CIRCULAR 11-11-12 Oil Record Book
CIRCULAR 11-11-12 Oil Record Book
CIRCULAR 11-11-12 Oil Record Book
11 - 11 - 12
Revision 00
Guidance for the recording of
operations in the oil record Book Page (s) 1 of 2
TO:
(I) ALL OWNERS OF JAMAICAN SHIPS
(II) MANAGERS AND OPERATORS OF JAMAICAN SHIPS
==================================================================================
Surveyor General
“…promoting high standards of maritime competence, safety and protection of the marine environment…”
MARITIME AUTHORITY OF JAMAICA Circular No. 11 - 11 - 12
Revision 00
Guidance for the recording of
operations in the oil record Book Page (s) 2 of 2
Email: registrar@jamaicaships.com
Email: safety@jamaicaships.com
“…promoting high standards of maritime competence, safety and protection of the marine environment…”
Appendix 1
GENERAL INSTRUCTIONS
1. An Oil Record Book shall be maintained on every vessel in accordance with the provisions of
applicable Maritime Regulations.
2. The Oil Record Book must be available at all times for examination by Nautical Inspectors or
Inspectors of any Port State when within the jurisdiction of that State. The Oil Record Book Part I must
be preserved for three years from the date of the last entry.
3. The Oil Record Book Part I must be properly completed. All machinery space operations must be
clearly and accurately recorded. See note on page iii regarding examples of entries.
4. The entries in the Oil Record Book Part I, for ships holding an IOPP Certificate, shall be at least in
English, French or Spanish. Where entries in official language of the State whose flag the ship is
entitled to fly are also used, this shall prevail in case of a dispute or discrepancy.
5. The Oil Record Book Part I shall be kept in such a place as to be readily available for inspection at all
reasonable times and, except in the case of unmanned ships under tow, shall be kept on board the ship.
It shall be preserved for a period of three years after the last entry has been made.
6. Owners and their Legal Advisors, Masters and Officers are reminded that, in addition to statutory
requirements concerning maintenance of an Oil Record Book Part I, this record is a valuable means of
providing proof that the ship has complied with anti-pollution regulations.
7. Pages iv to v of this instruction booklet show a comprehensive list of items of machinery space
operations which are, when appropriate, to be recorded in the Oil Record Book Part I in accordance
with Regulations 17 of Annex I of the International Convention for the Prevention of Pollution from
Ships, 1973, as modified by the Protocol of 1978 relating thereto (MARPOL 73/78). The items have
been grouped into operational sections, each of which is denoted by a letter code
8. Incineration or landing ashore of oily garbage and used filters should be recorded in the Garbage
Record Book only.
9. The competent authority of the Government of a Party to the Convention may inspect the Oil Record
Book Part I on board any ship to which this Annex applies while the ship is in its port or offshore
terminals and may make a copy of any entry in that book and may require the master of the ship to
certify that the copy is a true copy of such entry. Any copy so made which has been certified by the
master of the ship as a true copy of an entry in the Oil Record Book Part I shall be made admissible in
any juridical proceedings as evidence of the facts stated in the entry. The inspection of an Oil Record
Book Part I and the taking of a certified copy by the competent authority under this paragraph shall be
performed as expeditiously as possible without causing the ship to be unduly delayed.
Jamaican Maritime Regulations
On every vessel, other than unmanned vessels under tow, there shall be kept and maintained an Oil Record
Book approved by the Maritime Administrator. The Oil Record Book shall be readily available for
inspection at all reasonable times.
1 Every oil tanker of 150 gross tonnage and above and every ship of 400 gross tonnage and above
other than an oil tanker shall be provided with an Oil Record Book Part I (Machinery Space Operations).
The Oil Record Book, whether as a part of the ship’s official log-book or otherwise, shall be in the Form
specified in appendix III to this Annex.
2 The Oil Record Book Part I shall be completed on each occasion, on a tank-to-tank basis if
appropriate, whenever any of the following machinery space operations takes place in the ship:
.1 ballasting or cleaning of oil fuel tanks;
.2 discharge of dirty ballast or cleaning water from oil fuel tanks;
.3 collection and disposal of oil residue (sludge);
.4 discharge overboard or disposal otherwise of bilge water which has accumulated in
machinery spaces; and
.5 bunkering of fuel or bulk lubricating oil.
3 In the event of such discharge of oil or oily mixture as is referred to in regulation 4 of this Annex or
in the event of accidental or other exceptional discharge of oil not excepted by that regulation, a statement
shall be made in the Oil Record Book Part I of the circumstances of, and the reasons for, the discharge.
4 Each operation described in paragraph 2 of this regulation shall be fully recorded without delay in
the Oil Record Book Part I, so that all entries in the book appropriate to that operation are completed. Each
completed operation shall be signed by the officer or officers in charge of the operations concerned and
each completed page shall be signed by the master of ship. The entries in the Oil Record Book Part I, for
ships holding an International Oil Pollution Prevention Certificate, shall be at least in English, French or
Spanish. Where entries in an official national language of the State whose flag the ship is entitled to fly are
also used, this shall prevail in case of a dispute or discrepancy.
5 Any failure of the oil filtering equipment shall be recorded in the Oil Record Book Part I.
6 The Oil Record Book Part I, shall be kept in such a place as to be readily available for inspection at
all reasonable times and, except in the case of unmanned ships under tow, shall be kept on board the ship. It
shall be preserved for a period of three years after the last entry has been made.
7 The competent authority of the Government of a Party to the present Convention may inspect the
Oil Record Book Part I on board any ship to which this Annex applies while the ship is in its port or
offshore terminals and may make a copy of any entry in that book and may require the master of the ship to
certify that the copy is a true copy of such entry. Any copy so made which has been certified by the master
of the ship as a true copy of an entry in the ship's Oil Record Book Part I shall be made admissible in any
judicial proceedings as evidence of the facts stated in the entry. The inspection of an Oil Record Book Part I
and the taking of a certified copy by the competent authority under this paragraph shall be performed as
expeditiously as possible without causing the ship to be unduly delayed.
ii
General Guidance
The following pages of this section show a comprehensive list of items of machinery space operations
which are, when appropriate, to be recorded in the Oil Record Book Part I in accordance with regulation 17
of Annex I of the International Convention for the Prevention of Pollution from Ships, 1973, as modified by
the Protocol of 1978 relating thereto (MARPOL 73/78). The items have been grouped into operational
sections, each of which is denoted by a letter Code.
When making entries in the Oil Record Book Part I, the date (dd-MONTH-yyyy format, e.g., 16-MAR-
2009), operational letter code and item number shall be inserted in the appropriate columns and the required
particulars shall be recorded chronologically in the blank spaces. The Oil Record Book Part I shall be
maintained in the English language.
Each completed operation shall be signed for and dated by the officer or officers in charge of the operation
concerned. Each completed page shall be countersigned by the Master of the ship.
Tank nomenclature should be recorded as per the format noted within the International Oil Pollution
Prevention Certificate (IOPPC).
The Oil Record Book Part I contains many references to oil quantity. The limited accuracy of tank
Measurement devices, temperature variations and clingage will affect the accuracy of these readings. The
entries in the Oil Record Book Part I should be considered accordingly.
In the event of accidental or other exceptional discharge of oil statement shall be made in the Oil Record
Book Part I of the circumstances of, and the reasons for, the discharge.
Any failure of the oil filtering equipment shall be noted in the Oil Record Book Part I.
If a wrong entry has been recorded in the Oil Record Book (ORB), it should immediately be struck through
with a single line in such a way that the wrong entry is still legible. The wrong entry should be signed and
dated, with the new corrected entry following.
Recording of quantities retained in bilge water holding tanks listed under section 3.3 of the IOPPC is
voluntary and not required by the Convention.
iii
LIST OF ITEMS TO BE RECORDED
(A) Ballasting or cleaning of oil fuel tanks
(B) Discharge of dirty ballast or cleaning water from oil fuel tanks referred to under Section (A)
5 Identity of tank(s).
6 Position of ship at start of discharge.
7 Position of ship on completion of discharge.
8 Ship's speed(s) during discharge.
9 Method of discharge:
.1 through 15 ppm equipment;
.2 to reception facilities.
10 Quantity discharged, in m3.
1
Only Tanks listed in item 3.1 of form A and B of the supplement in the IOPP Certificate used for oil residues
(sludge).
2
Ship’s masters should obtain from the operator of the reception facilities, which includes barges and tank trucks, a
receipt or certificate detailing the quantity of tank washings, dirty ballast, residues or oily mixtures transferred,
together with the time and date of the transfer. This receipt or certificate, if attached to the Oil Record Book Part I,
may aid the master of the ship in proving that his ship was not involved in an alleged pollution incident. The receipt
or certificate should be kept together with the Oil Record Book Part I.
iv
.2 to another (other) tank(s) (indicate tank(s) and the total content of tank(s));
.3 incinerated (indicate total time of operation);
.4 other method (state which).
(E) Automatic starting of discharge overboard, transfer or disposal otherwise of bilge water
which has accumulated in machinery spaces
16 Time and position of ship at which the system has been put into automatic mode of
operation for discharge overboard, through 15 ppm equipment.
17 Time when the system has been put into automatic mode of operation for transfer of
bilge water to holding tank (identify tank).
18 Time when the system has been put into manual operation.
22 Time of occurrence.
23 Place or position of ship at time of occurrence.
24 Approximate quantity and type of oil.
25 Circumstances of discharge or escape, the reasons therefore and general remarks.
26 Bunkering:
.1 Place of bunkering.
.2 Time of bunkering.
.3 Type and quantity of fuel oil and identity of tank(s) (state quantity added, in
tonnes, and total content of tank(s)).
.4 Type and quantity of lubricating oil and identity of tank(s) (state quantity
added, in tonnes, and total content of tank (s)).
3.
In case of discharge or disposal of bilge water from holding tank(s), state identity and capacity of holding tank(s) and
quantity retained in holding tank(s).
4
The condition of the oil filtering equipment covers also the alarm and automatic stopping devices, if applicable.
v
NAME OF SHIP:
DISTINCTIVE NUMBER OR LETTER:
IMO NUMBER: 00000000
MACHINERY SPACE OPERATIONS
Example #1
Weekly inventory of oil residues (sludge) tanks (tank listed under item 3.1 in the Supplement to the IOPPC)
DATE CODE ITEM Record of operations/signature of officer in charge
(letter) (number)
11.2 xx m3
11.3 xx m3
11.2 xx m3
11.3 xx m3
Example #2
Recording of oil residue (sludge) collected by manual operation in oil residue (sludge) tank (tank listed under item 3.1
in the Supplement to the IOPPC). Use of code Item Number C11.4 only becomes applicable in accordance with
MARPOL Annex I amendments which entered into force on 1 January 2011(Resolution MEPC. 187 (59)).
11.2 xx m3
11.3 xx m3
Note: Operator initiated manual collection where oil residue (sludge) is transferred (transfer with a pump) into the oil
residue (sludge) tank(s). Examples of such operations could be:
1. Collection of oil residue (sludge) from fuel oil separator drain tanks.
2. Collection of oil residue (sludge) by draining engine sump tanks.
3. Adding fuel oil to an oil residue (sludge) tank (all content of a sludge tank is considered sludge).
4. Collection of sludge from bilge water holding tanks – in this case a disposal entry for bilge water is also
needed.
51
Usage of code C.12: Disposal or Transfer of oil residues (sludge)
Example #3
Note: Ships' masters should obtain from the operator of the reception facilities, which includes barges and tank
trucks, a receipt or certificate detailing the quantity of oil residue (sludge) transferred, together with the time
and date of the transfer. This receipt or certificate, if attached to the Oil Record Book Part I, may aid the master
of the ship in proving that his ship was not involved in an alleged pollution incident. The receipt or certificate
should be kept together with the Oil Record Book Part I.
Example #4
Draining of water (disposal) from an oil residue (sludge) tank listed under item 3.1 in the Supplement to the IOPPC, to
a bilge water holding tank listed under item 3.3 in the Supplement to the IOPPC
xx m3 water drained from [Name of sec 3.1 Tank & Designation],
dd-MONTH-yyyy C 12.2 xx m3 retained,
Note: Collection of bilge water need not to be accounted for, so only one entry is required. Capacity of sludge tanks
should not be recorded for C.12.x entries.
Example #5
Transfer from one oil residue (sludge) tank to another oil residue (sludge) tank, both listed
under item 3.1 in the Supplement to the IOPPC
xx m3 sludge transferred from [Name of sec 3.1 Tank & Designation],
dd-MONTH-yyyy C 12.2 xx m3 retained,
Example #6
52
Example #7
Example #8
Evaporation of water (disposal) from an oil residue (sludge) tank listed under items 3.1 in the Supplement to the IOPPC
xx m3 water evaporated from [Name of sec 3.1 Tank & Designation],
dd-MONTH-yyyy C 12.4 xx m3 retained.
Example #9
Usage of code D: Non-automatic starting of discharge overboard, transfer or disposal otherwise of bilge water
which has accumulated in machinery spaces.
Example #10
Pumping of bilge water from engine-room bilge wells to a tank listed under item 3.3 in the Supplement to the IOPPC
Example #11
Transfer of bilge water between tanks listed in item 3.3 in the Supplement to the IOPPC
xx m3 bilge water from, [Name of sec 3.3 Tank & Designation],
dd-MONTH-yyyy D 13 xx m3, retained
53
Example #12
Pumping of bilge water overboard from tank listed in item 3.3 in the Supplement to the IOPPC
dd-MONTH-yyyy D 13 xx m3 bilge water from [Name of sec 3.3 Tank & Designation],
Example #13
Disposal of bilge water from tank listed in item 3.3 in the Supplement to the IOPPC to oil residue (sludge) tank listed in
item 3.1 in the Supplement to the IOPPC
x m3 bilge water from [Name of sec 3.3 Tank & Designation],
dd-MONTH-yyyy D 13 now xx m3
Usage of code E: Automatic starting of discharge overboard, transfer or disposal otherwise of bilge water which
has accumulated in machinery spaces.
Example #14
Pumping of bilge water overboard via 15 ppm equipment from tank listed in item 3.3 in the Supplement to the IOPPC
or from engine-room bilge wells
dd-MONTH-yyyy E 16 Pump start: hh:mm at xx deg xx min N/S, xx deg xx min E/W from
18 Stop: hh:mm
54
Example #15
Transfer of bilge water from engine-room bilge wells to a tank listed under item 3.3 in the Supplement to the IOPPC
Example #16
dd-MONTH-yyyy F 19 hh:mm
Note: The condition of the oil filtering equipment also covers the alarm and automatic stopping devices, if
applicable.
A code 'I' entry should also be made indicating that the overboard valve was sealed shut due to non working
Oil Filtering Equipment or Oil Content Meter.
On the date where the system is functional again, a new entry, using code F 19 / 20 / 21 should be made where
F 19 is the date and time of the initial failure and F 20 is the time the system is functional again.
Example #16bis
When proper operation of the Oily Filtering Equipment, Oil Content Meter or stopping device is restored
Note: The condition of the oil filtering equipment also covers the alarm and automatic stopping devices, if
applicable.
A code 'I' entry should also be made indicating that the overboard valve was unsealed since the operation of
the Oil Filtering Equipment or Oil Content Meter has been restored.
55
Usage of code G: Accidental or other exceptional discharges of oil.
Example #17
Accidental Pollution
dd-MONTH-yyyy G 22 hh:mm
Note: If failure of Oil Filtering Equipment or Oil Content Meter related equipment is involved, appropriate (F) entry
is to be made in ORB.
Relevant sections of the SOPEP (SMPEP) are to be used to combat oil spills at sea.
Examples of circumstances of discharge include, but are not limited to:
1. Oil Content Meter failure.
2. Fuel tank overflow.
3. Ruptured bunkering hose/flange.
4. Fuel tank leakage (due to collision or grounding).
Example #18
56
Example #19
Note: Separate entries required for each grade of fuel oils and lubricating oils respectively to ensure transparency.
This entry is not required if lubricating oils are delivered onboard in packaged form (55 gallon drum, etc.).
Example #20
Pumping oily bilge water from a Cargo Hold bilge holding tank to a tank listed under item 3.3 in the Supplement to the
IOPPC
dd-MONTH-yyyy I xx m3 oily bilge water from Cargo Hold bilge holding tank
Note: Any collection and transfer of oily bilge water into the engine-room bilge holding
tank(s) from a cargo hold bilge holding tank(s) should be recorded using code (I)
Example #21
57
Example #22
Note: Include receipt & certificate from receiver for amount & type of fuel oil de-bunkered.
Example #23
Transfer of sludge from engine-room oil residue (sludge) tank to deck/cargo slop tank
xx m3 sludge from [Name of sec 3.1 Tank & Designation] xx m3
dd-MONTH-yyyy C 12.4 retained
Example #24
Transfer of bilge water from tank listed in item 3.3 in the Supplement to the IOPPC to deck/cargo slop tank
dd-MONTH-yyyy D 13 xx m3 bilge water from [Name of sec 3.3 Tank & Designation]
Note: Requires this method listed in the IOPP Supplement under item 3.2.3.
If non-oil-cargo related oily residues are transferred to slop tanks of oil tankers, the discharge of such residues
should be in compliance with Regulation 34. (UI 22.1.1 for Regulation 15).
Requires an entry in the Oil Record Book – Part II using code (J).
If sludge or bilge water is transferred from multiple tanks in engine-room a separate
entry must be made in ORB Parts I & II for each transfer.
58
General Guidance – Additional Voluntary Recordings
Example #25
Voluntary declaration of quantities retained in bilge water holding tanks ref. MEPC.1/Circ.640 – record weekly
dd-MONTH-yyyy I Weekly Inventory of Bilge Water Tanks (listed under item 3.3)
Example #26
Example #27
59