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SSI Urges Regulatory Overhaul as 16,000 Ships Face End-of-Life Recycling This Decade

By MGN EditorialJune 22, 2026 at 12:00 PM

The Sustainable Shipping Initiative has called for urgent strategic alignment of ship recycling regulations, warning that fragmented frameworks are ill-equipped to handle the wave of vessels approaching end-of-life before 2030.

The Sustainable Shipping Initiative (SSI) has issued a call for the streamlining of ship recycling regulations, citing the imminent pressure of more than 16,000 vessels requiring recycling before the end of the decade. According to Seatrade Maritime, the SSI argues that the current regulatory landscape governing ship recycling is fragmented and strategically misaligned, creating significant compliance challenges for shipowners, recycling yards, and flag states alike. With a substantial portion of the global fleet approaching end-of-life, the organisation warns that the industry cannot afford regulatory ambiguity at this scale. ## A Critical Window for Reform The volume of vessels set to enter the recycling pipeline represents one of the most significant fleet renewal cycles in recent maritime history. Analysts have long noted that the combination of ageing tonnage, tightening emissions regulations, and the accelerating energy transition is pushing a large cohort of vessels toward early retirement. The SSI's intervention highlights a core tension in the sector: while international frameworks such as the Hong Kong International Convention for the Safe and Environmentally Sound Recycling of Ships and the EU Ship Recycling Regulation share broadly similar objectives, their differing requirements, approved facility lists, and enforcement mechanisms create a patchwork of compliance obligations that can be difficult and costly to navigate. ## Calls for Strategic Alignment The SSI is urging regulators, flag states, and industry stakeholders to work toward a more coherent and harmonised approach — one that maintains rigorous environmental and worker safety standards while reducing duplication and uncertainty for operators making end-of-life decisions. The organisation's position reflects growing industry concern that regulatory complexity could inadvertently drive recycling activity toward less transparent or less regulated markets, undermining the very environmental and social goals the frameworks are designed to protect. ## Industry Implications For shipowners and operators, the stakes are considerable. End-of-life decisions involve significant financial, legal, and reputational considerations, and clarity around which regulatory pathways apply — and how they interact — is essential for responsible fleet management planning. With the recycling wave set to intensify over the coming years, the SSI's call for reform is likely to gain traction among industry bodies and policymakers seeking to ensure that the sector's sustainability commitments extend through to the full lifecycle of a vessel. The issue is expected to feature prominently in upcoming discussions at the International Maritime Organization and within EU regulatory review processes.
#ship recycling#SSI#Hong Kong Convention#EU Ship Recycling Regulation#end-of-life vessels#fleet management#maritime sustainability#IMO

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