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wreck removal procedure Malaysia 2026

Wreck Removal Procedure in Malaysia (2026): Step‑by‑step Guide for Shipowners, P&I Clubs & Insurers

By Global Law Experts
– posted 1 hour ago

When a vessel grounds, sinks, or is abandoned in Malaysian waters, the wreck removal procedure in Malaysia imposes immediate obligations on shipowners, masters, and their insurers, obligations that, if missed, trigger compulsory state intervention, cost recovery, and potential sale of the wreck. This guide sets out the complete 2026 procedure: who must act, what must be reported, which documents are required, and how the Receiver of Wreck appointed under the Merchant Shipping Ordinance 1952 (MSO) exercises enforcement powers through Jabatan Laut Malaysia (the Marine Department). It applies equally to owners, bareboat charterers, P&I clubs, hull underwriters, salvage contractors, and port agents operating in Malaysian ports, territorial waters, and the exclusive economic zone.

For broader context on recent legislative developments, see the Shipping Law Malaysia, 2026 changes overview.

Overview of the Wreck Removal Process and Who It Applies To

Malaysia’s domestic framework for wreck removal is rooted in Part XII of the Merchant Shipping Ordinance 1952, which confers broad powers on the Receiver of Wreck and the Director General of Marine (Jabatan Laut Malaysia). The MSO defines “wreck” to include jetsam, flotsam, lagan, and derelict found in or on the shores of Malaysia, and empowers the Receiver to take possession of, mark, remove, and, where necessary, sell wreck material to recover costs.

Jabatan Laut Malaysia, operating under the Ministry of Transport, is the principal regulator. It publishes Notices of Wreck for unmanned and abandoned vessels throughout Malaysian waters and issues Malaysia Shipping Notices that prescribe reporting channels and procedural requirements. The Malaysian Maritime Authority wreck powers extend to ports, harbours, territorial waters, and, subject to applicable federal and state legislation, offshore zones including structures on the continental shelf.

This procedure is relevant to any party with a legal or commercial interest in a wreck incident in Malaysia, including:

  • Registered owners and bareboat charterers, who bear primary liability for removal.
  • P&I clubs and hull underwriters, who may be required to provide security and fund removal operations.
  • Salvage contractors, engaged under Lloyd’s Open Form (LOF) or bespoke contracts.
  • Port agents and in‑house counsel, coordinating notifications and compliance on behalf of principals.
  • Masters and crew, who must make immediate reports and preserve evidence.

The Receiver of Wreck, typically a senior Jabatan Laut officer at the relevant port, is the person who issues statutory notices and exercises compulsory removal and sale powers under the MSO. All Notices of Wreck published by Jabatan Laut, including those for unmanned vessels, are accessible through the Marine Department’s official portal.

Eligibility and Prerequisites: Who Is Responsible for Wreck Removal in Malaysia

Under the MSO, the registered owner of the vessel bears primary responsibility for wreck removal. This means the person or entity named on the certificate of registry at the time of the casualty. Where a bareboat charter is in place, the charterer may assume operational responsibilities, but the registered owner’s statutory exposure remains unless expressly displaced by legislation or court order.

Legal tests: who is “owner” and when can the state intervene

The MSO does not limit liability to the operator alone. The statutory definition of “owner” encompasses the registered owner and, in certain contexts, any person who has possession or control of the vessel at the time of the incident. This broad definition means that P&I clubs and insurers must consider the exposure of every party in the ownership and management chain.

The state, acting through Jabatan Laut and the Receiver of Wreck, may intervene when:

  • The wreck constitutes a hazard to navigation. This includes obstruction of shipping lanes, approaches, or anchorage areas.
  • There is actual or threatened pollution. Oil discharge, chemical release, or risk of cargo contamination triggers additional obligations under environmental legislation administered by the Department of Environment.
  • The owner fails to act within a reasonable time or within the deadline fixed by the Receiver’s statutory removal notice.

Before removal operations can commence, several prerequisites must be satisfied. The owner must have notified Jabatan Laut and the P&I club, engaged a marine surveyor to assess the wreck, and, where hazardous cargo is involved, produced the relevant cargo manifest and dangerous goods declarations. If the owner holds P&I cover, the club will typically require immediate notification before agreeing to fund operations or provide security. Industry observers expect that owners without adequate insurance or security face accelerated enforcement action, including arrest of any other vessel in the same ownership within Malaysian jurisdiction.

Owners and operators should confirm their insurance position through the GLE lawyer directory, Malaysia to identify counsel who can verify coverage obligations and liaise with Jabatan Laut on their behalf.

Step‑by‑Step Wreck Removal Procedure in Malaysia (2026)

The following numbered steps set out the core process from initial incident through to final removal, disposal, or sale. Each step identifies who must act and the key actions required.

Step 1, Report the ship grounding to Jabatan Laut and notify P&I immediately

The Master must secure the safety of all persons on board and take immediate steps to preserve evidence, including photographs, logbook entries, and position records. Once life‑safety is confirmed, reporting obligations begin without delay.

To report a ship grounding in Malaysia, the Master, owner, or local agent must notify:

  1. Jabatan Laut Malaysia, via the nearest Vessel Traffic Service (VTS) centre or Marine Operations HQ. Jabatan Laut’s Notice of Wreck procedure requires submission of the casualty details through the channels published on its official portal.
  2. The flag state administration, in accordance with the vessel’s flag state reporting requirements.
  3. The P&I club, immediate telephone notification followed by written confirmation, including a request for instructions regarding salvage and security.
  4. The Department of Environment (DOE), if there is actual or suspected pollution (oil sheen, cargo discharge, chemical release).

The initial report to Jabatan Laut should include the following information at minimum:

  • Vessel name, IMO number, flag, and call sign
  • Position, latitude and longitude of the wreck or grounding site
  • Nature and extent of damage, hull breach, flooding, structural failure
  • Pollution observed, oil discharge, chemical release, or nil
  • Cargo type and quantity, including any dangerous goods (IMDG/IMSBC classification)
  • Number of crew and any injuries
  • Salvage assistance required, whether tugs, salvors, or pollution-response equipment are needed

Step 2, Conduct on‑site assessment and hazard determination

Once the initial report is filed, Jabatan Laut will appoint or designate a Receiver of Wreck for the casualty. The Receiver assesses whether the wreck constitutes a hazard to navigation or the marine environment. Concurrently, the owner should appoint a marine surveyor, typically through the P&I club’s correspondent, to conduct an underwater inspection and produce a preliminary condition report.

During this phase, the Receiver may order or direct the following temporary measures:

Action Responsible party
Mark and light the wreck position (buoys, lanterns) Receiver of Wreck / Port Authority
Establish a temporary exclusion zone around the wreck Jabatan Laut / Harbour Master
Deploy initial pollution containment (oil booms, absorbents) Owner / Salvors / DOE
Issue navigational warnings (Notice to Mariners) Jabatan Laut Hydrographic Directorate
Appoint marine surveyor and prepare condition report Owner / P&I club correspondent

The hazard determination is critical: if the Receiver concludes that the wreck poses a danger to navigation or the environment, statutory powers to compel removal are engaged immediately.

Step 3, Contract salvors or implement emergency state measures

Once the hazard assessment is complete, the owner (or the P&I club on the owner’s behalf) must engage salvors to carry out the removal. Two principal contracting models are used:

  • Lloyd’s Open Form (LOF), a “no cure, no pay” salvage contract. LOF is appropriate where there is still a prospect of saving the vessel or its cargo as property. The SCOPIC (Special Compensation P&I Clubs) clause may be invoked to provide salvors with compensation for environmental protection work even where the salved property value is low.
  • Fixed‑price or day‑rate wreck removal contract, used where the vessel is a constructive total loss and there is no salvageable property. This is a wreck removal operation, not a salvage operation in the legal sense.

The distinction between salvage and wreck removal matters both legally and commercially. Salvage operations aim to save property from peril, and salvors earn a reward proportionate to the value salved. Wreck removal operations eliminate a hazard or obstruction, the obligation falls on the owner, and costs are not offset by any “salvage reward” unless salved property generates proceeds.

If the owner fails to contract salvors within a reasonable time, Jabatan Laut has the power to take emergency measures, including engaging salvors directly and recovering all costs from the owner. Where pollution is imminent, the DOE may also direct emergency containment and clean‑up at the owner’s expense.

Step 4, Comply with statutory removal notices, receivership orders, and enforcement

The Receiver of Wreck, exercising powers under Part XII of the MSO, may issue a formal removal order requiring the owner to remove the wreck within a specified deadline. If the owner does not comply, the Receiver may:

  • Cause the wreck to be removed at the owner’s expense.
  • Sell the wreck and its materials by public auction or private treaty, using the proceeds to defray removal costs.
  • Recover any shortfall from the owner as a debt due to the Government of Malaysia.

The statutory scheme also addresses competing claims to wreck, owners who assert title to material recovered from a wreck must file a claim with the Receiver within the period prescribed by the MSO, failing which the Receiver may dispose of the material.

The following table summarises the wreck removal procedure timeline from incident to final disposal:

Step Who does it Typical duration (est.)
1. Immediate report to Jabatan Laut & P&I club Master / Owner / Agent Without delay, within hours of incident
2. On‑site hazard assessment & receiver/surveyor appointment Jabatan Laut / Receiver / Owner (surveyor) 24–72 hours (initial); formal determination within days
3. Marking, lighting & temporary safety measures Receiver / Salvors / Port Authority 1–7 days (weather-dependent)
4. Salvage or emergency pollution response contracted Owner / P&I club / Salvors Hours to weeks (salvage); weeks to months (pollution response)
5. Formal removal order issued & permits obtained Jabatan Laut / Local environmental authorities Deadline set case‑by‑case (varies by complexity and hazard level)
6. Physical removal, disposal, or sale & claims settlement Salvors / Receiver / Courts (if disputed) Weeks (small coastal wrecks) to months or years (offshore structures)

Documents Needed for Wreck Removal in Malaysia

Proper documentation is essential at every stage of the wreck removal procedure. Missing or incomplete documents delay approvals, complicate insurance claims, and expose owners to enforcement action. The following table lists the principal documents required, who issues each, and key notes on format and validity.

Document Notes
Report of casualty (Notice of Wreck / grounding report) Prepared by Master, owner, or agent. Submit to Jabatan Laut via VTS or Marine Operations HQ. Must include vessel particulars, lat/long position, damage assessment, cargo details, and pollution information.
Certificate of registry / ship particulars Issued by the flag state registry. Identifies the registered owner and manager. Required by Jabatan Laut to confirm the party upon whom removal obligations fall.
Crew list and witness statements Compiled by the Master. Used for casualty investigation and may be requested by the Receiver or marine inquiry.
P&I certificate / liability insurance documentation Issued by the P&I club or liability insurer. Confirms cover for third-party liabilities including wreck removal and pollution. Club contact details must be provided to Jabatan Laut.
Cargo manifest / dangerous goods declaration (IMDG/IMSBC) Issued by the shipper or shipper’s agent. Essential where hazardous cargo affects the removal method or triggers additional environmental permit requirements.
Salvage contract (LOF or commercial agreement) Executed between owner (or P&I club) and the salvor. Retain signed originals and scope‑of‑works annexures for cost‑recovery and arbitration purposes.
Environmental permit / waste disposal licence Issued by the Department of Environment or relevant state environmental agency. Required for disposal of recovered wreck materials, hydrocarbons, and contaminated sediments.
Statutory removal order / Receiver’s notice Issued by the Receiver of Wreck under Part XII of the MSO. Sets the compliance deadline, specifies the scope of removal required, and activates enforcement powers if the owner defaults.
Marine surveyor report / underwater inspection Commissioned by the owner or P&I club. Establishes the wreck’s structural condition, stability, and environmental risk profile. Informs the salvage plan and cost estimate.

Owners should prepare these documents in advance as part of their emergency response plan. Where dangerous goods are involved, ensure that IMDG or IMSBC classifications are current and that the Department of Environment has been notified of the cargo profile before removal operations begin.

Wreck Removal Timeline and Key Deadlines

Timing is critical in every wreck removal case. The MSO requires that the owner act “without delay” once a wreck has occurred, and the Receiver may set a specific deadline for removal in the statutory notice. Several overlapping time‑sensitive obligations apply simultaneously:

  • Immediate reporting. The Master must notify Jabatan Laut as soon as practicable after the incident. Any delay in reporting may constitute an offence and will prejudice the owner’s position in subsequent negotiations with the Receiver.
  • P&I notification window. Most P&I club rules require notification within a very short period (commonly 24–72 hours) for the club to accept cover for wreck removal costs. Late notification risks denial of cover.
  • Receiver’s removal deadline. Once a formal removal order is issued, the Receiver specifies the period within which the owner must complete removal. The length of this period is set at the Receiver’s discretion, taking into account the nature of the hazard, the complexity of removal operations, and weather conditions. Failure to comply within the stated deadline triggers the Receiver’s power to remove at the owner’s expense.
  • Salvage claim limitation. Under international salvage law principles (the Salvage Convention 1989, to the extent applicable), claims for salvage reward are subject to a two‑year limitation period from the date on which the salvage operations terminated.
  • Pollution claim procedure. Claims arising from pollution damage may be subject to separate limitation periods under Malaysian environmental legislation. Owners should seek legal advice on the interaction between maritime limitation and environmental liability regimes.

For interim obligations, marking, lighting, pollution containment, the Receiver may set independent deadlines. Owners must maintain all temporary safety measures (buoys, lanterns, oil booms) until the wreck is fully removed or the Receiver confirms that the hazard has been eliminated. The likely practical effect of the 2026 updates to Jabatan Laut’s procedural notices is that enforcement timelines will be monitored more closely and owners can expect shorter grace periods before compulsory removal is ordered.

Wreck Removal Costs, Fees, and Insurance Considerations

The registered owner bears primary financial responsibility for all wreck removal costs. Where the owner holds P&I cover, the club will typically fund removal operations, subject to policy terms, deductibles, and any applicable limit of liability. The principal cost categories are set out below.

Cost item Indicative range (MYR) Notes
Emergency towing and salvage (small vessel) 50,000–250,000 Highly variable, depends on tug availability, distance, weather. Obtain competitive quotes from at least two salvors.
Small wreck removal (coastal craft) 100,000–500,000 Covers mobilisation, crane/barge, diving, lifting, and disposal. Figures are illustrative only.
Large vessel or offshore wreck removal Millions (project‑specific) Major offshore removals require specialised heavy‑lift vessels and may run over multiple seasons.
Pollution response (booms, skimmers, clean‑up) Tens of thousands to hundreds of thousands Scale depends on volume of hydrocarbons discharged and environmental sensitivity of the site.
Port and harbour dues / disposal fees Variable Charged by the relevant port authority at published tariff rates. Verify current rates with the port.
Legal and surveyor fees 5,000–50,000+ Covers legal representation for arrest, security, receiver proceedings, and surveyor inspections.

All figures above are illustrative estimates intended to indicate the order of magnitude. Actual costs depend on the specific incident, location, vessel size, cargo, and market conditions. Owners and P&I clubs should obtain contractor quotations and verify port authority tariffs before relying on these ranges.

Where the owner fails to remove the wreck and the Receiver exercises compulsory removal powers, all costs incurred by the Government are recoverable from the owner. The Receiver may also sell the wreck by public auction and apply the sale proceeds to offset costs. Any surplus is held for the owner; any deficit remains a debt due to the Government.

Owners should confirm early with their P&I club whether the club’s cover extends to wreck removal, pollution liability, and any security demanded by the Receiver. Some clubs offer separate wreck removal cover with sub‑limits, understanding these limits before an incident occurs is critical to managing the wreck removal timeline and cost exposure.

What Changes in 2026 for the Wreck Removal Procedure in Malaysia

The 2026 landscape for wreck removal in Malaysia is shaped by several developments that affect the practical procedure:

  • Updated Jabatan Laut Notices of Wreck. Jabatan Laut has updated its Notice of Wreck publications during 2026, reflecting new reporting channels and updated guidance on unmanned vessel wrecks. Owners and agents should check the Jabatan Laut portal for the latest contact details and procedural instructions.
  • Merchant Shipping and Admiralty legislation amendments. Malaysia’s ongoing programme of maritime law reform, including amendments to the merchant shipping legislative framework and admiralty jurisdiction, is expected to strengthen enforcement powers and align domestic provisions more closely with international conventions. Industry observers expect that once finalised, these reforms will introduce clearer statutory timelines, mandatory insurance requirements, and enhanced Receiver powers for wreck removal.
  • Nairobi Wreck Removal Convention alignment. The Nairobi International Convention on the Removal of Wrecks 2007 establishes a uniform international regime for owner liability, compulsory insurance, and state powers to order wreck removal. While Malaysia’s ratification and full domestication of the Convention should be independently verified before relying on its provisions, the global trend in 2026 is clear, neighbouring jurisdictions such as Singapore have already enacted domestic wreck removal legislation modelled on the Convention.

Owners and their legal advisers should, as an immediate 2026 action item, re‑verify: (a) current Jabatan Laut reporting channels and any new online submission portals; (b) whether any new compulsory insurance or financial security requirements have been gazetted; and (c) whether the statutory removal deadline framework has changed under the latest amendments.

Common Pitfalls and How to Avoid Them

  • Delayed reporting to Jabatan Laut. Every hour of delay prejudices the owner’s position and may constitute an offence. Report immediately via VTS, do not wait for a full damage assessment before making the initial notification.
  • Failing to notify the P&I club within the policy notification window. Late notification may void cover for wreck removal costs. Keep the club’s emergency contact number accessible on the bridge and in the ship management office.
  • Poor evidence preservation. Photographs, logbook entries, AIS data, and crew statements must be secured before the scene changes. Evidence lost in the first hours after grounding is rarely recoverable.
  • Using the wrong contracting model. Engaging salvors under LOF when the vessel is already a total loss, or using a fixed‑price removal contract when salvageable property remains, creates legal and financial complications. Obtain legal advice on the appropriate contract form before signing.
  • Omitting environmental permits. Disposal of wreck materials, hydrocarbons, and contaminated sediments requires permits from the Department of Environment. Beginning removal without these permits exposes the owner and contractor to prosecution.
  • Misclassifying or ignoring dangerous cargo. Failure to declare hazardous goods (IMDG/IMSBC) in the casualty report or to the salvors can endanger removal crews and lead to additional regulatory sanctions.

Need Legal Advice?

This article was produced by Global Law Experts. For specialist advice on this topic, contact Jeremy M Joseph at Messrs Joseph and Partners, a member of the Global Law Experts network.

Sources

  1. Jabatan Laut Malaysia, Notice of Wreck
  2. Marine Department Malaysia, Merchant Shipping Ordinance 1952
  3. Ministry of Transport Malaysia, Maritime Acts and Policy
  4. IMO, Nairobi International Convention on the Removal of Wrecks 2007
  5. NATLEX, Merchant Shipping Ordinance 1952 (Consolidated English Text)
  6. Singapore Statutes Online, Merchant Shipping (Wreck Removal) Act 2017

FAQs

How do I report a ship grounding in Malaysia?
Notify Jabatan Laut Malaysia immediately through the nearest Vessel Traffic Service (VTS) centre or Marine Operations HQ. Provide the vessel name, IMO number, position (latitude and longitude), nature and extent of damage, any pollution observed, cargo type, and whether salvage assistance is required. Simultaneously notify your P&I club and the flag state administration. Jabatan Laut publishes its Notice of Wreck procedures and contact channels on its official portal.
The registered owner of the vessel bears primary responsibility for wreck removal under the Merchant Shipping Ordinance 1952. The Receiver of Wreck, a Jabatan Laut officer, has the power to order the owner to remove the wreck within a specified deadline. If the owner does not comply, the Receiver may cause the wreck to be removed at the owner’s expense and may sell the wreck to recover costs.
At minimum: the report of casualty (Notice of Wreck), the certificate of registry, the P&I or liability insurance certificate, the cargo manifest (including any dangerous goods declaration), the salvage or wreck removal contract, and the marine surveyor’s condition report. Environmental permits from the Department of Environment are also required before disposal of recovered material can commence. A full checklist is set out in the Required Documents table above.
The Receiver of Wreck may exercise compulsory removal powers under Part XII of the MSO. This means the Receiver can engage contractors to remove the wreck, sell the wreck and its materials by public auction, and recover all costs from the owner, including any shortfall between sale proceeds and actual removal costs. The owner may also face prosecution for failing to comply with a lawful removal order.
In most cases, yes, standard P&I cover includes wreck removal liability, subject to club rules, deductibles, and any applicable sub‑limits. Some clubs also provide separate wreck removal and pollution cover. The critical step is to notify the P&I club immediately after the incident, within the notification window specified in the policy. The club will typically appoint correspondents, instruct salvors, and, where necessary, provide security to the Receiver on the owner’s behalf.
Engage legal counsel immediately if: a statutory removal order has been or is about to be issued; enforcement deadlines are running; there is a pollution claim or risk of prosecution; the Receiver threatens compulsory sale; or a vessel arrest is anticipated. A maritime lawyer can advise on the appropriate salvage or removal contract, negotiate with the Receiver, provide security to prevent arrest, and manage the pollution claim procedure in Malaysia. Early legal involvement consistently reduces total cost exposure and preserves the owner’s rights under limitation and insurance regimes.
The Nairobi International Convention on the Removal of Wrecks 2007 establishes international standards for owner liability, compulsory insurance, and state intervention powers. Malaysia’s ratification and full domestication status should be independently verified before relying on Convention provisions in any specific case. In practice, Malaysia’s domestic framework under the MSO already confers broadly comparable powers on the Receiver of Wreck, and the 2026 reform programme is expected to bring further alignment with international standards.
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Wreck Removal Procedure in Malaysia (2026): Step‑by‑step Guide for Shipowners, P&I Clubs & Insurers

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