Regulation of maritime transport is, in many countries a common phenomenon. The following three categories of regulation can be distinguished:
– rules of competition in the field of maritime transport, often referred to as conference or anti-conference legislation,
– flag preference provisions, e.g., cargo reservation provisions,
– retortion provisions or retaliatory provisions.
Provisions in these three categories all have in common that they are aimed to influence the market conditions under which maritime transport takes place. I have outlined the various national provisions regulating maritime transport in a 1979 report for the Dutch section of the ILA. Part III of that report analyses the question to what extent national provisions are compatible with international public law. The present article is a summary of that analysis.