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Canada — Toward an Overhaul of the Marine Personnel Regulations: New Requirements and Transition

Canada — Toward an Overhaul of the Marine Personnel Regulations: New Requirements and Transition

Home/Regulatory Watch/Canada — Toward an Overhaul of the Marine Personnel Regulations: New Requirements and Transition
Alain Auclair
17 September 2025
4 min read
The Marine Personnel Regulations (MPR 2007 – SOR/2007-115) form the foundation for the certification and professional obligations of Canadian seafarers. However, this regulatory framework no longer fully reflects international requirements (STCW, STCW-F, MLC 2006) or safety expectations (passenger management, fatigue, etc.). Summary: Canada’s Marine Personnel Regulations (2007) underpin mariner certification and duties, but they are now out of step with international standards (STCW, STCW-F, MLC 2006) and evolving safety practices, including passenger management and fatigue risk management.

Context

 

The Marine Personnel Regulations (MPR 2007 – SOR/2007-115) form the basis of certification and professional obligations for Canadian seafarers. However, this regulatory framework no longer fully reflects international requirements (STCW, STCW-F, MLC 2006) or safety expectations (passenger management, fatigue, etc.).

Transport Canada is therefore preparing a comprehensive overhaul of the regulations (MPR 2025), with prepublication expected in fall 2025 in the Canada Gazette, Part I.

Objectives of the reform

The reform of the Marine Personnel Regulations (MPR) is primarily aimed at international harmonization through the integration of STCW, STCW-F, and the Maritime Labour Convention (MLC 2006). It is also part of a modernization approach, incorporating by reference Transport Canada’s technical publications, such as TP 2293 on examinations and certificates or TP 4957 on safety training.

From a safety perspective, a major change is the removal of the 500 gross tonnage threshold for training in passenger safety management, in order to cover all vessels, regardless of size.

Finally, the reform introduces a preventive dimension by launching specific consultations on crew fatigue management, a key issue for modern maritime safety.

Requirements to sit examinations leading to a certificate

 

The revised MPR provide for clarification and strengthening of the criteria for access to examinations:

Criterion

Description

Mandatory prior training

Successful completion of validated modules (STCW courses, TP 2293, TP 4957).

Documented sea service

Signed and verifiable service record book, meeting STCW thresholds.

Health certificates and medical fitness

Medical examinations compliant with national and international standards.

New competencies

Integration of passenger safety (all vessels, not only > 500 GT).

Oral and practical examinations

Revision of content to include more elements related to emergency management.

Grandfathering clause

As with previous revisions, Transport Canada is considering the inclusion of transitional provisions. The operating approach after the new MPR come into force could be as follows: 

  • - Seafarers already engaged in a certification pathway could benefit from a grace period to obtain their certificate under the old rules; and
    - A period of regulatory coexistence (often 2 to 5 years in STCW transitions) could be provided.

    The exact terms will be specified at the time of prepublication in the Canada Gazette, Part I.

Practical impacts for the maritime industry


Shipowners should plan training updates now and support their crews in the transition to the new requirements.

Maritime institutions will need to adjust their programs, notably by integrating new modules related to passenger safety and by revising the relevant technical reference publications.

For their part, seafarers in certification should check whether a grandfathering clause applies to their situation and closely follow implementation timelines.

Finally, Transport Canada inspectors will be responsible for gradually applying these changes during inspections and certificate verification.

Next steps to watch

•       Fall 2025: publication of the full draft of MPR 2025 in the Canada Gazette, Part I; and

•       2026–2027: phased entry into force, with transitional clause to be confirmed.

Summary


The overhaul of the MPR is a substantive reform that will have direct impacts on seafarer training, access to examinations, and competency management. Sector stakeholders should closely monitor:

•       The new eligibility conditions for certificates;

•       The removal of the 500 GT threshold; and

•       Any transitional clauses to safeguard ongoing pathways.

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