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Vietnam: Competition Law Fact Sheet
Overview of the main provisions of the Competition Law, and discussion of the enforcement regime and recent enforcement trends.
South Africa | Publication | March 2019
The UK Admiralty Court has held that a defective passage plan may render a vessel unseaworthy and allow cargo owners and their marine insurers to successfully defend claims for general average contributions.
In the CMA CGM Libra1, the master navigated the vessel outside of a demarcated fairway which resulted in the vessel running aground whilst leaving the port of Xiamen, China.
A Notice to Mariners had been issued advising navigators that there were numerous places where the actual depths were significantly less than the charted depths. In preparing the passage plan, the master and first officer had relied on inaccurate paper charts which did not expressly reflect the warning contained in the Notice to Mariners.
As a result of the grounding, the shipowner incurred general average expenses of approximately US$13m, which it tried to claim from cargo interests in the form of general average contributions.
In order to successfully defend the shipowner’s claim for general average, the cargo owners had to show that the defective passage plan prepared by the master and second officer rendered the vessel unseaworthy at the commencement of the voyage, that this caused the loss, and that the shipowner had failed to exercise due diligence by allowing the vessel to sail with a defective passage plan.
The court held that all three of these requirements had been met and therefore, there was actionable fault on the part of the shipowner. This allowed the cargo interests to successfully defend the shipowner’s claim for general average contributions.
This judgment is of importance to cargo owners and their marine insurers facing claims for general average although it will be interesting to see whether it is taken on appeal.
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Overview of the main provisions of the Competition Law, and discussion of the enforcement regime and recent enforcement trends.
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The European Court of Human Rights (ECtHR or the Court) recently ruled in Verein KlimaSeniorinnen Schweiz & Ors v. Switzerland (Application No. 53600/20) that Switzerland had breached the European Convention of Human Rights (the Convention) by not taking sufficient action against climate change. In particular, it found a breach of the right to respect for private and family life contained in Article 8 of the Convention, based on Switzerland’s failure to mitigate the impact of climate change on the lives, health, well-being and quality of life of its citizens. It also ruled that Switzerland had breached the right to a fair trial in terms of Article 6, in that the domestic courts failed to examine the merits of the applicants’ complaints, including the scientific evidence. In this article we consider the key features of this landmark judgment, which has wide ramifications for Member States of the Convention.
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