Mr. Chair and members, good morning. Thank you for inviting the Transportation Safety Board of Canada to discuss the important topic of marine safety and, specifically, cargo container spills.
Our mandate, and our sole purpose, is to advance transportation safety in the air, marine, pipeline and rail modes that are under federal jurisdiction by conducting independent investigations, identifying safety deficiencies, causes and contributing factors, making recommendations, and publishing reports.
The issue before the committee today is related to the loss of marine cargo at sea. There have been four occurrences in Canada of lost cargo containers reported to the TSB in the last 10 years, including the Malta-flagged Zim Kingston. The TSB is currently investigating the October 2021 fire on that vessel, which occurred not far from Victoria, B.C. Initial indications were that the fire broke out after damage to containers on the deck that contained dangerous goods. As this is an ongoing investigation, we're not able to comment on the details, other than to say that it is in the examination and analysis phase.
There is significant attention being paid internationally to the issue of cargo container losses after a few notable incidents. For example, two separate investigations were launched into the January 2019 occurrence when the Panamanian-flagged MSC Zoe lost 342 containers in severe weather while transiting the Wadden Sea between Germany and the Netherlands. At that time, it was the second-highest number of containers lost overboard in heavy weather. It has since become the fourth largest, after the Japanese-flagged One Apus lost 1,816 containers in 2020 and the Danish-flagged Maersk Essen lost 750 in 2021, both in the mid-Pacific Ocean.
The International Maritime Organization has the issue of “loss of shipping containers” as one of many maritime safety issues it's tracking. The TSB participates in the IMO's working group on casualty investigations, and we expect to be able to share lessons learned with that group once our work on the Zim Kingston investigation is complete. The TSB also participates in the Marine Accident Investigators' International Forum, a network of investigation bodies that discuss lessons learned in casualty investigation. We have received support from peer agencies in the early stages of the Zim Kingston investigation.
More broadly, marine safety continues to be top of mind for the TSB. We are in the process of updating the TSB's watchlist, which outlines the key issues that need to be addressed to make Canada's transportation system even safer.
The current watchlist includes one marine-specific issue: commercial fishing safety. It has been on the TSB watchlist since its inception in 2010. Every year, however, the same safety deficiencies on board fishing vessels continue to put at risk the lives of thousands of Canadian fish harvesters and the livelihoods of their families and communities. Fishing continues to be one of the most dangerous professions in Canada. There were eight fishing-related fatalities in 2021, just under the five-year average of 10 fatalities.
Other multi-modal watchlist issues also affect marine safety including fatigue management in vessel operations, safety management and regulatory surveillance.
Since the TSB's creation in 1990, the board has issued 159 marine-related recommendations to regulators and the marine industry. As of September 2021, 86.8% of the responses to these marine recommendations have received the board's highest rating of “fully satisfactory”. However, there is still much that can be done to improve marine safety, especially with respect to the issues that underpin our watch-list.
We're currently in the process of completing our annual reassessments for outstanding recommendations. The results will be available on our website in the coming weeks and will also help inform the next TSB watch-list, which we will publish later this year.
Thank you, Mr. Chair. We're now ready to answer your questions.