Baggywrinkle
Well-Known Member
According to UK rules pleasure crafts bigger than 20 tons must pay light dues!
http://www.trinityhouse.co.uk/th/about/funding.html
The service provided by Trinity House is financed from 'Light Dues' levied on commercial vessels calling at ports in the British Isles, based on the net registered tonnage of the vessel. The rate is set by the Department of Transport, and annually reviewed. Light Dues are currently charged at 41 pence per net registered ton, subject to a maximum charge of £16,400 per voyage in 2010. Vessels are charged for a maximum of nine voyages per annum. Tugs and fishing vessels are liable for annual payments based on the registered length of the vessel.
Light dues are paid in to the General Lighthouse Fund (GLF), which is under the stewardship of the Department for Transport. The fund is used to finance the lighthouse services provided by Trinity House, the Northern Lighthouse Board (responsible for Scotland and the Isle of Man) and the Commissioners of Irish Lights (responsible for the waters around both Northern Ireland and the Republic of Ireland). Major initiatives such as lighthouse and lightvessel automation and the solarisation of buoys and a growing number of lighthouses have made a significant contribution to the reduction of Light Dues. The rate of Light Dues has fallen in real terms for over a decade with the rate either being frozen or cut. 2009 saw the first increase in Light Dues for 20 years.
The 20 tons rule is not enforced.
Certainly I know no-one who pays light dues in the U.K. on a pleasure vessel.
http://www.rya.org.uk/newsevents/ne...dstoAtkinsreportonMarineAidstoNavigation.aspx
Atkins Report on Marine Aids to Navigation
In June 2009 the Department for Transport appointed consultants Atkins Ltd to undertake an independent assessment of the provision of marine aids to navigation around the UK and Ireland. The then Shipping Minister Paul Clark MP published Atkins Ltd’s report in March 2010.
The Atkins report contained over fifty recommendations, including the proposal that all pleasure craft over a specified size should make a contribution to the costs of providing general aids to navigation (i.e. pay light dues).
Under the Merchant Shipping (Light Dues) Regulations 1997, pleasure vessels with a tonnage of 20 tonnes or more are already subject to light dues at a rate of £77 per year but in practice this charge is not collected as it is not financially viable to do so.
The proposal in the Atkins report was for light dues to be paid by much smaller pleasure craft, at a significantly higher rate, which would also necessitate compulsory registration of such craft.
The RYA took the view that several of the assumptions and statements made in the report in relation to recreational boating were flawed and we wrote to Mr Clark to highlight our concerns.