Responsibility and Liability of Marine Pollution by Oil
Balikpapan Bay Pollution Case
Dina Sunyowati
1
and Annisa Firdhausy
2
1
Postgraduate School, Universitas Airlangga, Surabaya, Indonesia
2
Postgraduate School of Law, Universitas Gajahmada, Yogjakarta, Indonesia
Keywords: Liability, Marine, Pollution, Responsibility.
Abstract: Incidents of marine pollution occurred once more in Indonesian waters. It took place in Balikpapan Bay on
March 31, 2018 due to the fact that PT Pertamina, Co. subsea pipeline was cut off then the crude oil
contamined the sea. The problem is all about who is responsible and liable in restoring those destructions?,
It also the problem how to enforce the law on this case. Based on the collected data, there come up
casualties, environmental pollution and the fishermen’s losses. This research methode uses juridical-
normative together with the statute and conceptual approach. The purpose is to recognize how the law
enforcement in environmental pollution does and who the responsible person is. The result of the research
stated that the main focus of the effort has been done to overcome the emergency post-oil spill occurred in
various ways, in line with Presidential Regulation No. 109/2006, including the polluter pays principle and
strict liability. This is in accordance with the 1992 Civil Liability Convention and Convention on
Compensation for Oil Pollution Damage 1971. Meanwhile, consistent with Law No. 32/2009, the polluters
are also compulsarily required to restore the environment from damages to the marine ecosystem.
Therefore, the government may apply for additional compensatory restoration.
1 INTRODUCTION
Environmental pollution occurs in waters resulting
in the damage of marine ecosystem, coastal
community losses and environment. The source of
the pollution at sea is caused by land, oil, ships,
dumping, exploration and exploitation activities
from air space and others that cause damage to the
marine environment. (Patricia Birnie et.all, 2009)
One of the activities on exploration and exploitation
in a sea are offshore mining or laying down the
pipelines or cables in underwater. When the owner
wants to install the structure or laying down the
pipelines or cables, they should have a permission or
an agreement from coastal state eventhough an
agreement of the zone belongs to EEZ and
Continental Shelf.. The regulation of laying down
the pipelines or cables is regulated in UNCLOS
1982 and several national laws in Indonesia.
In Indonesia, there are many cases of marine
environment pollution as it happened in the Bay of
Balikpapan, on March 31, 2018. The case is quite
popular and pay a public attention. This incident
began when Panama's MV Ever Judger ship,
transporting coal to Balikpapan, crossed to
Balikpapan Bay. Since the condition Balikpapan
Bay is not too deep (approximately 25 meters closed
to the seabed), so before the docks, the Port States
has sent a sea patrol ship to guide this coal carrier
ship into the port. Balikpapan Bay has a several "red
zones" because there is a seabed pipelines used to
deliver crude oil connecting between Lawe-lawe
Terminal and Pertamina's Balikpapan oil refinery.
(Mongabay, 2018)
Based on the testimony of the witness, there are
both miscommunication and misinterpretation
between the Captain of the MV vessel Ever Judger
and the Captain of the Sea Patrol ship. According to
the Captain (a chinese), the anchor of the ship can
put up to 1 meter above the surface of the sea. But
the Captain dropped the entire ship's anchor of 27.5
meters longer ‘till it reached the seabed. It resulted
in the breaking up of Pertamina's oil pipeline. The
breaking up of the oil pipe caused the pollution in
Balikpapan bay, blackened seawater including fire
caused victims of 5 fishermen. The police set the
ship's Captain MV Ever Judger as a suspect. In
relation to pollution in Balikpapan Bay due to oil
spill, The question came up; who is the resposible
Sunyowati, D. and Firdhausy, A.
Responsibility and Liability of Marine Pollution by Oil.
DOI: 10.5220/0007548706450648
In Proceedings of the 2nd International Conference Postgraduate School (ICPS 2018), pages 645-648
ISBN: 978-989-758-348-3
Copyright
c
2018 by SCITEPRESS Science and Technology Publications, Lda. All rights reserved
645
for the incident, and how the liability system and
recovery should work.
2 DEFINITION OF BAY
International law always recognizes that Bays have a
close connection with land and it is more appropriate
that they should be considered as internal waters
than as territorial sea. International customary law
recognised that the baseline could in principle be
drawn across the mouth of bays, enclosing them as
internal waters. But, customary international law
fails to provide clear rules on two essentials points:
the criteria of by which an indentation of the coast
would be recognised as a bay and the maximum
length of the closing line across a bay. (Churchill,
1999: 41)
The territorial sea convention, in article 7,
established clear and precise rules for the
determination of both herbs and the convention
article 10. At the outset it should be noted that these
rules do not apply to cases where the coasts belong
to more than one state. (Churchill, 41)
According to article 1 point 7 of Law 6/1996 on
Indonesian Waters, the meaning of the bay is a
distinct indentation whose penetration is in
proportion to the width of its mouth until the
concealed seawater is more than a mere coastal arch,
but a notion is not a bay unless the area is wider or
wider than the area of the semicircle which is in the
middle drawn across the mouth of the indentation.
3 REGULATIONS OF MARINE
POLLUTION BY OIL
3.1 International Treaties
International Convention Relating to
Intervention on the High Seas in Cases of Oil
Pollution Casualties 1969
International Convention on Civil Liability
for Oil Pollution Damage (CLC) 1969
International Convention on the
Establishment of an International Fund for
Compensation for Oil Pollution Damage
(FUND) 1971
International Convention on Civil Liability
for Bunker Oil Pollution Damage (BUNKER)
2001
United Nation Convention on The Law of
The Sea (UNCLOS) 1982
3.2 National Regulations
Law Number 6 of 1996 on Indonesian Waters
Minister of Transportation Regulation
Number 94 of 1999 on the Protection and
Security Communication System Underwater
Law Number 32 of 2009 on Protection and
Management Human Environment (UU
32/2009)
President Decree Number 109 of 2006 on
Emergency response of Oil Spill at Sea
(Perpres 109/2006)
Minister of Transportation Regulation
Number 58 of 2013 on Pollution Control in
Waters and Ports (Permen 58/2013).
Minister of Transportation Regulation
Number 71 2013 on Salvage and/or
underwater work.
Government Regulation Number 101 of 2014
on Toxic and Hazardous Waste Mangement
(PP 101/2014)
4 STATE RESPONSIBILITY AND
LIABILITY ON MARINE
POLLUTION
Arrangements on pollution of the marine
environment, started in many cases of marine
environmental pollution, caused by oil spills from
ships, such as Torrey Canyon Case, 1967, Amco
Cadiz 1978, Exxon Valdez 1989 and Sea Empress
1996. (Meinhard Doelle & Chris Tollefson, 2009)
In Article 1 (4) UNCLOS, the so-called marine
pollution is
“..the introduction by man, directly or indirectly,
of substances or energy into the marine
environment, including estuaries, which result or is
likely to result in such deleterious effects as harm to
living resources and marine life, hazards to human
health, hindrance to marine activities, including
fishing and othe legitimate uses of the sea,
impairment of quality for use of sea water and
reduction of amenities”.
In order to preserve and protect the marine
environment, States are required to take the
necessary action against pollution occurring in their
territory individually or jointly, such action shall be
within its jurisdiction and captivity, and shall not
transfer damage or harm or alter any type of
pollution to in other types. (Article 195 of UNCLOS
1982) In maximizing the protection of the marine
environment, the state is required to monitor and
ICPS 2018 - 2nd International Conference Postgraduate School
646
analyze environmental assessments, in cooperation
with competent organizations on an ongoing basis.
Related to laying down the subsea pipelines and
cables regulations are found in Chapter II UNCLOS
1982 regarding territorial sea, stated that coastal
States have a rights to establish the requirements on
laying down and maintenance the subsea cables and
pipelines which is located in territorial sea. Coastal
State also can make a regulation to protect the
subsea cable and pipelines in territorial sea.
If a marine pollution dispute occurs caused by
broken or damaged pipelines or cables in underwater
then there are environmental damages such as oil
spill and harm the marine biota, according to that
incident the polluters have to responsible to recover
the environment and pay the compensation. It is
based on the Polluter Pays Principle and the
Absolute liability listed on the Law No. 32/2009.
4.1 State and Individual
Responssibility
Under Principle 21 of the Stockholm Declaration of
1972, the principle of state responsibility has been
formulated. Under this Declaration stated that States
may exploit their resources as they wish but must
not endanger others.
Then in the Second Principle of the 1992 Rio
Declaration stated States have, in accordance with
the Charter of the United Nations and the principles
of international law, the sovereign rights to exploit
their own resources pursuant to their own
environmental and developmental policies, and the
responsibility to ensure that activities within their
jurisdiction or control do not cause damage to the
environment of the other states or of areas beyond
the limits of national jurisdiction.
Whereas in Law 32/2009, the State has the
responsibility to protect and utilize the existing
environment for the welfare of the people. Apart
from the state, the community must also be
responsible and protect and protect the environment.
For regions which are unique that needs to be
protected, then tankers are prohibited from passing
in the area, also it must be announced to all ships
that will cross the territorial sea. The Coastal States
or Port States, and every ship must obey the
provisions. Includes “red zones” are set by the
Government of Indonesia for the Balikpapan Bay.
The principle of absolute liability contained in Law
No. 32 of 2009 in Article 88, states that "any person
whose actions, business, and / or management of
hazardous and toxic materials waste, produce and /
or manage hazardous and toxic materials waste and /
or poses a serious threat to the environment
responsible for absolute responsibility for losses
incurred without the need to prove the element of
error ". Referring to the Balikpapan Bay case, the
one responsible for the oil spill in the sea is the
Captain’s MV Ever Judger and the Government in
this case is Pertamina, Co. has an obligation to make
compensation payments to the surrounding
community. (Tribun Kaltim, 2018)
In the International Convention on Civil Liability for
Oil Pollution Damage, commonly known as
Liability Convention 1976, stipulates that the
obligation of the owner or operator of the vessel to
provide compensation to the polluter who suffered
loss or damage to the pollution of the marine
environment by oil. The principle of indemnity used
is strict liability, which is the obligation to pay
compensation immediately after the loss, regardless
of whether the ship is wrong or not, (Dina
Sunyowati, Enny Narwati, 2011) This principle is a
new development in the principle of liability based
on fault. The principle of absolute liability can be
exempted in 2 things: there is force majeur, or if a
ship accident is caused by negligence of the state
monitor to maintain good guidance and navigational
aids. (IMO, 1954)
Implementation UNCLOS and national regulation
concerning the subsea pipelines or cables should pay
attention in several things, such as :
Requires cooperation between the owner and
the operator the subsea cables via
.International Cables Protection Committee
UN don’t have a special information of
institutional framework for national
legislation on underwater cables.
The implementation of regulation on broken
and damaged underwater cables still
lacking
Regulation related to install and laying down
the subsea pipelines/cables in the Law No.
6/1996
5 CONCLUSIONS AND
RECOMMENDATIONS
Currently the case is still continues and
investigations are conducted to determine who is
responsible for polluting oil spill in Balikpapan bay.
In the interim, the police have appointed the ship's
Captain of MV Ever Judger as a suspect. As an
effort to prevent and obligate the State, Pertamina,
Co. as the owner of pipelines in Balikpapan Bay
compensates, reduces oil spill and restores the
marine environment.
The government should review and emphasized
the shipping lanes and marine navigation system and
Responsibility and Liability of Marine Pollution by Oil
647
inform the user. In addition, there is a need for
monitoring and evaluation continously of all parties
and processes in the voyage, especially regarding
areas where there are pipelines or subsea
installations.
ACKNOWLEDGEMENTS
This article is the result of research in 2018
REFERENCES
Churchill V. Lowe, 1999, the Law of the Sea third edition,
Juris Publishing, UK,
Dina Sunyowati, Enny Narwati, 2011, Buku Ajar Hukum
Laut, AUP Press, Surabaya.
Meinhard Doelle & Chris Tollefson, 2009, Environmental
Law – Cases and Materials, Thomson Reuters,
Canada.
Patricia Birnie, Alan Boyle, Catherine Redgwell, 2009,
International Law & the Environment, Oxford
University Press, UK.
London Convention for prevention of Pollution of the Sea
by Oil, 1954
The 1969 Convention on Civil Liability for oil Pollution
Damage
International Convention Relating to Intervention on the
High Seas in Cases of Oil Pollution Casualties 1969
International Convention on Civil Liability for Oil
Pollution Damage (CLC) 1969
International Convention on the Establishment of an
International Fund for Compensation for Oil Pollution
Damage (FUND) 1971
Stockholm Declaration 1972
United Nation Convention on the Law of the Sea 1982 Rio
Declaration 1992
Agenda 21 Global 1992
International Convention on Civil Liability for Bunker Oil
Pollution Damage (BUNKER) 2001
Law Number 32 of 2009 on Protection and Management
Human Environment (UU 32/2009)
President Decree Number 109 of 2006 on Emergency
response of Oil Spill at Sea (Perpres 109/2006)
Minister of Transportation Regulation Number 58 of 2013
on Pollution Control in Waters and Ports (Permen
58/2013).
Government Regulation Number 101 of 2014 on Toxic
and Hazardous Waste Mangement (PP 101/2014)
Law Number 6 of 1996 on Indonesia Waters
http://kaltim.tribunnews.com/2018/04/30/pemeriksaan-
perdana-sebagai-tersangka-nakhoda-mv-ever-judger-
didampingi-3-pengacara-2-penerjemah
http://www.mongabay.co.id/2018/04/09/ternyata-teluk-
balikpapan-sudah-sering-tercemar-minyak-kok-bisa/
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