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General safety obligation
As the fundamental principle of the Transport Operations (Marine
Safety) legislation, the general safety obligation transfers the
responsibility of safety to owners and operators and encourages
risk management. The Transport Operations (Marine Safety) Act
1994 imposes general safety obligations on:
- ship designers, builders and surveyors about the condition of
ships
- persons involved with the operation of a ship to operate it
safely
- owners and masters about safety equipment.
All owners and operators, masters and crew members must ensure the
ship is:
- safe
- properly equipped and crewed
- operated in a safe manner.
These general safety obligations prohibit a ship from going to sea
if it is not properly built and maintained, equipped, crewed and
operated in accordance with its proposed operating environment.
The Transport Operations (Marine Safety) Act 1994
provides penalties for breach of safety obligations.
Last reviewed: 10 February 2012