Greek shipping has the potential, knowledge and experience to adapt to the rapidly developing technology. This was the main conclusion of the 7th Hydra Shipping Conference, entitled: “From the ‘brig’ to the autonomous ship”. The conference, organized by the Fraternity of the Athenian Hydriots, took place on Saturday, September 17th 2016, in the Conference Hall of the Hydra Holy Cathedral, under the auspices of the Greek Ministry of Maritime Affairs and Insular Policy, the Hellenic Chamber of Shipping, and with the support of the Hellenic Institute of Marine Technology (H.I.M.T.), the Association of Banking and Financial Executives of Hellenic Shipping, the International Propeller Club of the United States – International Port of Piraeus and of WISTA Hellas. Greek shipowners, distinguished members of historical Hydriot families, senior business executives working in the shipping industry, representatives from IT companies, consultants and academics, attended the conference.
In his welcome speech, the President of the Fraternity of the Athenian Hydriots, John Sahinis, referred to the conference which, due to the uninterrupted substantial support of all those participating in it, has become not only an important annual event, but also a high-level discussion forum for the shipping industry. He also referred to the contribution of the Fraternity. The Fraternity was established in 1890, by the historical Hydriot shipping families that led the sea battle during the 1821 fight against the Turks, offering their 186 ships and all their fortune for that cause. They were aiming at the preservation and promotion of Hydras’ contribution to the liberation from the Turkish occupancy, the development of significant charity activity, and attracting the young people to the maritime professions. The Ship Owner and Member of the Hellenic Parliament Gkikas Koulouras, who was the Fraternity’s President from 1938 to 1954, was the initiator and co-founder of the "Union of Greek Shipowners", a union which, this year, celebrates 100 years of operation.
Mr. Sahinis mentioned that for the first time the Conference had been hosted in the Conference Hall of the Hydra Holy Cathedral, where Hydra’s Ecclesiastical Museum is also hosted. In the courtyard, the participants of the conference could see the busts of eminent Hydriots, such as Lazaros Kountouriotis and Andreas Miaoulis. The Conference Hall had been renovated in 2011 and is audio-visually fully equipped.
The President of the Fraternity mentioned that the subject of this year’s Conference was “From the ‘brig’ to the autonomous ship”, with focus on the digital transformation of the shipping industry. He called the distinguished speakers of the conference to develop their views in a productive dialogue and guide the attendants in a tour from the Brig to the autonomous ship.
The Mayor of Hydra, Dr. George E. Koukoudakis, welcomed all conference’s distinguished guests to the island of Hydra, an island with significant shipping tradition in which the oldest in the world naval academy was established and is still operating, an island which is the benchmark of the maritime competence of our country. Hydra’s maritime competence was turned into naval power and was the main pillar of our national liberation fleet. The Mayor concluded by thanking the President of the Fraternity of the Athenian Hydriots for the establishment of such a prestigious conference and he also congratulated the organizers for the choice of the subject of the 7th Hydra Shipping Conference, since the technological developments in the shipping industry result to domino effects in other sectors, such as geopolitics.
Professor Ioannis Theotokas, Secretary General of Maritime Affairs and Insular Policy, in his speech presented the evolution from the traditional to the modern, technologically advanced ship. He mentioned the uninterrupted development of the fleet in terms of both number of ships and tonnage during the last four decades, which makes Greek-owned shipping a unique case in the history of modern shipping. To preserve their competitive position in the years to come, Greek-owned shipping companies will have to confront various challenges. The ability to renew and expand the human capital and the knowledge basis of the industry should be one of their first priorities. To succeed in this, it needs to attract, train, provide life-long career schemes and retain young people to the industry. In this perspective, the development of a competitive Maritime Education and Training sector is a precondition. The economic crisis and unemployment has highlighted the career prospects provided by the shipping industry. This has led to the increase of the number of candidates for the Marine Academies and the recruitment of qualified young people. The challenge for the industry, after the completion of their studies, will be their sustainable professional development and their retention in the profession. For the vast majority of the seafarers, especially for Generations Y and Z, the availability of Internet access and social media applications on board ships is a critical factor that would prompt them to extend their service on a vessel with such amenities. Based on the above, communication is a factor that contributes to improving retention in the seafaring profession. Beyond the HR function, if companies have good and accessible communication facilities in place, this could have the potential to improve the overall operational efficiency of shipping companies not only by reducing personnel costs or the cost of recruiting and training a new employee, but also by gaining efficiency in other areas such as control or management systems.
Sustainable development of the fleet asks for expansion to other types of innovation, based on the ability to create, exploit and integrate the technological evolutions in the product development process. In other words, to transit from the organizational innovation to the product innovation, based on the technology development.
Concluding his speech, Prof. Theotokas said that technological development is the way out for the future. However, it is the necessary, but not the sufficient condition, for success. This is because competitors with better prospects for investing in developing new technologies are about to appear. What is equally important, and somehow the precondition for the exploitation of the advantages of technological developments, is the solid basis that human resources offer. Thus, investments in technological developments should go hand in hand with investments in human resources.
The President of the Hellenic Chamber of Shipping and Managing Director of Aegeus Shipping S.A., George D. Pateras, mentioned that Hydra, as well as Oinousses, his ancestral island, are both pillars of the Greek Maritime tradition. Hydra is 3,5 times larger than Oinousses, and is inhabited by approximately 2.000 people, while Oinousses is inhabited by less than 800, thanks only to the Boarding school and the Deck officers’ college. This is yet another similarity between the two Islands, the fact that both have outstanding Naval Academies. Of course, the Hydra Academy claims to be the first, founded in 1749. Mr. Pateras wondered what all graduates of Greek Maritime Academies would say if questioned about smart shipping and what the future holds for them. They have been educated to be smart mariners to use modern technology to their benefit, both for efficiency and safety.
Advancements in technology reply to necessity, and if properly used, may contribute to environment protection and enhance safety. “We can rely on their benefits as long as we don’t forget our basic training and learn to use these advantages, as a tool to assist us in doing a better job.
Safer for the seaman and our environment, thus increasing reliability and consistency for a better outcome of any adventure”, said Mr. Pateras, adding: “Let us not forget that Greek Merchant Shipping flourished for decades with second hand vessels which many considered to be technologically inferior or even obsolete. Greece has historically been in the forefront of technological advancement; nothing has changed, we are still the forerunners of the digital world. I firmly believe that the Greek seaman and the Greek shipowner are both knowledgeable and flexible and will welcome modernization and adapt easily into the reality of a digital future”.
Mr. Xiradakis introduced the two speakers of the debate on stage, Dr. John Coustas, President & CEO, Danaos Corp., and Dr. Martin Stopford, non executive President, Clarkson Research Services Ltd.
Dr. Martin Stopford said that major improvements in Information and Communications Technology (ICT) make a new business model viable. The “Smart-Shipping” model uses ICT based innovation to achieve a major improvement in global transport service and efficiency. It focuses in three areas – Smart-Ships with improved operating systems; Smart Fleet-Management which manages a fleet of ships like a “factory” producing more efficient transport; and Smart Shipping-Logistics which integrate sea transport into the door-to-door logistics train. These innovations can create wide-reaching improvements in global transport value creation in the form of safety; Personnel development; improved service levels, and lower inputs and emissions.
The “Smart Ships” will need to become digitally ready, in the same way as has happened with office buildings on land – server facilities and wireless LAN access throughout the ship are the main items. Retrofitting a fleet of 86,000 ships, with 6,000 companies and an expected life of 25 years will not happen quickly. Meanwhile the digital integration of maritime infrastructure needs to be developed. This is already happening for charts. Ports will need transport management systems dealing with pilotage, berthing and cargo management. Again this is already happening, as is the tracking of containers. But the big changes in Smart Shipping will come in transport system innovation. The core will be the move from the ship as the business unit to the fleet as a transport factory, with links to customers and suppliers. The key word is "evolution", preferably within a "protocol" framework.
1. Fleet economies of scale, greater professionalism, effective QA systems and fewer defects.
2. Fewer accidents and unplanned breakdowns lead to higher performance benchmarks and fewer disputes.
3. Better use of assets as management make better informed fleet decisions.
4. Better performance monitoring and reporting (less paper) against realistic benchmarks.
5. “One company” culture, group wide communications, teamwork and better career progression.
Technology helped us to automate various procedures on board. It also gave us the potential to employ people in a more productive way. Today’s ship becomes an extension of the office. However, there is also a problem here; the fact that we are able to move the ship so close to the office, made people less assertive. The ability to find solutions is now gradually diminishing. People on board feel closer to the office; however, their ability to take decisions on board decreases. It is also true that we have moved in a more complex and bureaucratic environment on shipping. A captain spends most of his day in administering all regulations, papers etc. Information technology is a necessary solution for
us to keep up with our requirements, to do our job properly.
Finally, it is very important to use IT, not as a tool that takes responsibility away from the vessel, but as a tool to give the vessel more information to take responsibility. The advent of big data is to give correlations and information that we could not have up to this moment.
LAROS is an open architecture platform that enables the ability to utilize data and obtain actionable knowledge, predictions and insights, allowing continuous process improvements that result in optimal performance throughout the lifetime of assets. It is the bridge between the vessels and their systems and onshore enterprises resources. The ability to manage all data and information from different systems onboard in a safe and efficient manner enables a new level of possibility to analyze and monitor situations, critical operations, to adverse conditions and to increase performance awareness.
Μichael Bodouroglou, President & CEO, Paragon Shipping and Box Ships, said that during his 35 years of experience in the shipping industry, he has seen a basic trend; modern ships are becoming more technologically advanced, more complicated. However, people who work on ships have not become more educated. Moreover, regulations have become more complicated, instead of being simplified. Greek shipping is successful due to its ability to adapt and change, in a cost-effective way. Technology will continue to improve, but the decisions will continue to be transferred from the vessel to the office. The pace of this change and the ways it will be implemented will make the difference between success and failure for all of us in the future, in the competitive world that we operate.
www.all4yachting.com supported the 7th Hydra Shipping Conference as media sponsor.