Jump to content

Netherlands Coastguard: Difference between revisions

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Content deleted Content added
No edit summary
No edit summary
Line 170: Line 170:
| Netherlands
| Netherlands
| buoy maintainer
| buoy maintainer
|provided by the National shipping company
|
|-
|-
| Terschelling
| Terschelling
| Netherlands
| Netherlands
| buoy maintainer
| buoy maintainer
|provided by the National shipping company
|
|-
|-
|Wadden Sea
|Wadden Sea
| Netherlands
| Netherlands
| buoys|buoy maintainer
| buoys|buoy maintainer
|provided by the National shipping company
|
|-
|-
| Frans Naerebout
| Frans Naerebout
| Netherlands
| Netherlands
| buoys|buoy maintainer
| buoys|buoy maintainer
|provided by the National shipping company
|
|-
| Waddenstroom
| Netherlands
| Multi Purpose vessel
|provided by the National shipping company
|-
|-
| Zirfea
| Zirfea

Revision as of 13:44, 3 July 2024

Netherlands Coastguard
Kustwacht Nederland
Netherlands Coast Guard emblem
Netherlands Coast Guard emblem
Ensign
Ensign
Racing stripe
MottoServamus Servientes
Agency overview
FormedFebruary 26, 1987
Annual budget64,258,000 (2020)[1]
Jurisdictional structure
Operations jurisdictionNetherlands
Constituting instrument
  • Regulation on organization of Netherlands Coastguard, 2019[2]
Specialist jurisdiction
  • Coastal patrol, marine border protection, marine search and rescue.
Operational structure
Elected officer responsible
Agency executive
  • Nicole Kuipers[3], Director
Parent agencyRoyal Netherlands Navy
Website
www.kustwacht.nl

The Netherlands Coastguard (Template:Lang-nl) is civil organisation that carries out tasks on the Netherlands North Sea for six Ministries under administration of the Royal Netherlands Navy.[4] Its operational command falls under the Ministry of Defence, and the Royal Netherlands Navy is responsible for its coordination.[5]

Headquarters office is in Den Helder. Director is commander Nicole Kuipers.[6]

History

While the Netherlands Coastguard was officially established on 26 February 1987,[7] a less formal Dutch coastguard had been active since 1883. In 1882 the gunboat HNLMS Adder sunk off Scheveningen with the death of all 65 aboard. The public outcry that followed led to reforms, including an improved system of observing, reporting and assisting ships in distress off the coast, with better cooperation between lighthouses and government agencies.[7]

After World War II the area that could be covered off-coast became larger with new technologies such as radar and better means of communication. At the same time, government desire to protect Dutch interests in the North Sea, such as fishery, and extraction of oil, gas, sand and gravel, led to each ministry establishing its own department with, at one point, over twenty government organisations at work off the Dutch coast. To stop this fragmentation, in 1984 Minister Smit-Kroes of Traffic and water management ordered a review to examine how to make guarding the coast of the Netherlands more efficient and effective. The results of this review were published in 1986 and led to the creation of a single coastguard agency, namely the Netherlands Coastguard.[7]

Initially, the Coast Guard headquarters was housed in a building belonging to the coast radio station Scheveningen Radio [nl] in IJmuiden. In 1995 the Coast Guard was assigned to the Ministry of Defense and on 23 November 2001 the headquarters moved to the national Navy HQ in Den Helder.

Organisation

The Netherlands Coastguard carries out duties for six government ministries, these ministries are the:[8]

JRCC Den Helder

The Kustwachtcentrum (English: Coastguard Center) in Den Helder is also the Netherlands Joint Rescue Coordination Center (JRCC Den Helder, Call DEN HELDER RESCUE). It coordinates not only sea rescue (MRCC) but also air rescue (ARCC). Emergency calls in the monitored area of the North Sea and the airspace of the Netherlands are recorded at all times. A back office, which has access to the various databases of the authorities involved, serves to support the front office. For the SAR services, the lifeboats of the Koninklijke Nederlandse Redding Maatschappij (KNRM) get coordinated.

Tasks

Netherlands Coastguard Dornier 228 arrives for the Royal International Air Tattoo, England, UK (2014)

The Coastguard tasks can be divided into Provision of service tasks and Law enforcement tasks.[4]

  • Provision of service tasks:
    • Monitoring, handling and coordinating national and international Distress, Urgency and Safety radio traffic;
    • Maritime assistance and Search and Rescue;
    • Limiting and dealing with the aftermath of disasters and incidents;
    • Wherever necessary, implementing vessel traffic services (buoys, vessel traffic service, instructions)
    • Maritime traffic research
    • Clearing out explosives
  • Law enforcement tasks:
    • Maintaining law and order (police)
    • Monitoring import, export and transit of goods (customs)
    • Upholding laws regarding environment, sea fishing, nautical traffic, ships equipment and offshore activities
    • Border control

Equipment

Vessels

The Coast Guard has no vessels of its own, so resources are made available by the cooperating ministries and services[9]

The Barend Biesheuvel Coast Guard vessel
The Arca is a multifunctional vessel
Zeearend Coast Guard vessel
Vessel Origin Type Notes
P42 Netherlands patrol boat provided by the National Police Corps
Osprey Netherlands patrol boat provided by the National shipping company
Bald Eagle Netherlands patrol boat
Barend Biesheuvel Netherlands patrol boat provided by the National shipping company
Hellhole Netherlands lifeboat provided by the Theunisse Salvage
KBW1910 Netherlands lifeboat provided by the Dutch Sea Rescue Institution
George Dijkstra Netherlands lifeboat
Jeanine Parqui Netherlands lifeboat
Koen Oberman Netherlands lifeboat
Jan van Engelenburg Netherlands lifeboat
Fury 3 Netherlands anchor tug provided by the Theunisse Salvage
Fury 4 Netherlands anchor tug
Guardian Netherlands anchor tug
Flystream Netherlands buoy maintainer
Barge hole Netherlands buoy maintainer
New Deep Netherlands buoy maintainer provided by the National shipping company
Terschelling Netherlands buoy maintainer provided by the National shipping company
Wadden Sea Netherlands buoy maintainer provided by the National shipping company
Frans Naerebout Netherlands buoy maintainer provided by the National shipping company
Waddenstroom Netherlands Multi Purpose vessel provided by the National shipping company
Zirfea Netherlands research vessel provided by the National shipping company
Arca Netherlands multifunctional vessel provided by the National shipping company
Zr.Ms. Willemstad Netherlands mine sweeper provided by the Royal Netherlands Navy

See also

Footnotes

  1. ^ "KUSTWACHT NEDERLAND 2020" (PDF). Netherlands Coastguard. 2021. Retrieved 19 March 2022.
  2. ^ Regeling organisatie Kustwacht Nederland [Regulation on organization of Netherlands Coastguard] (Regulation of the Minister of Infrastructure and Water Management and of the Minister of Defence IENW/BSK-2019/95910) (in Dutch). 2019.
  3. ^ "Directeur Kustwacht Nederland Nicole Kuipers". Netherlands Coastguard. 21 April 2022. Retrieved 24 June 2022.
  4. ^ a b "Netherlands Coastguard - What we do". Netherlands Coastguard. Retrieved 5 July 2017.
  5. ^ "Kustwacht" (in Dutch). Netherlands Ministry of Defence. Retrieved 5 July 2017.
  6. ^ "Director of the Netherlands Coastguard Nicole Kuipers". Netherlands Coastguard. Retrieved 31 July 2023.
  7. ^ a b c "Historie" (in Dutch). Nederlandse Kustwacht. Retrieved 21 January 2018.
  8. ^ "Over ons" (in Dutch). Nederlandse Kustwacht. Retrieved 23 January 2018.
  9. ^ "Varende eenheden" (in Dutch). Nederlandse Kustwacht. Retrieved 23 January 2018.