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(1) These Regulations may be cited as the Merchant Shipping (Navigational Warnings) Regulations 1996 and shall come into force on 8th August 1996.
(2) In these Regulations—
 “Admiralty List of Radio Signals” means the publication of that name published by the Hydrographer of the Navy in force at the date of these Regulations, and any amendment, correction or replacement, which the Hydrographer considers relevant from time to time;
 “coast station” means a station on land intended to provide communication with ships by means of radio;
 “International Code of Signals” means the publication of that name published by the International Maritime Organization in 1985, and includes any document published by the International Maritime Organization amending that publication, which the Secretary of State considers relevant from time to time and specifies in a Merchant Shipping Notice;
 “Marine Safety Agency” means the Marine Safety Agency of the Department of Transport;
 “Merchant Shipping Notice” means a Notice described as such and issued by the Marine Safety Agency, and any reference to a particular Merchant Shipping Notice includes a reference to any Merchant Shipping Notice amending that Notice which is considered by the Secretary of State to be relevant from time to time;
 “Radio Regulations” means the Radio Regulations annexed to, or regarded as being annexed to, the International Telecommunication Convention 1992 and includes all amendments now in force and any amendment which the Secretary of State considers relevant from time to time and specifies in a Merchant Shipping Notice;
 “tropical storm” means a hurricane, typhoon, cyclone, or other storm of a similar nature, and the master of a ship shall be deemed to have met with a tropical storm if he has reason to believe that there is such a storm in its vicinity.
(3) The following Regulations are revoked, namely—
(a) the Merchant Shipping (Navigational Warnings) Regulations 1980;
(b) the Merchant Shipping (Navigational Warnings) (Amendment) Regulations 1981;
(c) the Merchant Shipping (Navigational Warnings) (Amendment) Regulations 1992.
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(1) The master of every United Kingdom ship, on meeting with dangerous ice, a dangerous derelict or any other direct danger to navigation, or a tropical storm, or on encountering subfreezing air temperatures associated with gale force winds causing severe ice accretion on the superstructure of ships, or winds of force 10 or above on the Beaufort Scale for which no storm warning has been received, shall send, by all means of communication at his disposal, information relating to the matters set forth in Merchant Shipping Notice No. M. 1641/NW1.
(2) Such information shall be sent to the appropriate shore-based authorities via a coast station, as listed in the Admiralty List of Radio Signals Volume 1, and shall be repeated to ships in the vicinity as practicable.
(3) Such information shall be sent on the authority of the master of the ship in English, or by means of the International Code of Signals. Where the information is being transmitted by radio messages, it may be sent in one of the working languages of the International Telecommunication Union and, where language difficulties are encountered, the IMO Standard Communication Phrases should be used.
(4) Such information, when sent on the authority of the master of the ship by means of radio, shall be preceded by the safety signal or code sequence, as prescribed by the Radio Regulations, and shall be in a format permitted under those Regulations.
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(1) If a master fails to report a danger to navigation as required by these Regulations, he shall be guilty of an offence and liable on summary conviction to a fine not exceeding level 2 on the standard scale.
(2) It shall be a defence for any person charged under these Regulations to show that he took all reasonable precautions to avoid the commission of the offence.
Signed by authority of the Secretary of State for Transport
Goschen
Parliamentary Under-Secretary of State,
Department of Transport
11th July 1996