08:51 uur 16-12-2019

ABS: Branche-leidende studie van 246 miljoen dollar aan letselschadeclaims biedt nieuw inzicht in de veiligheid van de scheepvaart

HOUSTON– (BUSINESS WIRE) – ABS, de American Club en Lamar University roepen de sector op om de oorzaak van de veiligheid op zee te bevorderen met uitgebreidere vereisten voor letsel en bijna-ongeluk rapportage.

De oproep volgt op een sectorbreed project dat meer dan 12.000 letselrecords analyseert met een financieel kostenplaatje van $ 246 miljoen en nog eens 100.000 bijna-ongevallenmeldingen van het ABS en Lamar Mariner Safety Research Initiative (MSRI) en bijna een decennium aan gegevens van de American Club .

Het onderzoek biedt een ongekend inzicht in ongevallen op zee, maar inconsistente gegevens samen met een gebrek aan consistentie en volledigheid hebben het projectteam ertoe aangezet om de sector aan te sporen om een uitgebreide nieuwe standaard voor maritieme letselrapportage aan te nemen.

ABS: Industry-Leading Study of $246m of Injury Claims Offers New Shipping Safety Insight

HOUSTON–(BUSINESS WIRE)– ABS, the American Club, and Lamar University are calling on industry to advance the cause of safety at sea with more comprehensive requirements for injury and near miss reporting.

The call follows an industry-wide project analyzing more than 12,000 injury records with a financial cost of $246m and a further 100,000 near miss reports from the ABS and Lamar Mariner Safety Research Initiative (MSRI) and nearly a decade of data from the American Club.

The research offers unprecedented insight into accidents at sea but inconsistent data along with a lack of consistency and comprehensiveness have led the project team to urge industry to adopt a comprehensive new standard for maritime injury reporting.

“Nothing is more important to ABS than the safety of the men and women working at sea. This project offers a deeper insight into how and where seafarers are being injured and highlights what industry can do to take our understanding of safety to the next level,” said Christopher J. Wiernicki, ABS Chairman, President and CEO.

The research reveals how injuries sustained while lifting or in slips, trips/falls are the most frequent at sea, with more than 1,300 in this study’s dataset. American Club data records these cost in excess of $85m for the period. The average cost per incident exceeds $65,000: lifting incidents averaged $48,000; falls and trips averaged $88,000; slips averaged $56,000. Looking at costs and anatomical locations, the two most costly body locations were the head and neck, averaging just over $100,000 followed by the back and torso at $66,000.

Joseph Hughes, the Shipowners Claims Bureau’s Chairman and Chief Executive Officer, “Shipping is currently navigating through a digital era in which asset owners are increasingly able to use the power of operational data to predict potential failures. As those capabilities grow, the industry would be well counselled to get ‘smarter’ about how it compiles and uses its safety data.”

“This industry, academic, and class partnership provided valuable insight into the impact of injuries across the maritime industry. This is another tool to provide better solutions to help prevent the occurrence of maritime injuries,” said Dr. Brian Craig, Lamar University, Dean of Engineering and Co-Director of the Mariner Safety Research Initiative.

A report summary is available here.

About ABS

About the American Club

About Lamar University

Contacts

Gareth Lewis

glewis@eagle.org

Check out our twitter: @NewsNovumpr