Admiral Allen Unveils Marine Safety Performance Plan
U.S. Coast Guard Commandant, Adm. Thad Allen, will unveil the Coast Guard's Marine Safety Performance Plan during a speech to members of 's maritime industry.
The Coast Guard is making its five-year plan available for public comment via its "Homeport" Internet site following Thursday's event for a period of 60 days and welcomes input from the maritime industry, stakeholders, communities and others interested in the Coast Guard's Marine Safety Program.
This action plan is designed to improve upon the service's marine safety program with the ultimate goal of a program that will be considerate and responsive to mariners and the maritime community with six areas of focus that include adding more than 230 marine inspectors and investigators, creating six "Centers of Expertise" to train marine safety officers and programmatic improvements designed to make the Coast Guard's marine safety program the model of effectiveness and efficiency that other maritime nations will seek to emulate.
Members of the community attending Thursday's event will hear Allen discuss the state of the nation's maritime transportation system and the value it adds to the economy, how the Coast Guard works with the maritime industry to support the maritime transportation system and details about the Coast Guard Marine Safety Performance Plan. Maritime Transportation System notes of fact include:
Maritime trade is expected to double by the year 2020 and the current fleet of 10,500 flagged vessels subject to Coast Guard inspection and certification is expected to expand by two thirds as nearly 7,000 towing or assistance vessels migrate from the uninspected fleet under requirements for the Marine Transportation Act of 2004.
More than $958 billion of international commerce -- 1.4 billion tons of cargo, including 51 million containers -- are carried upon the maritime transportation system. Nearly 90 percent of war-fighters' equipment and supplies travel by sea.