Application and analysis of the IMO taxonomy on casualty investigation over 20 years of marine events in the Russian and Norwegian Arctic

International audience The Arctic Ocean is simultaneously rich in terms of hydrocarbons and rare earth and highly sensitive to human activity. Due to the remoteness of the multiple production areas, the development and use of rail roads would be too costly and hard to pay-back, hence the use of mari...

Full description

Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: Fedi, Laurent, Faury, Olivier, Cheaitou, Ali, Etienne, Laurent, Rigot-Muller, Patrick
Other Authors: Kedge Business School (Kedge BS), Métis Lab EM Normandie, École de Management de Normandie (EM Normandie), University of Sharjah (UoS), Knowledge Learning and Information Modelling (LABISEN-KLAIM), Laboratoire ISEN (L@BISEN), Institut supérieur de l'électronique et du numérique (ISEN)-YNCREA OUEST (YO)-Institut supérieur de l'électronique et du numérique (ISEN)-YNCREA OUEST (YO), National University of Ireland Maynooth (Maynooth University)
Format: Conference Object
Language:English
Published: HAL CCSD 2020
Subjects:
Online Access:https://hal.archives-ouvertes.fr/hal-03355149
https://hal.archives-ouvertes.fr/hal-03355149/document
https://hal.archives-ouvertes.fr/hal-03355149/file/Application%20and%20analysis%20of%20the%20IMO%20taxonomy%20on%20casualty%20investigation%20over%2020%20years%20of%20marine%20events%20in%20the%20Russian%20Arctic%20IAME%202020.pdf
Description
Summary:International audience The Arctic Ocean is simultaneously rich in terms of hydrocarbons and rare earth and highly sensitive to human activity. Due to the remoteness of the multiple production areas, the development and use of rail roads would be too costly and hard to pay-back, hence the use of maritime transport appears as the main profitable solution. Yet hydrocarbons fields, mines and human activities are not equally spread around the Arctic. As an evidence, the Russian Federation and Norwegian coast are highly developed with ports such as Sabetta for LNG or Novy for crude oil and also Murmansk as a regional hub for Russia and Kirkenes for Norway. Concomitantly, former years witnessed an exponential increase in the amount of cargo shipped along the Russian shores in line with the requirement of the President of the Russian Federation and his target of 80 million tons shipped by 2024. These parameters, combined with the ice melting, may increase the density of traffic in the coming years and consequently the number of accidents and the corresponding number of claims. Until now, few maritime claims within the Russian Arctic have been analyzed and reported in the literature. However, when one investigates different sources of information, it appears that around 140 claims occurred with different layers of severity between 1991 and 2011. Based on a 20-year observation period and following the standardized IMO taxonomy on casualty investigation, we classified these claims by level of severity, frequency of occurrence, geographical area and time period. Our results stress the fact that most existing studies underestimate the severity of the claims occurring in the Russian Arctic. Finally, we call for a greater reporting of maritime events and compliance with the IMO risk classification tool to better understand accidentology in this risky zone.