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APM 2026: HFW discusses legal matters on shipping’s compliance, decarbonisation and digitisation journey

Toby Stephens, Head of Shipping, Asia, HFW, speaks with Manifold Times prior to his session at the upcoming Asia Pacific Maritime 2026.

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APM 2026: HFW discusses legal matters on shipping’s compliance, decarbonisation and digitisation journey

Asia Pacific Maritime (APM) 2026 will take place between 25 – 27 March 2026 at Marina Bay Sands, Singapore. Toby Stephens, Head of Shipping, Asia, HFW, speaks with Manifold Times prior to his session: “Panel Discussion: Shipping Insurance in an Age of New Risk” on 27 March, 11.20am to 12.10pm.

MT: Green-fuel contracts and charterparties now involve new types of operational and safety risk. How should owners and charterers allocate responsibilities for issues like fuel quality, bunkering delays, or regulatory non-compliance?

The move towards green fuels has changed the risk landscape, so allocation of responsibility needs to be addressed more explicitly in charterparties. In terms of fuel quality, owners will usually retain responsibility for the vessel itself, ensuring that engines, fuel systems and safety arrangements are compatible with the nominated fuel, that crew are properly trained, and that reasonable onboard testing and monitoring is carried out during bunkering. Charterers, by contrast, are typically better placed to manage supply risk and should warrant that the fuel supplied meets the agreed contractual and regulatory specifications, with appropriate certification and traceability. Given the novelty and technical sensitivity of fuels such as methanol or ammonia, it is increasingly important for parties to agree on upfront procedures for sampling, testing and dispute resolution, so that any quality concerns can be addressed without unnecessary delay or operational disruption.

Similar principles apply to bunkering delays and regulatory non‑compliance – liability for delays will still largely follow the charterparty’s terms, but the risk is becoming more pronounced as uptake outpaces infrastructure. While around half of global newbuild tonnage is now alternative‑fuel capable,[1] there are still only relatively few ports worldwide with methanol bunkering available or planned, which makes availability‑driven delays a real commercial issue. On compliance, owners carry the operational burden of complying with evolving international and regional regimes such as the IGF Code, port state requirements and emissions reporting under regimes such as the EU ETS and FuelEU Maritime. Meanwhile, charterers should clearly define any emissions or sustainability criteria linked to the fuel they nominate. Ultimately, well‑drafted clauses that clearly allocate liability for delays, fines or penalties arising from fuel or regulatory issues are essential, as green fuels move from pilot projects into mainstream commercial use.

MT: As environmental claims and disputes increase, do you expect to see more litigation around emissions reporting, data accuracy, and ‘greenwashing’ in chartering or commercial arrangements?

In short, yes. As decarbonisation requirements tighten, we are likely to see a marked increase in disputes and regulatory scrutiny around emissions reporting, data accuracy and environmental claims in shipping contracts. Environmental representations are no longer peripheral – they are increasingly embedded in charterparties, voyage planning and financing arrangements, particularly through regimes such as the EU ETS and FuelEU Maritime. That creates obvious friction where parties try to optimise routes or reporting to reduce their regulatory exposure, or where owners and charterers take different views on responsibility for allowances, penalties or compliance failures. As regulators become more adept at identifying practices such as artificial port calls or other forms of regulatory avoidance, disputes are likely to arise over whether emissions have been reported correctly and who ultimately bears the financial consequences.

At the same time, the risk of litigation linked to greenwashing and inaccurate emissions claims is quickly growing. Courts and regulators are already showing a willingness to challenge misleading environmental statements across other sectors, and there is no reason to think shipping will be treated differently. By way of example, the Grantham Research Institute at the LSE identified 43 climate‑washing cases globally between 2016 and 2021, followed by a further 77 cases filed between 2021 and 2023, illustrating how rapidly enforcement is accelerating.[2] As charterparties increasingly include ESG‑linked clauses on emissions performance, fuel choice or efficiency targets, we can expect more private law disputes as well, particularly where data sources diverge or promised environmental outcomes are not achieved. The challenge for the industry will be that ESG‑related obligations are often difficult to define and even harder to quantify in loss terms, which makes careful drafting and allocation of risk more important than ever.

MT: Digitalisation is creating new contractual risks, particularly around cybersecurity and system failures. What should vessel operators consider when negotiating agreements with digital service providers?

Digitalisation is now so embedded in vessel operations that contracts with digital service providers need to be treated as safety‑critical. Service providers’ obligations should be clearly defined, including minimum security standards, patching and monitoring responsibilities, access controls, and incident notification requirements. Liability and indemnity provisions should expressly cover cyber incidents or system failures caused by the provider’s systems, rather than relying on generic exclusions. Where BIMCO’s Cyber Security Clause 2019 is incorporated, parties should be cautious about default liability allocations and ensure these are refined to reflect who actually controls and manages the relevant systems.

Beyond cybersecurity, operators should focus on resilience, compliance and control. Contracts should require adherence to recognised standards such as ISO 27001, NIST or the IMO cyber risk management guidelines, which help anchor liability and reduce uncertainty when failures occur. Clear incident response procedures are essential, including defined response times and cooperation obligations, as vague wording is often commercially unworkable during a live incident. Data ownership is another increasingly contentious area: operators should ensure they retain access to, and control over, operational and performance data, particularly on termination, to avoid being locked out of critical information needed for compliance or vessel management. Finally, where contracts interface with carriage obligations, operators should be mindful of potential conflicts with non‑delegable duties under regimes such as the Hague‑Visby Rules, and avoid including provisions that may ultimately prove to be unenforceable.

[1] Clarksons. OVER HALF OF VESSEL ORDERBOOK CAN USE ALTERNATIVE FUEL, SAYS CLARKSONS – Clean Shipping International

[2] Grantham Research Institute – Climate‑washing litigation. New figures show rise in ‘climate-washing’ litigation against companies – Grantham Research Institute on climate change and the environment

 

Photo credit: HFW
Published: 18 March, 2026

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Winding up

Singapore: Heng Tong Fuels & Shipping Pte Ltd to be wound up voluntarily

Nicholas James Gronow, director of the Singapore-based bunker tanker owner, filed a statutory declaration last year for the company, stating the firm cannot continue their businesses due to its liabilities.

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Several written resolutions for Singapore-based bunker tanker owner Heng Tong Fuels & Shipping Pte Ltd (HTFS) were approved by the sole shareholder of the company on 19 June, according to a post in the Government Gazette on Friday (26 June).

Manifold Times previously reported a director of HTFS filing a statutory declaration (SD) with the Official Receiver’s office stating that the company cannot continue its business due to its liabilities.

The company was reportedly affiliated with troubled Singapore bunker player Coastal Oil (Singapore) Pte Ltd. 

The duly passed resolutions were:

SPECIAL RESOLUTIONS:

  • That the Company be wound up voluntarily pursuant to Section 160(1)(b) of the Insolvency, Restructuring and Dissolution Act 2018 (No. 40 of 2018).
  • That the Liquidators be authorised to exercise any or all of the powers provided under Section 144(1)(b), (c), (d), (e), (f) and (g) and 144(2) of the Insolvency, Restructuring and Dissolution Act 2018 (No. 40 of 2018).
  • That the Liquidators be and are hereby authorised to distribute in cash or in specie any or all of the assets of the Company remaining after satisfaction of all debts and liabilities.

ORDINARY RESOLUTIONS:

  • That Mr. Wong Pheng Cheong Martin and Ms. Koay May Yee, both care of FTI Consulting (Singapore) Pte. Ltd., One Raffles Quay #27-10 South Tower Singapore 048583 be and are hereby appointed the joint and several Liquidators of the Company for the purpose of such winding up and that the Liquidators be indemnified by the Company against all costs, charges, losses, expenses and liabilities incurred or sustained by them in the execution and discharge of their duties in relation thereto.
  • That the remuneration of the Liquidators be based on their normal scale rates for carrying out the engagement plus disbursements and the prevailing goods-and-services tax and that the Liquidators’ remuneration be paid out of the assets of the Company.

In another notice, the liquidators of Heng Tong Fuels & Shipping said creditors for the company are required on or before the 27 July to send in their names and addresses and particulars of their debts or claims, and the names and addresses of their solicitors (if any) to the liquidators. 

Liquidators may also require creditors to, “come in and prove their debts or claims at such time and place as shall be specified in such notice, or in default thereof they will be excluded from the benefit of any distribution made before such debts are proved.”

The liquidators can be contacted at the following address:

WONG PHENG CHEONG MARTIN
KOAY MAY YEE
JOINT AND SEVERAL LIQUIDATORS
of FTI Consulting (Singapore) Pte. Ltd.
One Raffles Quay
#27-10 South Tower
Singapore 048583

Related: Singapore: Director declares Heng Tong Fuels & Shipping’s inability to continue business
Related: Heng Tong Fuels & Shipping in court over DBS Bank bunker tanker loan
Related: Singapore: Bunker tanker “Coastal Neptune” arrested
Related: Heng Tong Fuels & Shipping, Coastal Logistics tankers enter S&P market

 

Photo credit: Benjamin child
Published: 29 June, 2026

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Legal

Singapore: Bunker Partner succeeds in High Court bid to wind up Victory Shipping

Estonia-based marine fuels and commodities trading company Bunker Partner filed a winding up application against Victory Shipping on 13 April.

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Singapore: Estonian firm Bunker Partner files bid to wind up of Victory Shipping

The High Court of Singapore granted a winding up order against Victory Shipping Pte Ltd on 12 June, according to a Thursday (25 June) notice on the Government Gazette. 

The winding up application was filed by Estonia-based marine fuels and commodities trading company Bunker Partner on 13 April.

Victory Shipping, with representations in Malaysia, India and the U.A.E., operates dry bulk shipping contracts around the globe with voyages performed mainly in the Middle East and Southeast Asia.

The winding up order also included the following name and address of a liquidator:

Mr Farooq Ahmad Mann
C/o M/s Mann & Associates PAC
3 Shenton Way #03-06C
Shenton House
Singapore 068805

The notice noted that all creditors of the Victory Shipping should file their proof of debt with the liquidator who will be administering all the affairs of the company. 

Manifold Times previously reported a virtual hearing between Victory Shipping and Integr8 Fuels Pte Ltd, organised by the High Court of the Republic of Singapore.

The event was to set aside a statutory demand served on 3 October 2025 by Integr8 Fuels lawyers under Section 125(2)(c) and Section 10 of the Insolvency, Restructuring and Dissolution Act 2018 (IRDA) against Victory Shipping, according to court documents obtained by the bunkering publication.

Integr8 Fuels provides bunker trading and brokerage services to shipowners and operators that enables them to optimise fuel procurement.

Related: Singapore: Court to hear Bunker Partner’s winding-up bid against Victory Shipping on 12 June
Related: Singapore: Estonian firm Bunker Partner files bid to wind up Victory Shipping
Related: Singapore: Victory Shipping aiming to set aside bankruptcy court process from Integr8 Fuels

 

Photo credit: Manifold Times
Published: 26 June, 2026

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Winding up

Intended dividend notice issued for defunct Singapore bunker supplier Inter-Pacific Petroleum

Creditors of the companies will have to submit proof of debt to the liquidators of Inter-Pacific Petroleum Pte Ltd by 6 July, according to Government Gazette notice.

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Intended dividend notice issued for defunct Singapore bunker supplier Inter-Pacific Petroleum

A notice to declare the intended dividend of defunct Singapore bunker supplier Inter-Pacific Petroleum Pte. Ltd. to its creditors has been posted on the Government Gazette on Monday (22 June).

Name of Company : Inter-Pacific Petroleum Pte. Ltd. (In Compulsory Liquidation)
Unique Entity No./ Registration No. : 201115209N
Address of Registered Office : c/o 6 Shenton Way, OUE Downtown 2 #33-00, Singapore 068809
Court : The High Court of the Republic of Singapore
Number of Matter : Companies Winding Up No.: HC/CWU 37/2021
Last Day for Receiving Proofs : 6th day of July 2026
Name of Liquidators : Tan Wei Cheong and Lim Loo Khoon, Joint and Several Liquidators
Address of Liquidators : c/o 6 Shenton Way, OUE Downtown 2 #33-00, Singapore 06880

Manifold Times previously reported the Appellate Division of Singapore’s High Court finding a former Director of Inter-Pacific Petroleum (IPP) not liable to pay up to USD 146 million of the company’s total USD 156 million loss. 

The decision sets aside an earlier decision by the High Court that found Dr Goh Jin Hian responsible for the company’s financial loss. 

The Appellate Division of the High Court found that even though it agreed that Dr Goh had breached his duty of care as a director, IPP has failed to show that his breach caused loss to the company.

Lester Ho, Associate Director of multi-disciplinary law firm Helmsman LLC previously shared his timely key takeaways on the case of Dr Goh v Inter-Pacific Petroleum when the Appellate Division of the High Court in Singapore overturned the High Court’s finding that Mr Goh’s breach had caused IPP to incur the losses. 

Related: Helmsman on Inter-Pacific Petroleum legal battle: When ignorance meets fraud
Related: Singapore: Ex-Director of Inter-Pacific Petroleum wins appeal against former company
Related: Singapore: Ex-Director of Inter-Pacific Petroleum appeals High Court decision
Related: Singapore: Former auditors of Inter-Pacific Petroleum undergo private oral examination at court
Related: Singapore: Civil trial between Inter-Pacific Petroleum and Dr Goh Jin Hian begins
Related: Former Singapore Director of Inter-Pacific Petroleum sued for USD 156 million
Related: Inter-Pacific Petroleum creditors authorised to fund lawsuit against former Director
Related: New Silkroutes under investigation over possible breach of Securities and Futures Act
Related: Judicial Managers considering to take former Singapore Director of Inter-Pacific Petroleum to court
Related: Singapore: Inter-Pacific Group receives winding up order from High Court
Related: Singapore: Inter-Pacific Group files for winding up application at High Court
Related: MPA revokes Inter-Pacific Petroleum Pte Ltd bunker supplier licence
Related: Co-heads of Trade and Commodities Finance for Asia-Pacific leave SocGen
Related: Inter-Pacific Group, Inter-Pacific Petroleum to hold creditors’ meet
Related: NewOcean detains Singapore-flagged bunker tanker “Pacific Energy 28”
Related: SocGen lawsuit against NewOcean Petroleum dropped, party to counterclaim
Related: MPA revokes Inter-Pacific Petroleum bunker craft operator licence
Related: Magnets on MFMs: Trial starts for former bunker clerk of “Consort Justice
Related: First suspect charged over MFM tampering in landmark case
Related: With nearly $180 million of debt, IPP proposes interim judicial management
Related: Inter-Pacific Group, Inter-Pacific Petroleum under judicial management
Related: Magnets on MFMs: “Consort Justice” crew pleads ‘not guilty’ to tampering charge
Related: IPP responds to temporary suspension of bunker craft operator licence
Related: MPA temporarily suspends IPP bunker craft operator licence
Related: Singapore: Bunker Cargo officer, crew face charges over alleged MFM tampering

 

Photo credit: Manifold Times
Published: 22 June, 2026

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