohn C. Lyras, già presidente della Union of Greek Shipowners e dell’ECSA; il presidente dell’AIDM e vicepresidente CMI Giorgio BerlingieriLeo Drollas, direttore e chief economist del Center for Global Energy Studies fondato dallo Sceicco Yamani; Mäns Jacobsson, per oltre un ventennio direttore degli International Oil Pollution Compensation (IOPC) Funds ed il presidente del gruppo Giovani Armatori Giacomo Gavarone.

La conferenza, uno tra i pochi eventi internazionali che registra il Support of the Internartional Chamber of Shipping, sarà patrocinata, tra gli altri, dalla Regione Campania e da AIDM, ATENA e Confitarma.

Tutte le informazioni su www.shippingandthelaw.org.

CONTATTI:  info@shippingandthelaw.org  –  info@studiolegalelauro.it  

tel.+39 0815800199 – fax +39 0815800195

SAVE THE DATE – 9th edition of Shipping and the Law: Naples, 15th and 16th October 2018

 

Shipping and the law 2017

 

9th edition of Shipping and the Law
Naples, 15th and 16th October 2018 
San Lorenzo Maggiore monumental complex

Studio legale Lauro is pleased to inform you that the 9th edition of Shipping and the Law will be held on 15th and 16th October 2018.

The conference annual appointment will take place in the San Lorenzo Maggiore monumental complex in Naples and will include, as usual, some of the most important personalities of the international Shipping sector and institutional personalities.

This year conference will bear the title The Future is Now and will investigate some among the hottest current topics of shipping which is going to be revolutionized in the near future by issues as for instance the forthcoming new environmental IMO regulations and the fuel and technologies required, a fast implementation of automatisation or will just face more down-to-earth challenges, such as national barriers for people and goods plus new international trade embargoes and the Port of Refuge’s choice.                                                              

register now

 

Further information may be found by clicking www.shippingandthelaw.org.

 

 

CONTACTS: info@shippingandthelaw.org – info@studiolegalelauro.it 

tel.+39 0815800199 – fax +39 0815800195

facebooktwitterinstagramyoutube

 

 

 

Shipping and the law 2017

 

Shipping and the Law IX edizione

Napoli, 15 e 16 ottobre 2018 

Complesso monumentale di San Lorenzo Maggiore

Lo Studio legale Lauro ha il piacere di annunciare che la IX edizione di Shipping and the Law si terrà il 15 e 16 ottobre 2018 a Napoli presso San Lorenzo Maggiore, un complesso monumentale eretto tra il XIII e il XVIII secolo sovrastante gli scavi della Neapolis greca e romana.

La conferenza avrà come sempre tra i suoi protagonisti molte fra le maggiori personalità dell’industria marittima internazionale e delle istituzioni.

Il titolo della manifestazione di quest’anno è The Future is now e verterà su diversi temi tra i quali spiccano la sfida costituita dall’entrata in vigore delle nuove regolamentazioni ambientali IMO e le tecnologie ed i combustibili che risponderanno più efficacemente ad essa, la rapida implementazione dell’automazione, l’insorgenza di nuove barriere al movimento di persone e cose, l’ingresso dei fondi di investimento nello shipping, i poteri decisionali relativi alla scelta del Port of Refuge.

register now

 

Tutte le informazioni su www.shippingandthelaw.org.

 

 

CONTATTI: info@shippingandthelaw.org – info@studiolegalelauro.it 

tel.+39 0815800199 – fax +39 0815800195

facebooktwitterinstagramyoutube

 

 

HELLENIC SHIPPING NEWS: Shipping & The Law conference draws maritime royalty to Naples

Influencers and thought leaders from across the maritime industry convened in Naples to take part in the 8th edition of Shipping & The Law.

Held in the 17th century splendour of the Court Theatre at the Royal Palace of Naples and organised by Studio Legale Lauro the event was hosted by Managing Partner Francesco S Lauro, the conference saw participation of a number of leading figures from shipowning, finance, law, insurance from Naples and around the world.

Studio Legale Lauro Managing Partner Francesco S Lauro.

A series of panels and interviews interspersed with keynotes from leading industry practitioners saw discussion of the threats and opportunities in shipping, including the rise of China, the effects of climate change as well as free trade and protectionism in the era of Brexit and the Trump administration.

“Through its eight editions, Shipping and the Law has become much more than a maritime conference, it is a forum for the Naples shipping community to exchange ideas and debate with the industry at large,” said Managing Partner Francesco S Lauro. “Once again, some of the leading thinkers and practitioners shared their views on the critical topics affecting the entire shipping cluster and I thank them for their participation.”

Speakers included ECSA President elect Panos Laskaridis, Confitarma President elect Mario Mattioli, ICS Chairman Esben Poulsson, President of the Antwerp Port Authority, Marc Van Peel and Magda Kopczynska, Director of Waterborne Transport, European Commission Former Director of the IOPC Funds Måns Jacobsson spoke on the impending review to the Fund’s policy on economic loss from oil spills and President, Associazione Italiana di Diritto Marittimo Giorgio Berlingieri shared the main outcomes of the CMI 2017 in Genoa.

Panos Laskaridis, Esben Poulsson and Magda Kopczynska.

The conference also included keynote interviews, which saw Tradewinds’ columnist Terry Macalister in conversation with Banchero Costa founder Lorenzo Banchero and Bianco D’Antonio interview local shipping legend Peppino D’Amato.

The two-day proceedings included sessions focussing on ports and ship finance as well as legal and arbitration issues, the future for family-owned Italian shipping companies and the path towards a more digital, smart shipping future.

Shipping and the Law was held in the Court Theatre at the Royal Palace of Naples.

Link: http://www.hellenicshippingnews.com/shipping-the-law-conference-draws-maritime-royalty-to-naples/