Safe maritime operations under extreme conditions: the Arctic case
Acronym
SEDNA
Description of the granted funding
Maritime traffic in the Arctic region is rapidly increasing. But there has been a huge increase in marine casualties in this region due to its extremely harsh environment and the severe safety challenges for ships’ navigation teams.
SEDNA will develop an innovative and integrated risk-based approach to safe Arctic navigation, ship design and operation, to enable European maritime interests to confidently fully embrace the Arctic’s significant and growing shipping opportunities, while safeguarding its natural environment.
More specifically SEDNA will create and demonstrate the improved safety outcomes of:
1. The Safe Arctic Bridge, a human-centered operational environment for the ice-going ship bridge using augmented reality technology to provide improved situational awareness and decision making whilst enabling integration with new key information layers developed by the project using innovative big data management techniques.
2. Integrated dynamic meteorological and oceanographic data with real time ship monitoring and ice movement predictions to provide reliable decision making for safe and efficient Arctic voyage optimisation.
3. Anti-icing engineering solutions, using nature inspired approaches, to prevent ice formation on vessels, eliminating ice as a ship stability and working-environment hazard.
4. Risk-based design framework to ensure that vessel design is connected to all key hazards of ship operation in the Arctic. The holistic treatment of the ship design, operating regime and environment will improve safety and minimise impact over the entire life cycle.
5. A CEN Workshop Agreement on a process to systematically address safety during bunkering of methanol as a marine fuel along with safety zone guidance for three bunkering concepts: Truck to Ship, Shore to Ship and Ship to Ship.
To maximise impact, SEDNA will provide formal inputs to international regulatory regimes regarding regulation adaptation requirements for its safety solutions.
Show moreStarting year
2017
End year
2020
Granted funding
AKER ARCTIC TECHNOLOGY OY
345 087.5 €
Participant
UNIVERSITY COLLEGE LONDON (UK)
959 700 €
Participant
MUNSTER TECHNOLOGICAL UNIVERSITY (IE)
348 558.75 €
Participant
SP/F DECISION3 (FO)
222 151.25 €
Participant
ULSTEIN POWER & CONTROL AS (NO)
389 250 €
Participant
ARKITEKTUR OG DESIGNHOGSKOLEN I OSLO (NO)
695 375 €
Participant
Harbin Engineering University (CN)
Participant
Stena Rederi AB (SE)
421 562.5 €
Participant
Dalian University of Technology (CN)
Participant
LLOYD'S REGISTER EMEA IPS (UK)
222 815 €
Participant
CORK INSTITUTE OF TECHNOLOGY (IE)
348 558 €
Participant
MET OFFICE (UK)
765 893.75 €
Participant
UNIVERSITY OF SOUTHAMPTON (UK)
364 892.5 €
Participant
CHALMERS TEKNISKA HOEGSKOLA AB (SE)
705 875 €
Participant
Amount granted
6 498 753 €
Funder
European Union
Funding instrument
Research and Innovation action
Framework programme
Horizon 2020 Framework Programme
Call
Programme part
SOCIETAL CHALLENGES - Smart, Green And Integrated Transport (5374Topic
Safer waterborne transport and maritime operations (MG-3.3-2016Call ID
H2020-MG-2016-Two-Stages Other information
Funding decision number
723526
Identified topics
maritime, ships