Article ID Journal Published Year Pages File Type
6975803 Safety Science 2015 23 Pages PDF
Abstract
Ship collisions are rare occurrences with a potential to cause significant human, monetary and/or environmental loss. One element in preventing collision accidents is the presence of a collision alert system (CAS), providing warnings to ship crews and/or personnel in Vessel Traffic Services of the collision risk in a real-time operational environment. In risk research, there is a recent focus on foundational issues related to risk concepts, perspectives and methods for describing risk, with calls for work addressing these risk-theoretical issues in application areas. Despite several proposed applications for CAS, no frameworks covering these risk-theoretic issues have been presented. Hence, the purpose of this paper is twofold. First, a framework for maritime risk-informed CAS (RICAS) is presented, including a risk-conceptual basis, a systematic description of the risk perspective and a discussion on the intended use of the risk model. A theoretical framework for the operationalization of the construct “ship collision risk” is presented, and a method for measuring this construct is introduced. Second, the framework is applied to a case-study concerning open sea navigation. An evaluation of the proposed RICAS in comparison with earlier proposed CAS methods indicates an improved performance over these.
Related Topics
Physical Sciences and Engineering Chemical Engineering Chemical Health and Safety
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