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The Impact of Autonomous Ships on Safety at Sea – A Statistical Analysis

Jiri de Vos, Robert Hekkenberg, Osiris A. Valdez Banda

2021Reliability Engineering & System Safety138 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

The advent of autonomous ships that are unmanned or low-manned will reduce the number of people at risk at sea. Even when autonomous navigation does not reduce the number of accidents, this means that safety at sea will increase. In fact, increased safety is one of the primary perceived drivers for autonomous shipping, although this safety increase has not yet been quantified in academic literature. In this article a statistical analysis is performed to determine the distribution of human casualties and lost ships over accident types, ship types and ship sizes. Subsequently, based on several scenarios for the implementation of autonomous ships, a quantification of the estimated reduction in loss of life and loss of ships is provided. It is concluded that the implementation of autonomy on small cargo ships with a length below 120 m will have the largest safety benefit, since these ships account for the majority recorded ship losses and lives lost.

Topics & Concepts

Marine safetyMaritime safetyAeronauticsStatistical analysisMarine engineeringTransport engineeringEngineeringRisk analysis (engineering)BusinessStatisticsMathematicsMaritime Navigation and SafetyMaritime Transport Emissions and EfficiencyMaritime Ports and Logistics