International Convention on Civil Liability for Bunker Oil Pollution Damage


The International Convention on Civil Liability for Bunker Oil Pollution Damage is an International treaty listed and administered by the International Maritime Organization, signed in London on and in force generally on. The purpose is to adopt uniform international rules and procedures for determining questions of liability and providing adequate compensation.
In the convention, Bunker Oil is fuel used to power the ship. The convention covers leakage of that oil, and requires signatories to the convention to have their ships appropriately insured against such leakages.
It is associated with and references:
While BUNKER is apparently similar to CLC Convention – they are substantially different. Unlike the CLC, the BUNKER Convention is not limited to persistent fuel oils and will apply to any hydrocarbon used to operate the ship.

State parties

While the convention has been widely adopted, notable exceptions includes Bolivia, Honduras, and Lebanon—which are generally flag of convenience states—have not ratified the treaty. As with the CLC, the United States of America was a driver behind the BUNKER convention, and had legislation in place similar to BUNKER provisions, the Oil Pollution Act of 1990, hence it claimed, the treaty did not need to be signed.
As of November 2018, the treaty has been ratified by 90 states.