In an interview with the Financial Times, Oskar Levander,
Head of Marine Innovation Engineering at Rolls-Royce, said recently that the
first unmanned cargo ship would likely be sailing out there within the next
decade. “I think it will take more than 10 years before you have all the global
rules in place, but you may have a local administration that is prepared to run
[remote-controlled ships] sooner,” he said.
The idea of drone ships- or crewless ships, autonomous ships
or roboships, if you prefer- is nothing new. However, many would have us
believe that technology has advanced to a stage where these are well possible,
and what is really holding back the advent of roboships are international
regulations governing seafaring that will take, as Levander says, ‘decades to
unravel and renegotiate.’ Levander
admits that oceangoing drone ships are a long way away, but feels that we will probably
see drone ships sailing on fixed routes in European waters, or those of the US,
within the next ten years.
It is not just Rolls Royce that is pushing the idea. The European Munin project (Maritime Unmanned
Navigation through Intelligence in Networks, cleverly named after the
globetrotting raven of the Norse God Odin) is a consortium co-funded by the
European Commission that recognises the future shortage of seafarers as one of
the reasons for why drone ships are desirable, and is examining a ‘pilot to
pilot’ autonomous ship. Their brochure also somewhat snidely refers to the
usual shibboleths of human error being the cause of whatever percentage of marine
accidents (while admitting that fatigue- which nobody has done anything about-
is a big factor behind this) and implying that a drone ship will make accidents
disappear.
Elsewhere, media reports say that the UK engineering group,
one of the world’s largest suppliers to the commercial shipbuilding industry, “has
called for a public debate on the switch from crewed cargo vessels to
autonomous ships as part of a wider drive by industry to use advanced automation
technology.”
To me, all this roboship business is, at the moment, just
smoke propelled by a segment of the industry that wants to make money. Money to
fund its ‘research projects,’ which will result in the development of a whole
new range of equipment that the IMO will no doubt be pressurised to make
mandatory, so more money can be made there. For example, advanced navigational
computer systems and sensor systems that will identify even small objects in
the vicinity of the ship on the ‘deck’ side and advanced monitoring and
surveillance systems in the engine room that will detect machinery issues long
before humans can. No doubt this will be
mandated as compulsory on even crewed ships of the future. This is the same old
game that has been played over the years; whether it has contributed to
increased safety is often a question mark.
Which is not to say that drone ships are undesirable,
although I take with a pinch of salt the assumption that they will be cheaper.
The saving in crew costs and in lifesaving equipment outlays is likely to be more
than somewhat offset by increased maintenance costs and costs for much more
expensive temporary staff for repairs or in port. A drone ship will solve the
issue of competent seafarer shortage immediately, of course. It will also make
large parts of the shipmanagement industry redundant, a cost saving for
shipowners.
Drone ships may be desirable, but they are not, in the near
future at least, inevitable. The advantages of having a human eyeball assessing
a situation and taking immediate action a hundred times a day is something that
will not be easy to replicate with computers and sensors for quite a few years,
at least not reliably. And, it is not just maritime regulatory issues that will
have to be ‘unravelled and re-negotiated’; the entire insurance and freight markets
will have to be overhauled too, for a start, as will large parts of
international maritime law and its practice.
And so will have to be overhauled- and I say this with great
glee- the mindset of an industry that scapegoats and criminalises seafarers as
a matter of routine. The ‘error of servant’ defence will no longer apply on
roboships, because there will be none. What will our shipmanagers, owners,
insurers, Flag and Port States and potential ports of refuge do, then, after an
accident? Who will they blame? How will they cover their backsides?
As for drone ships sailing in traffic-dense European or
American waters within ten years, well, I wouldn’t bet on that either. I don’t think countries there are going to buy
the idea of unmanned ships zipping up and down their coasts so easily.
.
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1 comment:
Dear Manu,
Excellent and timely response to the current flurry of breathless reports.
There is a lot of tech that could be much better used today, without waiting for the robot future - our often abused 24/7 connectivity could be profitably employed, for instance, in moving paperwork off the ship. This is a concrete step that I think would do some real good, and it wouldn't need to wait for the advent of HAL.
Driverless ships may be a common sight one day, but why wait for tomorrow to make shipping safer and saner?
Thanks, as always, for your clear-eyed view!
Reid
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