| Report released on methods for spotting alien species in Baltic ports15 July 2014 HELCOM has today released a  report on alien species transported via ships’ ballast water that  threaten the sensitive Baltic ecosystem and may also have negative  impacts to the economy and human health. The report is the final outcome of HELCOM  ALIENS 3 project (2012–2013) which further tested and proposed  improvements to the joint HELCOM-OSPAR sampling protocol, specifying  methods and means for spotting marine alien species in ports. The  project has also updated the related online port survey  database and risk assessment tool, shared with the North-East Atlantic  marine environment protection commission OSPAR, which  went live last week. Both the sampling  protocol and the online tool were adopted by the coastal countries of  the Baltic Sea in 2013, as part of the joint harmonised procedure on  granting exemptions for ballast water  treatment provisions of the International Convention for the Control  and Management of Ship’s Ballast Water and Sediments (BWM Convention) of  the International Maritime Organisation (IMO) in the combined HELCOM  and OSPAR marine area. Under certain  low risk conditions, the BWM Convention Regulation A-4 enables a party to grant exemptions to any requirements to apply ballast water management for ships (regulation B-3) or additional measures (regulation C-1).  Whether or not a specific case can be defined as falling under such low  risk conditions requires a risk assessment. The joint harmonised  procedure was agreed within HELCOM by the Baltic Sea coastal states and  the EU in 2013, and simultaneously also by the OSPAR Contracting  Parties. It was a further development  of the regional Baltic Sea guidance on such risk assessments for A-4  exemptions, agreed within HELCOM in 2010.These documents  were seen as necessary in order to ensure an efficient and harmonised implementation of the BWM convention in the Baltic Sea. This final report of  the project coordinated by the HELCOM Secretariat presents the results  of practical trials carried out in the ports of Gothenburg (SWE),  Kokkola (FIN), Hamina/Kotka (FIN)  and Sköldvik (FIN). Further, the report estimates the work load of the  agreed port sampling procedure; describes the work carried out on the  joint online decision support tool as well as other activities of the  project. Download the report |