Oil Major Vetting and Approvals
Oil Major Vetting and Approvals
Oil Major Vetting and Approvals
The vetting criteria varies amongst the oil majors, but typically, in
order to be considered acceptable to an oil major, a ship must satisfy
the following criteria:
AND ‘APPROVALS’
1. there must be an up-to-date (no more than six months old) SIRE
report evidencing minimal defects with the ship and it’s on-board
systems and maintenance;
2. the ship must have a good safety record;
3. the ‘crew matrix’ and shore-based management systems must
be adequate; and
4. any other ships within the same managed fleet should have a
good safety record.
The charterer claimed that they could have sold the cargo to Shell for The owner relied on letters from the named majors, in terms similar to
$3.25m, subject to successful vetting, but, as a result of the owner’s that provided by Lukoil at the outset of the charterparty:
breach of the charterparty warranty, the charterer actually realised
just under $2m for the cargo. ‘We have now received sufficient information ... and will not normally
require re-inspecting the vessel for a 12 month period from the date
The issues in dispute were: what was the scope of the owner’s of the inspection.
obligations; did the owner ever have the necessary oil major
‘approval’ as warranted by the charterparty; and, if so, was that Please note, however, that this letter does not constitute a blanket
approval lost following the events at Antwerp? approval of the vessel for LUKOIL-LITASCO business or for visits to
Lukoil terminals or facilities. The vessel will be screened by us on
each occasion it is tended for Lukoil/Litasco business or intends to
visit one of our terminals or facilities.’
The charterer said that these letters showed that the owner had
obtained no approvals at all. However, the judge accepted the
evidence of the owner’s expert witness that, in 2007, owners and
operators collected such letters to help with marketing their ships
and that these letters were usually known as ‘approval letters’ despite
the conditional language in which they were expressed. The judge
concluded that, in 2007, ‘approved’ was used by the market to mean
‘acceptable to’ the oil majors who might or might not then decide to
accept the ship for use for particular business.