The Brussels Convention for the Unification of Certain Rules with Respect to Assistance and Salvage at Sea (French: Convention pour l'unification de certaines règles en matiere assistance et de sauvetage maritimes) is a treaty on marine salvage that was concluded on 23 September 1910, in Brussels, Belgium.
[1] As of 2013, the convention remains in force in over 70 states.
[2] The states that have denounced the convention after accepting it are Canada, Croatia, Denmark, Germany, Iran, Netherlands, New Zealand, Norway, Spain, and Sweden.
[2] The Brussels Convention forms the basis of current international marine salvage law.
[1] The Convention was amended by a Protocol issued in Brussels on 27 May 1967.