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    CMA CGM fined US$165,000 by EPA over ballast record keeping

    December 10, 2025
    SeaNews
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    CMA CGM fined US$165,000 by EPA over ballast record keeping
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    THE US Environmental Protection Agency (EPA) has fined CMA CGM, the world's third-largest shipping container company, for violating the Clean Water Act's Vessel General Permit, reports Ventura, California's gCaptain

    THE US Environmental Protection Agency (EPA) has fined CMA CGM, the world's third-largest shipping container company, for violating the Clean Water Act's Vessel General Permit, reports Ventura, California's gCaptain. As part of the agreement, CMA CGM will pay US$165,000 for violations committed by four of its ships. The violations are over ballast water discharge, recordkeeping, inspection, monitoring and reporting.

    The Vessel General Permit is a key component of the Clean Water Act, designed to safeguard the quality of the nation's waters.

    'When companies and their ships don't comply with this permit, the quality of our nation's already-challenged waters can be seriously impacted,' said EPA Pacific Southwest Regional Administrator Martha Guzman. 'It's incumbent upon vessel owners and operators to properly manage what they discharge into our oceans, and to meet their monitoring and reporting requirements.'

    The EPA said that CMA CGM failed to adhere to several requirements, including the proper treatment of ballast water before discharge at US ports, recordkeeping of annual comprehensive inspections, annual calibration of a ballast water treatment system, monitoring, and sampling of discharges from ballast water treatment systems, and submission of complete and accurate information in annual reports.

    The settlement covers penalties for specific vessels, namely $48,277 for the CMA CGM A Lincoln, $48,233 for the CMA CGM T Jefferson, $52,197 for the CMA CGM Fidelio and $16,293 for the APL Columbus.

    The EPA said self-inspections are vital for identifying potential sources of pollution, equipment issues, or violations of the permit, empowering owners and operators to address problems promptly and remain compliant with US law. Given that the Clean Water Act relies on self-reporting by permittees, violations related to inspection, monitoring, and reporting undermine the effectiveness of the permit programme, said the agency.

    The settlement between EPA and CMA CGM resolves Clean Water Act violations but is subject to a 30-day public comment period before final approval.

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