1 / 14

SOCP Spring Meeting 2013

Piracy and Other Critical Incidents at Sea – How to Reduce Impact on Mariners? The Mariner’s Viewpoint. SOCP Spring Meeting 2013. Introduction. 1990 Graduate of SUNY Maritime College at Fort Schuyler

hayden
Télécharger la présentation

SOCP Spring Meeting 2013

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. Piracy and Other Critical Incidents at Sea – How to Reduce Impact on Mariners? The Mariner’s Viewpoint SOCP Spring Meeting 2013

  2. Introduction • 1990 Graduate of SUNY Maritime College at Fort Schuyler • Sailed for Military Sealift Command as 3rd Mate, 2nd Mate and Cargo Officer for most of the 90s • Worked in tug and barge industry on East Coast and Hawaii • Chief Mate and Master on MSC-contracted survey vessels from 2006 – 2008 operating in Western Pacific, Southeast Asia and Indian Ocean • Past four years (2009 – 2013) have been Chief Mate onboard Maersk Alabama

  3. You are trying to prevent this…

  4. Maersk Alabama Area of Operation Jebel Ali, UAE Salalah, Oman Djibouti, Djibouti Pre-2009 Piracy Routing Mombasa, Kenya Post 2009 Piracy Routing Dar es Salaam, Tanzania

  5. Piracy Incidents • 6 incidents in past 4 years • April 2009 – Maersk Alabama pursued by 2 skiffs as it was leaving Gulf of Aden. Pursuit ended due to sea conditions. • April 2009 – Hijacked and retaken by crew. Master taken hostage in lifeboat (~0600) • November 2009 – Attacked by skiff in Indian Ocean (~0600) • September 2010 – Attacked by skiff in Indian Ocean (~0800) • March 2011 – Attacked by skiff west of Seychelles (~0700) • May 2011 – Attacked by skiff in Gulf of Aden while transiting IRTC (~0015) • Multiple incidents of avoiding suspicious vessels / probable mother ships

  6. Many components to piracy and vessel security….. • There are many aspects to anti-piracy preparations and operations ranging from the outfitting of vessels to tactics used. • Today, however, I will try to address only two of these components – risk management and the additional stress on the seafarer.

  7. The risk….. • Between 2009 and 2012, the mantra onboard was, “It’s not a matter of if, but a matter of when…..” • If there are skiffs in the water, you have between 6and 12 minutes. After that, they either have the ship or are going away. • ….is high, but is it is high as it once was?

  8. Current Piracy Risks in Gulf of Aden / Horn of Africa (GOA/HOA) AOR Risk = Probability X Consequence Consequence – Higher to Lower Probability Post 2009 Piracy : Probability (5) X Consequence (5) = 25 Post 2012 Scenario : Probability (3) X Consequence (5) = 15

  9. Applying the Bow-Tie Model to Piracy Have a well drilled plan / Brief crew Early detection / Hard target Pirates approach vessel Crew under stress Non-lethal or lethal means / Crew in citadel Only necessary crew / protective gear Piracy Or Armed Robbery Pirates fire at vessel Crew injured/killed due to weapons use Good comms / stores of food and water Lethal means / All entrances secure Pirates board vessel Crew in citadel Physical / mental stress Crew disables vessel & waits for military Planned response by shipping company / flag state Pirates seize vessel Crew held for ransom

  10.          Control measures in place to mitigate risk of piracy • BMP-4 (Best Management Practices, Version 4) from UKMTO Razor wire / fire hoses / dummies Establish citadel • Non-lethal means – LRAD, laser, searchlights • Armed Security • Have a robust security plan • Drill the plan frequently and realistically so that all crewmembers are familiar with it

  11. How has piracy changed us? • “I know I’m paranoid, but am I paranoid enough?” • “Chronic unease” is a term I first heard a couple of years ago which describes our situation pretty well, but probably applies to all mariners. It’s a form of ongoing risk analysis, but is a possible fatigue issue. • Watch in open ocean used to be a place to catch up on paperwork, correct charts, etc. Not anymore. This has caused the mates’ daily work hours to rise. • BMP-4 talks of keeping minimal people on deck in high risk waters. As we are always there, we must modify our behavior/workload to keep people safe.

  12. How has piracy changed us? (continued) • Areas that used to be safe havens aren’t anymore. • Explaining the vessel’s actions/reality of piracy situation to others in shipping industry is sometimes difficult.

  13. Reducing Stress • Have a robust anti-piracy/emergency plan. • Drill the plan! • Keep crew informed of situation. • Good communications. • Mariners need to discuss issues with family. If the mariner cannot reach family due to communications being disturbed - especially after a publicized event – the company should contact families. • Debrief crew after critical incident/piracy IAW IMP MSC.1/Circ. 1334 PIRACY AND ARMED ROBBERY AGAINST SHIPS - Guidance to ship owners and ship operators, shipmasters and crews on preventing and suppressing acts of piracy and armed robbery against ships

  14. Thank you! Questions and/or comments

More Related