(a)
An exploration or exploitation vessel shall display identification panels bearing the name, identification letters or numerals of the vessel so that at least one panel is visible in any direction.
(b)
The name, identification letters or numerals referred to in paragraph (a) shall be
(i) black,
(ii) not less than one metre in height,
(iii) displayed on a yellow background, and
(iv) easily visible in daylight and at night by the use of illumination or retro-reflecting material.
(c)
Subject to paragraph (h), an exploration or exploitation vessel, when stationary and engaged in drilling or production operations, shall, in lieu of the lights or shapes required by these Rules, exhibit where it can best be seen from any direction a white light or a series of white lights located at an equal height above the water and operating in unison, which light or lights shall
(i) flash the morse letter “U” at intervals of not more than 15 seconds,
(ii) be installed at a height above the water of not less than six metres and not more than 30 metres so that at least one light shall remain visible to within 15 metres of the vessel,
(iii) be visible all round the horizon at a nominal range of 15 miles,
(iv) be powered by a reliable power source,
(v) be equipped with an auxiliary power source, and
(vi) be exhibited from 15 minutes before sunset until sunrise and at all times when the visibility in any direction is two miles or less.
(d)
The horizontal and vertical extremities of an exploration or exploitation vessel that is stationary and engaged in drilling or production operations shall be adequately marked in compliance with the requirements set out in Transport Canada Standards Obstruction Markings (2nd ed.), 1987, TP 382, as amended from time to time.
(e)
An exploration or exploitation vessel, when stationary and engaged in drilling or production operations, shall be equipped with a sound-signalling appliance that
(i) is powered by a reliable power source,
(ii) is provided with an auxiliary power source,
(iii) when operating, emits a rhythmic blast corresponding to the Morse letter “U” every 30 seconds,
(iv) has its maximum intensity at a frequency between 100 and 1 000 Hertz,
(v) has a usual range of at least two miles,
(vi) is installed at a height above the water of not less than six metres and not more than 30 metres, and
(vii) is so placed that the sound emitted is audible, when there is no wind, throughout the required range in all directions in a horizontal plane from the vessel.
(f)
An exploration or exploitation vessel, when stationary and engaged in drilling or production operations, shall, whenever the visibility in any direction is two miles or less, operate the sound-signalling appliance described in paragraph (e) in lieu of the sound signal described in Rule 35.
(g)
An exploration or exploitation vessel shall comply with the relevant technical requirements set out in sections 2.3 and 2.4 of, and Appendix 1 to, the IALA’s publication Recommendations for the marking of offshore structures, as amended from time to time, and the nominal range of lights shall be computed in accordance with Appendix II of the IALA’s 1967 publication Recommendations for the notation of luminous intensity and range of lights.
(h)
For the purposes of this Rule, wherever the word “Authority” appears in a document incorporated by reference, it shall be read as “Minister”.
(i)
In the Canadian waters of the Great Lakes Basin, the white light or series of white lights exhibited by an exploration or exploitation vessel when stationary and engaged in drilling or production operations shall have a range of visibility of between eight and fifteen miles.