Toilers of the sea
The sugar in your tea, the petrol in your bike and umpteen other consumables reach you by sea, thanks to a tribe of hardworking people who spend months on end — away from their homes and loved ones — at sea. A major pillar of the merchant navy (the other being engineers), navigation or deck officers manoeuvre ships to transport about 90 per cent of the world’s goods (as well as passengers) from one place to another.
One such person is Suneha Gadpande, 25, who has crisscrossed the entire world, barring Europe, sailing for a total of 44 months. A graduate of the public sector navratna Shipping Corporation of India’s (SCI’s) training institute in Powai, she is now chief officer, the second-in-command, on a ship. Officers like her, also called chief mate, oversee loading and unloading of cargo, ensure the vessel is in good shape, manage the crew and take care of the paperwork required for sea transportation.
Gadpande says she wanted to get into the Navy, for which she required a Bachelor’s degree. So, when she got to know about the SCI training option, she quit the first year of her mechanical engineering programme at NIT Bhopal to be among the first group of women allowed into this still male-dominated bastion. Initially, says Gadpande, it was “pretty difficult” for the women as well as men not used to having the fair sex on board.
Hisar boy Vikrant Punia, 23, is third officer with SCI, a rank above the trainees. A BSc in nautical science from SCI’s Maritime Training Institute, Punia is happy about taking a shortcut to a career. “I didn’t have to do a four-year engineering course and then search for a job.” This job promises lots of money and adventure — all at a very young age. You can become a captain, master in industry parlance, in about 12 to 15 years, including at least eight years of sailing time, depending on one’s experience and vacancies on ships.
A seafarer’s life is no bed of roses between the endless sky and sea but you can go places if you have what it takes. It’s important to remember that this is a physically and emotionally demanding profession. Gadpande advises, “Join if you can survive alone…one has to be mentally prepared for the job.”
“If you dock at Singapore, you wouldn’t be out sightseeing. You have to carry out cargo duties,” says Gadpande, who recently completed a two-week course on tankers in Delhi. Shipping is an expensive business and companies don’t want their vessels docked idle for long. The time available to you will depend on the kind of cargo you handle, says Tushar Sharma, senior manager - 
It’s a lucrative career, no doubt. Job prospects are “very good because the number of officers is less,” says Capt. Pankaj Sarin, Director, Applied Research International, New Delhi.
Foreign companies consider Indian officers and Filipino crew the ideal complement on a merchant ship. Higher pay and income tax exemption due to non-resident status make most professionals sign up for foreign-flag carriers. However, on the other hand, the tax rules and a law requiring Indian ships to hire crew from within the country have caused a shortage of quality manpower in domestic companies, whose combined share in the global sea-route business dipped from about 35 per cent in 1990-91 to under 14 per cent in 2004-05.
Author: Rahat Bano
Date: 11th Nov., 2009
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