UK seafaring community could nearly halve by 2040.
- Research commissioned by the Maritime Charities Group predicts a 40% drop in seafaring communities over the next 15 years.
- Active seafarer numbers will also fall, indicating potential issues for recruitment, trade, and food security.
- UK seafarers move more than 90% of the UK’s traded goods and support the Royal Navy via the Royal Fleet Auxiliary.
Declining communities could mean that the UK struggles to recruit the next generation of seafarers, the MCG warned. Seafarers handle 90% of the UK’s traded goods and support the Royal Navy via the Royal Fleet Auxiliary, as well as crewing cruise ships, ferries and more. Threats to food security posed by sharply falling numbers of people employed in commercial fishing were also identified in the report.
The MCG is now calling for maritime welfare charities to take urgent action. This includes reviewing eligibility criteria to expand the number of seafarers they can support, and working with policy makers to ensure standards on seafarer safety and wellbeing – such as those enshrined in the Maritime Labour Convention – are rigorously applied by all stakeholders.
Tim Slingsby, chair of the MCG, commented:
“Seafarers are absolutely crucial to the national interests of the UK. They make sure we all have food on our plate and fuel to heat our homes. If seafaring communities start to disappear it will get harder and harder to restore them and to attract the next generation into vital seafaring careers. The MCG is committed to supporting maritime charities with the challenges that our report identifies, but we need everyone from industry to policy makers to play their part in protecting the health and welfare of seafarers and their families.”
Tina Barnes, Impact Director at The Seafarers’ Charity, added:
“This research is sobering and reveals what many in the UK’s maritime and fishing industries have known for some time – the nature of work at sea is changing. This means that maritime welfare charities need to adapt too. Not only do charities need to be able to support the complex needs of an older retired generation, but they also need to reflect and respond to the changing needs of a modern generation who perceive themselves not as seafarers, but as part of the hospitality and leisure industry.”