A1 Refereed original research article in a scientific journal

Regulating Autonomous Ships - Concepts, Challenges and Precedents




AuthorsHenrik Ringbom

PublisherTaylor & Francis Inc.

Publication year2019

JournalOcean Development and International Law

Volume50

Issue2-3

First page 141

Last page169

Number of pages29

ISSN0090-8320

eISSN1521-0642

DOIhttps://doi.org/10.1080/00908320.2019.1582593


Abstract

The article seeks to contribute to the development of a conceptual framework for the ongoing regulatory discussions on autonomous ships at the International Maritime Organization (IMO). It elaborates on the distinction between the level of autonomy and the level of manning and highlights the sliding scale that features in both. Certain building blocks that are needed for regulating autonomous ships are identified, followed by an assessment of how key existing IMO rules deal with the challenges and an analysis of available precedents. The conclusion is that the on-going exercise is unique, almost without precedent, and that the work that has just started at IMO, so far at least, fails to address the most important— and complex—regulatory challenges.The article seeks to contribute to the development of a conceptual framework for the ongoing regulatory discussions on autonomous ships at the International Maritime Organization (IMO). It elaborates on the distinction between the level of autonomy and the level of manning and highlights the sliding scale that features in both. Certain building blocks that are needed for regulating autonomous ships are identified, followed by an assessment of how key existing IMO rules deal with the challenges and an analysis of available precedents. The conclusion is that the on-going exercise is unique, almost without precedent, and that the work that has just started at IMO, so far at least, fails to address the most important— and complex—regulatory challenges.



Last updated on 2024-26-11 at 16:46