Merchant Shipping Act 1988

The Merchant Shipping Act 1988 (c. 12) was an Act of Parliament of the United Kingdom. It aimed to prevent foreign fishing fleets from fishing in British territorial waters. In the Factortame case, its provisions in Parts I and II, Registration of British Ships, were disapplied by the Judicial functions of the European court of justice when they were found to conflict with European Community law and the Common Fisheries Policy which stated British waters were the EUs too. Part II dealt only with fishing vessels and was found to be repugnant by the European Court of Justice.[citation needed] The subsequent definition of British Ships is found in the Merchant Shipping Act 1995.

Merchant Shipping Act 1988
Act of Parliament
Long titleAn Act to amend the law relating to the registration of ships; to make provision for the giving of financial assistance in connection with the training of seamen and crew relief costs; to make provision for the establishment of a Merchant Navy Reserve; to make further provision with respect to the safety of shipping, with respect to liability and compensation for oil pollution and with respect to the financing and administration of the lighthouse service; to make other amendments of the law relating to shipping, seamen and pollution; and for connected purposes.
Citation1988 c. 12
Territorial extent United Kingdom
Dates
Royal assent3 May 1988
Repealed26 May 2015
Other legislation
Repealed byDeregulation Act 2015
Status: Repealed

See also

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