Regulation 3.2 – Food and
catering
Purpose: To ensure that seafarers have access to
good quality food and drinking water provided under regulated hygienic
conditions
1 Each Member shall ensure that ships that fly
its flag carry on board and serve food and drinking water of appropriate
quality, nutritional value and quantity that adequately covers the
requirements of the ship and takes into account the differing cultural
and religious backgrounds.
2 Seafarers on board a ship shall be provided
with food free of charge during the period of engagement.
3 Seafarers employed as ships’ cooks with
responsibility for food preparation must be trained and qualified
for their position on board ship.
Standard A3.2 – Food and catering
1 Each Member shall adopt laws and regulations
or other measures to provide minimum standards for the quantity and
quality of food and drinking water and for the catering standards
that apply to meals provided to seafarers on ships that fly its flag,
and shall undertake educational activities to promote awareness and
implementation of the standards referred to in this paragraph.
2 Each Member shall ensure that ships that fly
its flag meet the following minimum standards:
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(a) food and drinking water supplies, having regard
to the number of seafarers on board, their religious requirements
and cultural practices as they pertain to food, and the duration and
nature of the voyage, shall be suitable in respect of quantity, nutritional
value, quality and variety;
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(b) the organization and equipment of the catering
department shall be such as to permit the provision to the seafarers
of adequate, varied and nutritious meals prepared and served in hygienic
conditions; and
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(c) catering staff shall be properly trained or
instructed for their positions.
3 Shipowners shall ensure that seafarers who are
engaged as ships’ cooks are trained, qualified and found competent
for the position in accordance with requirements set out in the laws
and regulations of the Member concerned.
4 The requirements under paragraph 3 of this Standard
shall include a completion of a training course approved or recognized
by the competent authority, which covers practical cookery, food and
personal hygiene, food storage, stock control, and environmental protection
and catering health and safety.
5 On ships operating with a prescribed manning
of less than ten which, by virtue of the size of the crew or the trading
pattern, may not be required by the competent authority to carry a
fully qualified cook, anyone processing food in the galley shall be
trained or instructed in areas including food and personal hygiene
as well as handling and storage of food on board ship.
6 In circumstances of exceptional necessity, the
competent authority may issue a dispensation permitting a non-fully
qualified cook to serve in a specified ship for a specified limited
period, until the next convenient port of call or for a period not
exceeding one month, provided that the person to whom the dispensation
is issued is trained or instructed in areas including food and personal
hygene as well as handling and storage of food on board ship.
7 In accordance with the ongoing compliance procedures
under Title 5, the competent authority shall require that frequent
documented inspections be carried out on board ships, by or under
the authority of the master, with respect to:
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(a) supplies of food and drinking water;
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(b) all spaces and equipment used for the storage
and handling of food and drinking water; and
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(c) galley and other equipment for the preparation
and service of meals.
8 No seafarer under the age of 18 shall be employed
or engaged or work as a ship’s cook.
Guideline B3.2 – Food and catering
Guideline B3.2.1 – Inspection, education,
research and publication
1 The competent authority should, in cooperation
with other relevant agencies and organizations, collect up-to-date
information on nutrition and on methods of purchasing, storing, preserving,
cooking and serving food, with special reference to the requirements
of catering on board a ship. This information should be made available,
free of charge or at reasonable cost, to manufacturers of and traders
in ships’ food supplies and equipment, masters, stewards and
cooks, and to shipowners’ and seafarers’ organizations
concerned. Appropriate forms of publicity, such as manuals, brochures,
posters, charts or advertisements in trade journals, should be used
for this purpose.
2 The competent authority should issue recommendations
to avoid wastage of food, facilitate the maintenance of a proper standard
of hygiene, and ensure the maximum practicable convenience in working
arrangements.
3 The competent authority should work with relevant
agencies and organizations to develop educational materials and on-board
information concerning methods of ensuring proper food supply and
catering services.
4 The competent authority should work in close
cooperation with the shipowners’ and seafarers’ organizations
concerned and with national or local authorities dealing with questions
of food and health, and may where necessary utilize the services of
such authorities.
Guideline B3.2.2 – Ships’ cooks
1 Seafarers should only be qualified as ships’
cooks if they have:
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(a) served at sea for a minimum period to be prescribed
by the competent authority, which could be varied to take into account
existing relevant qualifications or experience;
-
(b) passed an examination prescribed by the competent
authority or passed an equivalent examination at an approved training
course for cooks.
2 The prescribed examination may be conducted
and certificates granted either directly by the competent authority
or, subject to its control, by an approved school for the training
of cooks.
3 The competent authority should provide for the
recognition, where appropriate, of certificates of qualification as
ships’ cooks issued by other Members, which have ratified this
Convention or the Certification of Ships’ Cooks Convention,
1946 (No. 69), or other approved body.
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