Title: Presentation to the Edmonds Rotary Club
1Safety Security Impacts on Maritime Trade
Competition
CAPT Chip Boothe
November 2003
2(No Transcript)
3USCG Shield of Freedom
- Comprehensive Natl strategy to protect Americas
interests while allowing international trade to
continue. - Overall focus is on increased protection for
critical MTS infrastructure and key assets. - USCG Core Missions Intact with Enhanced MARSEC
Rqmts - USCG Maritime Security aspects include
- 1) increased patrols and presence by USCG, BTS
partners, and state and local law enforcement
personnel, - 2) Strategic military and sealift asset
protection, - 3) sea marshalling of high consequence vessels,
- 4) increased enforcement of security zones
around critical port infrastructure. - 5) security boarding of vessel of interest w/
random coverage of others - 6) Increased border security
- Ports/Facilities/Vessels have commensurate MARSEC
Rqmts
4Maritime Transportation Security Act 2002 (MTSA)
- Enacted on November 25, 2002
- MTSA requirements aligned closely w/ ISPS code
- Covers domestic vessels and public/commercial
facilities - Mandates port, vessel facility assessments,
- National, Regional , Facility Vessel plans
- USCG Maritime Security Regs
- Published October, 2003
- USCG NVICs provide implementation guidance
5Port Security Grants
- Round 1 - TSA Grants in 2002 included 93M
(5.1M) - Round 2 - DHS Grants in 2003
- Port Security Grant Distributions 170 M
(14.2M) - Urban Area Grants included additional 75M
(6.8M) - Round 3 TSA PS Grants 105M
- Focus Facility Operational Security upgrades.
- Priority - Strategic seaports
- Grantees announced mid-November 2003
- Operation Safe Commerce/Container Security
Initiative (28M)
6USCG Maritime Transportation Security
Philosophy
- The MTS is Worth Protecting
- Economic Impact
- Ripple Effect
- Must Account for Port Diversity
- Security is an All Hands Evolution
- Maximize stakeholder input
- Balance Commerce vs. Security
- Risk-based Approach
- Performance-based Standards
- Maximize Uniformity
- National consistency
- Predictability
7Puget Sound Port Diversity
15 Billion Gals Oil Moved
3500 square mile AOR 123 to 147 mile Transits
5000 deep Draft Ships arrivals/year
USN strategic port-3rd Largest
Alaskan Fishing Fleet Homeport
WSF moves over 26 million passengers 11
million vehicles/year 10 routes
- Growing cruise ship industry
- 250k cruise ship passengers
- 90 visits in CY02 triple by 07
1.8 Million containers thru Seattle Tacoma-3rd
largest
Major Military Outload port
8USCG Regulatory Principles
9USCG Regulatory Principles
- Performance Based
- vs.
- Prescriptive Rules
- Risk-Based
- Flexibility
- State local agency measures
- Equivalencies
- Alternative security programs
10USCG Regulatory Principles
- Risk-Based
- Decision Making
- Initial assessment for applicability
- Assessments for each area/vessel/facility
- Consequence/ Criticality
- Threat - Probability Capability
- Vulnerability
11Port Security Plan
- Addresses measures for all activities within the
port - At all three MARSEC levels
- Whether or not the activity is directly regulated
- Developed through local port security committees
- Based on a port security assessment
- Coordinates incident response (fed, state, local)
- Facility and vessel security plans are critical
follow-on elements - Port security plan will constitute port facility
security plan required for SOLAS ISPS compliance
12Vessel Facility Security Plans
- Based on Individual Vulnerability Assessments
- Plan Must Address For Each MARSEC level
- Access control
- Restricted Areas
- Handling of Cargo
- Delivery of Stores/supplies
- Security monitoring
- Security duties
- Plan approval Process
- Ships Government/USCG (May allow RSO in future)
- Certificate issued
- Port Facilities Government/USCG COTP
- Bilateral Agreements w/ Trade Partner Nations
13Private Pier
Foreign Port
U.S. Port
Port Authority/INSCustoms
Police Boat
Private Sector
Container Terminal
Park Service
Customs Inspectors
Private Sector
14Questions?