CRIMARIO - Critical Maritime Routes in the Indian Ocean

Project

Antipollution exercise in Seychelles
Antipollution exercise in Seychelles
Project start date
Project end date
Financing amount (Euro)
€ 5.5m
Country and region
Comoros, Djibouti, Mauritius, Kenya, Madagascar, Mozambique, Seychelles, Somalia, Tanzania, Yemen
Funders

EU CRIMARIO aims to strengthen maritime safety and security in the wider Indian Ocean region by supporting coastal countries in enhancing maritime situational awareness (MSA).

Reducing maritime risk through information sharing

The Indian Ocean is the maritime route through which about 70% of the oil transported around the world transits. Despite its recent decline, piracy in the Indian Ocean must continue to be prevented, while other forms of organised crime at sea must also be tackled, such as human trafficking, drugs and arms trafficking, illegal fishing, oil pollution and the illegal exploitation of marine resources. Controlling these problems, which are developing around waters under national sovereignty and international waters, requires inter-administration coordination and regional cooperation.

To address these challenges, the European Union is supporting the regional mechanism of the Djibouti Code of Conduct, which was signed in 2009 by the 21 coastal countries of the Western Indian Ocean and amended in 2017 in Jeddha, and has launched the Critical Maritime Routes Programme.

Within this programme, the CRIMARIO project aims to strengthen maritime safety and security across the entire Indian Ocean by assisting the coastal countries with the development of maritime domain awareness.

To this end, CRIMARIO offers the regional partners several initiatives, which include the creation of a secure web portal for information sharing and incident management (IORIS), the creation of a regional AIS network, training for capacity building, workshops promoting inter-administration and regional cooperation, as well as assistance to design a set of information-sharing policies.

These initiatives will allow data from various sources to be shared and merged in order to enhance maritime domain awareness. In return, exhaustive and ongoing maritime domain awareness will give the coastal States the capacity to improve safety and security and protect the marine environment.

To ensure the sustainability of the achievements of CRIMARIO, a new project, called CRIMARIO II, will start in 2020 with an extension to South and Southeast Asia. It is also financed by the European Union (EU) and will be implemented by Expertise France.

 

Consult the CRIMARIO results brochure

Consult CRIMARIO II project sheet

IORIS, principal outil de communication pendant Cutlass Express 2019

IORIS, principal outil de communication pendant Cutlass Express 2019

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