News Report: Seafarers in Australian waters cheated for millions By portnews October 7, 2022 Share FacebookTwitterPinterestWhatsAppReddItEmailTumblrTelegramMixVKDiggLINEViberNaverFlipCopy URLKakao StoryGettrKoo Must read EU wants to demonstrate zero-emission ships by 2030 April 28, 2025 Navantia UK Appoints New Chief Commercial and Business Development Officer April 28, 2025 Cavotec nets €15.7M shore power order from ‘major’ shipping line April 28, 2025 CMT Warns Against AI Dependence in Engine Monitoring, Human Engineers Remain Critical April 28, 2025 portnews Legislative ”loopholes” and lack of compliance with regulation enable shipowners and suppliers to underpay foreign seafarers when working in Australian waters, claims report. Photo: Tim /Ritzau Scanpix Share FacebookTwitterPinterestWhatsAppReddItEmailTumblrTelegramMixVKDiggLINEViberNaverFlipCopy URLKakao StoryGettrKoo Previous articleIcebreaker USCGC Healy Calls at the North PoleNext articleOutsized OPEC+ output cut raises global risks - Advertisement - More articles EU wants to demonstrate zero-emission ships by 2030 April 28, 2025 Navantia UK Appoints New Chief Commercial and Business Development Officer April 28, 2025 Cavotec nets €15.7M shore power order from ‘major’ shipping line April 28, 2025 - Advertisement - Latest article EU wants to demonstrate zero-emission ships by 2030 April 28, 2025 Navantia UK Appoints New Chief Commercial and Business Development Officer April 28, 2025 Cavotec nets €15.7M shore power order from ‘major’ shipping line April 28, 2025 CMT Warns Against AI Dependence in Engine Monitoring, Human Engineers Remain Critical April 28, 2025 Cavotec secures shore power orders for boxship newbuilds April 28, 2025