1 / 7

Ship owners and masters concerns with regard to VOS data exchange

This article discusses the concerns of ship owners and masters regarding the exchange of VOS data. It highlights the need for masking schemes to comply with WMO Res. 40 and emphasizes the importance of protecting ship owners' authorization and partnership with WMO Members. The article also suggests actions for the shipping industry and the SOT to ensure secure data exchange and promote the value of VOS observations.

aaguayo
Download Presentation

Ship owners and masters concerns with regard to VOS data exchange

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. Ship owners and masters concerns with regard to VOS data exchange • WMO-EC LVIII, June 2006 • No reclassification (Res. 40) • 1 year ship masking trial • High level dialogue • Affected WMO Members • IMO, ICS • Shipping industry (Intercargo, Intertanko) • Technical Commissions (JCOMM, CBS, CCl) • WMO-IMO Consultative meeting, Geneva, 12-13 February 2007 World Meteorological Organization

  2. Consultative meeting agreed principles • Redrafting Res. 40 not wanted • Link not obvious: “Obs on web sites” => “increased security risk” • Perception of link exists, so concerns must be addressed • Commercial considerations • No ship ID nor position on web site without ship owners authorization • Masking schemes should comply with WMO Res. 40 (Cg. XII) • Universally accepted solution for the longer term World Meteorological Organization

  3. Consultative meeting agreed principles • Selective masking is acceptable when requested by ship owners • Agreement to be signed for receiving the non-masked data • Protecting the partnership of WMO Members with private sector • Geo-physical data + date + time + position are essential (Res. 40) • Unique ship identification, and recruiting country are critical (SOT to advice) World Meteorological Organization

  4. Consultative meeting agreed principles • Call sign not essential (Res. 40) provided technical solutions are proposed • Unique ID required for • data assimilation (bias, systematic errors) • quality monitoring • quality information feedback to PMOs • climate applications • Country identification not necessary in unique ID • Pub47 restrictions acceptable for unique ID • Simple and generic design standards : ship-owners eventually decide on building standards they use. World Meteorological Organization

  5. Consultative meeting recommended actions for SOT • Cooperate with MSC sub-committee for investigating the use of LRIT to transmit weather observations • To consider removing country name from unique ID • To promote the added value of VOS observations in support of marine meteorology and climatology and maritime safety with the shipping industry World Meteorological Organization

  6. Consultative meeting recommended actions for SOT • To undertake a review of the implementation impact of masking • To establish an ad hoc task team on call sign masking schemes • To explore long term solutions • To prepare a report to EC-LIX proposing to maintain Resolution 7 (EC LVIII) in force and to continue the trials for another year, on the basis of the recommendations from the SOT regarding a unified approach to call sign masking. World Meteorological Organization

  7. Consultative meeting recommended actions for SOT • To draft new version of MSC 1017 and then submit it to MSC-89 for approval • To encourage the use of AWS • To draft a document on ship design. ICS then to investigate impacts. • To prepare a promotional DVD World Meteorological Organization

More Related