MISSIONS AND COMPETENCES
 
Attend to the respect of the principles embodied by the Convention of Mannheim : freedom of navigation, equal treatment of ships of all nations, exemption from any taxes and duties based solely on navigation, absence of physical or administrative obstacles to navigation, commitment to maintain the navigability of the waterway.
Ensure the safety of navigation

The member States set themselves, and consequently also the Central Commission, the fundamental task of ensuring the safety of navigation and its environment. This concern is the outset of all the regulations adopted by the Central Commission and has commanded many of its decisions.

Police Regulations for the Rhine navigation
Inspection Regulations for vessels on the Rhine
Transport Regulations for dangerous goods
Regulations of Boatmaster's patent
Guidelines for radiotelephony etc.

The Rhine Regulations being permanently adapted to the evolution of needs and technology, they have ensured navigation as well as its environment, crews and passengers, a high level of security and have been taken over by other international bodies. Their adoption as basic provisions on a European level is envisaged.
The Central Commission overlooks projects dealing with developments on the river and the construction of structures.
Strive for the unity of the Rhine system and on a wider scale for the unification of fluvial law. Thus certain Conventions of private or public law have been adopted under its patronage. This was for instance the case with the Convention on collection, deposit and reception of waste produced by inland and Rhine shipping, which holds preventive as well as repressive measures intended to prevent pollution, reduce the production of waste and ensure its "ecological" elimination.
Promote the economical prosperity of the Rhine navigation through proposals made by the governments of the member States. Today, the Rhine is the most important inland waterway in Europe. The Rhine navigation carries about 300 million tons of goods yearly, which is three times more than the volume transported on the Danube. The action of the Central Commission remains tinged with liberalism. The Commission is striving to find consensual solutions between the various professional groups concerned, to adjust to a new economical order or to face up to emerging economical problems. In order to remedy the effects of overcapacity, it has nevertheless been lead to practise a policy of intervention by introducing a system of structural re-establishment of the Rhine fleet in conjunction with the European Union.
Deliberate over proposals made by the member States, particularly those proposals which aim at completing or amending the Convention. In fact, the Commission is acknowledged a genuine constituent power.
Examine any complaint linked to the implementation of the Convention and the enforcement of regulations or measures decided and jointly agreed upon by the riparian governments. This right of complaint is open to any individual, organisation or government.
On a social level, the Central Commission administers the Agreement concerning social security of boatmen on the Rhine, which has established an Administrative Centre, the European Agreement upon social security of boatsmen in inland and Rhine navigation (Eastern, Central and western Europe) and the Agreement concerning the working conditions in Rhine navigation, which has established a tripartite Commission dealing with working conditions.
Finally, the Central Commission fulfils an international role which reaches beyond the Rhine basin. The Commission is in constant contact with other international organisations and takes part in their work : European Union, (particularly the General Direction of Transports), the Economic Commission for Europe of the United Nations in Geneva, the European Conference of Ministers of Transport, the International Atomic Energy Agency in Vienna, etc.