Call for ‘data democratisation’ to improve maritime sustainability
French maritime data specialist Opsealog has launched a white paper calling for greater data sharing across supply chains to help achieve shipping’s decarbonisation and sustainability ambitions.
The report calls for a more collaborative approach to digitalisation in the maritime sector, so that all organisations can contribute their data insights and collectively share the benefits. It argues for the importance of putting the right architecture in place to make data easier to collect, share and analyse. This includes the need to standardise data formats to break siloes and make data accessible.
“If each shipping organisation can take steps towards democratising data within its own communities, networks, and supply chains, we all stand to benefit,” says Arnaud Dianoux, founder and managing director of Opsealog (pictured left).
“By helping to raise the data maturity of your partners, they will be able to perform better and in turn better support you.
“By contrast, if there is a weak link in your supply chain, this could be where you lose the opportunity to optimise your operations and materially improve your environmental performance.”
The white paper highlights the untapped potential of data collected for compliance purposes, including mandatory onboard logbooks and record books, stressing that such data can be harnessed to improve operational practices, boost fuel efficiency, and reduce waste and greenhouse gas emissions. It argues that shipowners and operators can go further with the data that they already collect for regulatory compliance by creating a new mindset that seeks the value of that data.
Currently, much of the information collected for compulsory reporting under the IMO’s fuel data collection system (DCS) and the EU’s EU MRV (monitoring, reporting and verification) regulation is recorded in spreadsheets, emails, or paper. In addition, there is also an accumulation of data (often duplicated) for other sustainability requirements, such as onboard record books like oil, ballast water, garbage and others.
Colomban Monnier, foundry manager at Opsealog and one of the lead authors of the report, explains that this data is a goldmine of insights that can be used to optimise operations.
“We have entered the age of environmental accountability on shipping’s sustainability journey,” says Monnier. “As sentiment around the green economy shifts from risk to opportunity, shipping can capitalise on how it engages with data and digitalisation. At the heart of environmental accountability, for every vessel or fleet, is good data. If the industry can take steps towards democratising access to this data, we can deliver a step change in mitigating shipping’s total environmental impact.”
The white paper also notes that the data processes put in place today will need to evolve throughout the energy transition to respond to the arrival of new low-carbon and zero-carbon fuels.
“The transition to new fuels will need to be accompanied by robust data to measure consumption and emissions, as well as the impact on other operational costs, including those relating to the logistics of getting these fuels onboard and potentially a full well-to-wake analysis. Digitising onboard reporting ensures that the right foundations are put in place to meet the longer-term ambitions of the organisation,” adds Monnier.
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