Risk-based ship security analysis – an approach based on civilian and military methods
Licentiatavhandling, 2012

The demands on maritime operations today are increasingly higher in terms of control, efficiency and cost. The margins for accidents and security incidents are therefore decreasing. In the area of ship safety the regulations, guidelines and methods have a history and culture of systematic research, development and implementation. In contrast, international security is highly politicized and therefore not as transparent. The result is that a tradition of ship security is not as well established. The overall aim of this thesis is to propose a method for ship security analysis that increases the overall safety of the crew and the ship. The objective is to develop a method that is systematic in order to ensure that assessment and response are complete and effective, and that the process is documented to provide evidence of decision-making. The method used is probabilistic risk assessment where quantitative analysis is central. The proposed approach is consistent with the requirements of maritime safety work. However, in the work here, the proposed methods are specifically tested for security cases. This is because hazards (without intent) and threats (with intent) evolve in different ways into risk. Therefore, they must be analysed differently in order to capture the causal relationship. The proposed approach consists of three steps: the first step consists of a threat description that documents qualitative and quantitative aspects that together describe how the threat most likely will act in relation to the ship’s vulnerability; the second step uses the threat description to define the system studied as well as the scenarios that collectively describe the harmful consequences; the third step evaluates the risk with tools from probabilistic risk assessment. The overall conclusion is that the proposed method brings the procedure and results of ship security analysis into the open and therefore allows for criticism, improvements and shared risk knowledge, not possible with less structured methods. The results also show that the calculated probabilities agree with available statistics, which indicates that the analysis succeeds in describing the central causal relationships of the scenarios modelled.

ship security analysis

naval ship

piracy

risk control options

risk-based

Gamma, Forskningsgången 4, Chalmers Campus Lindholmen
Opponent: Prof. Jakob Kuttenkeuler, Centre of Naval architecture, Royal Institute of Technology, Stockholm, Sweden.

Författare

Hans Liwång

Chalmers, Sjöfart och marin teknik, Marine Design

Probabilistic risk assessment for integrating survivability and safety measures on naval ships

Transactions of the Royal Institution of Naval Architects Part A: InternationalJournal of Maritime Engineering,; Vol. 154(2012)p. A21-A30

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Minimising Risk from Armed Attacks: The Effects of the Nato Naval Ship Code

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Artikel i vetenskaplig tidskrift

Drivkrafter

Hållbar utveckling

Styrkeområden

Transport

Building Futures (2010-2018)

Ämneskategorier

Tvärvetenskapliga studier

Transportteknik och logistik

Farkostteknik

Övrig annan samhällsvetenskap

R - Department of Shipping and Marine Technology, Chalmers University of Technology, Göteborg, Sweden: 12:141

Gamma, Forskningsgången 4, Chalmers Campus Lindholmen

Opponent: Prof. Jakob Kuttenkeuler, Centre of Naval architecture, Royal Institute of Technology, Stockholm, Sweden.

Mer information

Skapat

2017-10-07