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IACS chairman sets out three-legged work planIACS chairman sets out three-legged work plan

The International Association of Classification Societies (IACS) is to focus on completion of ongoing projects and strengthening its role as technical advisor to the IMO over the coming year, incoming IACS chairman Christopher J. Wiernicki announced at a press conference held in London yesterday.

Bob Jaques, Former Editor

September 17, 2015

2 Min Read
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These efforts will be in line with classification societies’ traditional role of ensuring the technical integrity of ship structures and machinery, and will be supplemented by work on a new “third leg of the safety stool,” cyber-security, said Wiernicki, also chairman, president and ceo of ABS.

Questioned whether IACS was working on Common Structural Rules (CSR) for large container carriers, as it has developed for tankers and bulkers, Wiernicki replied that the safety record for large containerships had generally been “very good” despite a few high-profile casualties such as the MSC Napoli and MOL Comfort in recent years.

“There’s a fundamental difference between tankers and bulk carriers and containerships,” he said, “and that’s the fact that the (containership) technology continues to move. Every day you wake up and there’s a new largest containerships – it’s been a fast moving target.”

For this reason the container sector lends itself more to themselves more to the drawing up of Unified Requirements for minimum technical and functional performance, rather than more prescriptive CSR as with tankers and bulkers.

Asked for his views on automated ships, Wiernicki was fairly sceptical. The problems were really twofold, he explained. “The first are practical: how would you handle an oil spill? And the second are psychological. I’m not sure I would get on a plane without a pilot, so I don’t foresee a vessel operating without a crew.”

Technical advances are all very well but they have their limits, ran the IACS chairman’s underlying argument, especially when they ignore the human element and the inbuilt “competencies and common sense” of good ship crews,

Over-reliance on systems also risks stifling innovation. Someone remarked that if Henry Ford had lived in this age of SMART shipping and Big Data, he quipped, “he probably would have invested in a faster horse rather than the motor car.”

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About the Author

Bob Jaques

Former Editor

Bob Jaques is a former editor of Seatrade Maritime Review magazine and has over 20 years of experience as a maritime journalist and moderator of shipping conferences.

Bob is an English literature graduate from the University of York with a postgraduate Diploma in Management Studies from Birkbeck College, University of London. He worked as an aerospace and media journalist in Geneva before joining Seatrade in the 1990s.

Bob is a past winner of the Seahorse ‘Journalist of the Year’ and ‘Best Feature Article’ Awards.

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