Environment

Amendment to the Regulation on Issuance of Green Port Certificate to Coastal Facilities

🇹🇷Türkiye··Regulation·High Impact0·View source ↗

AI-generated summary for informational purposes only. Not legal advice. See the original source for the authoritative text.

🇬🇧 English

This regulation amends the November 2023 Green Port Certificate framework for Turkish coastal facilities. It expands the scope to include facilities that voluntarily seek the certificate as well as those legally required to obtain it, and clarifies the legal definition of 'coastal facility' under the Coastal Law No. 3621. Mandatory Green Port Certificate requirements are introduced for two categories: cruise terminals receiving 100 or more cruise ships per calendar year must comply by 31 December 2028, and container terminals handling 100,000 TEU or more annually must comply by 31 December 2030. Newly constructed or significantly expanded (over 25% of total area) coastal facilities falling under the International Ship and Port Facility Security Code (ISPS) must also obtain the certificate before receiving operating permits. Administrative fines are established for non-compliant mandatory facilities: 5,000 TL per hour per vessel docked, with a floor of 15,259 TL and a ceiling of 605,279 TL, indexed annually to the tax revaluation rate. Technical requirements are also tightened, including mandatory shore power connections to TS IEC/IEEE 80005 standard (excluding marinas), a minimum reforestation obligation of 5,000 trees, and structured marine surface cleaning protocols with documented equipment inventories and annual reporting.

AI-generated summary. May contain errors. Refer to official sources for legal decisions.

Key Changes

  • Mandatory Green Port Certificate required for cruise terminals with ≥100 ship calls/year by 31 December 2028, and container terminals handling ≥100,000 TEU/year by 31 December 2030
  • New and significantly expanded coastal facilities (>25% total area expansion) under ISPS Code must obtain Green Port Certificate before receiving operating permits
  • Administrative fine of 5,000 TL per hour per docked vessel for non-compliant mandatory facilities; minimum 15,259 TL, maximum 605,279 TL, annually revalued via tax revaluation rate

+ 3 more changes with Pro

Obligations

What this law requires

high

Cruise terminals receiving 100 or more cruise ships per calendar year must obtain Green Port Certificate by 31 December 2028

Cruise terminal operators
licensing
high

Container terminals handling 100,000 TEU or more annually must obtain Green Port Certificate by 31 December 2030

Container terminal operators
licensing
high

Newly constructed coastal facilities under ISPS Code must obtain Green Port Certificate before receiving operating permits

Operators of newly constructed ISPS-classified coastal facilities
licensing
high

Coastal facilities significantly expanded (over 25% of total area) under ISPS Code must obtain Green Port Certificate before expansion areas receive operating permits

Operators of expanded ISPS-classified coastal facilities
licensing
high

All coastal facilities (except marinas) under ISPS Code must install shore power connections compliant with TS IEC/IEEE 80005 standard

Operators of ISPS-classified coastal facilities
operational

Affected Parties

Cruise terminal operators (≥100 ship calls/year)Container port operators (≥100,000 TEU/year)+4 more…

Tags

green port certificate,coastal facilities,maritime sustainability