ABSTRACT

The environmental and human costs of marine accidents are high, and risks are considerable. At the same time, expectations from society for the safety of maritime transportation, like most other activities, increase continuously. To meet these expectations, systematic methods for understanding and managing the risks in a cost-efficient manner are needed. This book provides readers with an understanding of how to approach this problem.

Firmly set within the context of the maritime industry, systematic methods for safety management and risk assessment are described. The legal framework and the risk picture within the maritime industry provide necessary context. Safety management is a continuous and wide-ranging process, with a set of methods and tools to support the process. The book provides guidance on how to approach safety management, with many examples from the maritime industry to illustrate practical use.

This extensively revised new edition addresses the needs of students and professionals working in shipping management, ship design and naval architecture, and transport management, as well as safety management, insurance and accident investigation.

chapter Chapter 1|9 pages

Introduction

chapter Chapter 2|22 pages

The risk picture

chapter Chapter 3|17 pages

Terminology

chapter Chapter 4|43 pages

Stakeholders, rules, and regulations

chapter Chapter 5|17 pages

Safety management system

chapter Chapter 6|19 pages

Risk acceptance

chapter Chapter 7|42 pages

Human and organizational factors

chapter Chapter 8|78 pages

Risk analysis methods

chapter Chapter 9|21 pages

Measuring risk

chapter Chapter 10|35 pages

Methods for navigational risk analysis

chapter Chapter 11|42 pages

Human reliability analysis

chapter Chapter 12|48 pages

Formal safety assessment

chapter Chapter 13|25 pages

Security

chapter Chapter 14|39 pages

Accident data

chapter Chapter 15|51 pages

Risk reduction measures

chapter Chapter 16|47 pages

Emergency preparedness and response

chapter Chapter 17|11 pages

Risk-based design

chapter Chapter 18|30 pages

Monitoring risk level

chapter Chapter 19|35 pages

Learning from accidents and incidents