When a maritime casualty occurs in Greek waters, the decisions made in the first hours determine whether owners, charterers and insurers retain the evidence they need and the enforcement options they deserve. Maritime casualty response in Greece has been reshaped by two convergent developments: the IMO SOLAS and MARPOL amendments that took effect on 1 January 2026, introducing mandatory reporting of containers lost at sea and expanded notification duties, and Greece’s domestic arbitration reform under Law 5016/2023, which recalibrated the procedural rules governing arbitrability and the enforcement of arbitral awards. Together, these changes impose new compliance obligations on ship masters and operators while simultaneously raising the evidential bar for anyone anticipating arbitration, arrest or interim relief in Greek jurisdiction.
This guide provides the actionable, step-by-step protocol that shipowners, P&I clubs, casualty managers, salvors and charterers need right now.
This article is a practical, jurisdiction-specific manual for anyone involved in a maritime casualty in or near Greek waters. It covers three interlocking priorities that must be addressed simultaneously from the moment a casualty event occurs:
The sections that follow move chronologically from the first minutes after a casualty through to enforcement strategy, with checklists, tables and templates designed for operational use at sea and ashore.
The first twenty-four hours after a casualty determine the quality and admissibility of evidence for years to come. Below is a time-sliced checklist for masters, owners, P&I correspondents and shore-side casualty managers. Every action should be logged with the date, time (UTC) and name of the person responsible.
No evidence preservation step should ever delay actions to protect human life or prevent pollution. The master’s overriding obligation under SOLAS Chapter V Regulation 33 is to render assistance to persons in distress. Simultaneously, all reasonable steps to prevent or minimise pollution must be initiated under MARPOL and Greek domestic law. Only once life-safety and environmental response measures are under way should the attention turn to evidence and reporting.
Notification must be treated as a parallel workstream, not a sequential one. The following parties should be contacted within the indicated windows:
Evidence degrades quickly. The following actions must be treated as urgent, ideally within the first two hours:
Every item must be logged with an unbroken chain-of-custody record from the moment it is collected. Industry observers expect that the new IMO 2026 reporting regime will make Greek authorities, and arbitral tribunals, increasingly attentive to whether evidence was secured promptly and transparently.
The regulatory landscape governing maritime casualty response in Greece shifted materially from 1 January 2026. Understanding the new framework is essential for compliance and for protecting arbitration positions.
The IMO’s Maritime Safety Committee adopted amendments to SOLAS Chapter V that entered into force on 1 January 2026. These amendments, covering Regulations V/31 and V/32, introduce mandatory reporting obligations for containers lost at sea. The key changes include:
Alongside these international changes, Greece’s Law 5016/2023 modernised the domestic arbitration framework. The likely practical effect for maritime disputes will be that arbitral tribunals seated in Greece apply updated procedural standards for evidence, interim measures and the enforceability of awards, all of which interact with the quality of evidence preserved after a casualty.
The SOLAS lost-container reporting obligations are directed at the coastal state, in Greek waters, that means the Hellenic Coast Guard and the relevant port authority. However, the HBMCI may open a separate safety investigation if the container loss event results in a “marine casualty” as defined under EU Directive 2009/18/EC. This means that a single container loss event can generate overlapping reporting obligations: one to the Coast Guard under SOLAS, another to HBMCI for safety investigation purposes, and potentially a third to the public prosecutor if criminal conduct is suspected. The master and owner must be prepared to satisfy all three channels, each of which requires slightly different information and serves a different legal purpose.
Practitioners handling preparation for and conduct of arbitration hearings should note that documents submitted to HBMCI as part of a safety investigation are intended to be treated confidentially and used solely for safety improvement. However, the practical boundaries of that confidentiality, particularly in relation to arbitral proceedings, remain a developing area in Greek law.
Understanding the distinct roles of Greek investigative bodies is critical for anyone managing a casualty investigation in Greece. Missteps in dealing with the wrong authority, or in providing the wrong information to the right one, can compromise both regulatory compliance and arbitration strategy.
The Hellenic Bureau for Marine Casualties Investigation (HBMCI) is Greece’s independent safety investigation body. It operates under the framework of EU Directive 2009/18/EC and investigates marine casualties and incidents to identify contributing safety factors and issue recommendations. Its investigations are not intended to determine liability or apportion blame.
The Hellenic Coast Guard is the primary enforcement authority. It conducts administrative and criminal preliminary investigations, and it coordinates search and rescue operations. Where pollution is involved, the Coast Guard exercises authority under both domestic law and the international conventions (MARPOL, CLC, Bunkers Convention).
The public prosecutor may intervene where there is evidence of criminal negligence, environmental crime or violations of port safety regulations. Criminal investigations run in parallel with, and independently from, the HBMCI safety investigation.
Evidence preservation is the single most important controllable factor in maritime casualty response in Greece. The steps taken in the first hours shape the strength or weakness of every subsequent arbitration, litigation or enforcement action. Greek admiralty evidence standards, and the expectations of arbitral tribunals, whether seated in Greece, London or elsewhere, demand an unbroken evidentiary chain from the moment of the casualty to the hearing room.
The VDR is the maritime equivalent of an aircraft’s black box and is typically the single most important piece of technical evidence. The following steps are essential:
Complete and contemporaneous log entries carry significant weight in arbitration. Masters should ensure that all relevant logbooks are completed up to the time of the casualty and secured against unauthorised access. Passage plans, ECDIS route history, weather routing correspondence, and any emails or instant messages between the bridge team and shore management should be preserved and backed up. Digital records should be exported to a separate storage device and sealed.
Crew statements are often the most contested category of evidence in maritime arbitration. The following best practices reduce the risk of challenge:
Bunker samples, water samples, cargo condition evidence, and photographs all require documented chain-of-custody procedures. Each sample should be sealed in the presence of a witness, labelled with identifying details, and stored in a secure location. Photographs should be taken systematically, exterior damage first, then internal compartments, followed by cargo holds and machinery spaces, with a contemporaneous photo log that records the subject, location, time and photographer.
Digital forensics are increasingly important. Bridge system data, ECDIS voyage files, engine monitoring system logs, email and instant message records from ship-to-shore communications, and vessel tracking data (AIS, VMS) should all be exported and preserved. Industry observers expect arbitral tribunals to give increasing weight to digital evidence, particularly where it corroborates or contradicts narrative witness evidence.
Effective reporting requires knowing who must be notified, when, and what data to include. The table below consolidates the reporting obligations by entity type, incorporating the IMO 2026 amendments to SOLAS Chapter V Regulations V/31 and V/32.
| Entity | Required / Recommended Reporting Obligations | Key Data to Include |
|---|---|---|
| Master / On-scene vessel | Immediate safety notifications to coastal state; mandatory SOLAS notifications for lost containers (from 1 January 2026); report to port authority and Hellenic Coast Guard | Position and time, number and type of containers, cargo description (including dangerous goods), damages, pollution status, AIS/VDR snapshot |
| Owner / Manager / P&I | Notify P&I club, on-hire/off-hire parties, charterers; appoint casualty team and surveyors; preserve documents for investigation and arbitration | P&I file reference, crew roster, appointment letter, insurers’ instructions, sample custody records |
| Salvors / Contractors | Notify authorities as required; preserve salvage logs and salvage plan; retain samples and equipment logs | Salvage plan, service-level agreements, operations log, GPS tracks, photographic record |
| Observing vessels / Third parties | Report drifting containers to coastal authorities per SOLAS observer obligations | Location, description, time, photographs |
For initial notification to the Hellenic Coast Guard or HBMCI, the report should include, at minimum: vessel name, IMO number, flag, position, nature of the casualty, number of persons on board, status of crew safety, pollution risk assessment, and a contact point ashore. Where containers have been lost, the additional SOLAS-mandated fields, number of containers, contents description, and last known position of the containers, must be included from the outset.
Practitioners should note the practical guidance published by major P&I clubs on reporting lost containers, which provides detailed templates for the information that should be gathered by the master and transmitted to coastal authorities and insurers.
The operational steps taken during and after a casualty directly influence the enforcement remedies available in subsequent disputes. Whether the claim is pursued through international arbitration or before the Greek courts, the quality and integrity of the evidential record will be tested.
Greek courts have consistently held that a party who fails to preserve relevant evidence, or who destroys documents after a dispute has arisen or is reasonably foreseeable, may face adverse inferences. In arbitration, tribunals applying Greek procedural law or seated in Greece under Law 5016/2023 may draw similar inferences and may also impose costs consequences. The practical lesson is clear: preserving evidence is not merely good practice but a prerequisite for maintaining credible enforcement options.
Salvage operations in Greek waters involve a complex interplay of operational urgency and evidential responsibility. Salvors have their own duty to preserve records of the salvage operation, including salvage plans, equipment deployment logs, GPS tracks, dive survey reports and photographic records, all of which may become relevant in subsequent salvage arbitration or in disputes over pollution liability.
Wreck removal obligations in Greece are governed by domestic legislation implementing the Nairobi International Convention on the Removal of Wrecks (2007). The owner is responsible for marking, lighting and ultimately removing the wreck where it poses a hazard. All documentation related to wreck removal, including contracts with salvage and wreck removal contractors, cost records and environmental monitoring data, should be retained as part of the broader casualty file. These records may prove essential in limitation proceedings, claims against hull underwriters or disputes between owners and charterers over responsibility for wreck removal costs.
From a P&I casualty response perspective, salvage and wreck removal contractors should be appointed in consultation with the club. The appointment letter should include express provisions requiring the contractor to preserve all operational records and make them available for arbitration or litigation purposes.
The following condensed action list is designed for shore-side stakeholders who need to mobilise immediately upon receiving notice of a casualty in Greek waters:
The following timeline synthesises the key actions by time window and responsible party:
| Time Window | Action | Responsible Party |
|---|---|---|
| 0–30 minutes | Ensure crew safety; initiate pollution prevention; activate VDR save function; issue distress/urgency calls | Master / Bridge team |
| 30 minutes – 2 hours | Notify Hellenic Coast Guard, port authority and P&I club; begin photographic and sample record; report lost containers under SOLAS V/31 | Master / Duty officer / Owner |
| 2–12 hours | Notify HBMCI, flag state, charterers, cargo interests and classification society; secure logbooks and digital records; begin crew statements | Master / P&I correspondent / Owner |
| 12–24 hours | Appoint local Greek counsel and surveyors; arrange VDR extraction; send written confirmations of all verbal notifications; prepare preliminary casualty report | Owner / P&I / Legal counsel |
| 24–72 hours | Complete crew statements; submit formal notifications; commence damage survey; assess arrest/interim relief options; coordinate with HBMCI if investigation opened | Legal counsel / Surveyors / P&I |
Early and systematic escalation, from the bridge to the P&I correspondent to local counsel, is the hallmark of effective maritime casualty response in Greece. Each step in the timeline feeds into the next, and delays at any point can create gaps in the evidential record that adversaries will exploit.
This article was produced by Global Law Experts. For specialist advice on this topic, contact Konstantinos Bachxevanis at BAX LAW, a member of the Global Law Experts network.
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