Seafarers Future
Seafarers Future
Seafarers Future
net/publication/342987363
The Future of Seafarers and the Seafarers of the Future from the Perspective
of Human Resources Management
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ABSTRACT
The rapid change in technology has begun to influence the maritime sector
with the effect of globalization. The impact of technologies is increasing
in shipping management; on the other hand, the importance of the hu-
man element has also increased. International Maritime Organization has
introduced regulations governing the training and social rights of seafar-
ers. MLC 2006 has been an important improvement for the social rights
of seafarers. Preventive measures for workplace bullying were started on
ships. The safety regulations of STWC Manila 2010 have brought some
improvements in the industry. The maritime industry will face some ab-
solute changes brought by Industry 4.0 such as IoT, artificial intelligence,
cloud technology and blockchain, although it is unclear yet what sort of
changes will occur in manpower labor markets. There are some countries
that carry on projects regarding unmanned ships presently. For example,
Norway has realized several trial voyages, as well as some other projects,
which were carried on by Finland and the EU. In spite of all these changes,
seafarers obviously will be needed in the maritime industry. The main pur-
pose of the study is to determine how, from where and how many seafarers
will be demanded onboard in the future. Prospects, futurists’ approaches,
opinions of sector representatives and research reports are evaluated, and
the future of seafarers is discussed in this study.
Introduction
The most important element of international trade and globalization is maritime
transport. Providing quality and safe service in maritime transport is possible through
management of seafarers. The rapid increase in trade relations with the globalization
of the maritime sector has raised its significance day by day. The shipping business
is an exceptionally universal, multicultural and technical industry, and it faces solid
demand on monetary effectiveness and benefit (Hanzu-Pazara & Arsenie, 2010;
Ljung, 2010). The most economical transportation mode is maritime transport. As
a form of transportation, maritime is still important. In spite of all technological
advances and the Fourth Industrial Revolution, the sector needs human-qualified
tasks. The importance of the human element is increasing by the day.
Today, human resources departments take duties and responsibilities related
to motivation, career planning, job satisfaction, organizational culture develop-
ment, training, performance evaluation, orientation training and communication
within the organization. Current developments have increased the importance of
human resource management in the maritime industry. It is clear that the impor-
tance of the philosophy of human resources management in the maritime sector
is increasing each day. Technological development has brought a new manage-
ment paradigm to the maritime sector. The new management paradigm is human
resource management in the shipping business for seafarers. Talent management is
getting more important in the Industry 4.0 era. With the flexibility to be created in
working life, the demand for seafarers will be directed to people who can use and
produce more specialized smart technologies. Maintaining these qualified seafar-
ers will depend on how much of the human resources management philosophy
can be achieved.
Human resources managers of shipping companies find the most effective sea-
farers for their ship organization, and to ensure its continuity, activities are defined
as a whole. Regardless of advances in innovation, somewhere in the range of 80%
of all mishaps are, as per examinations, brought about by human error. Ship mis-
hap factors, for example, weakness of crews because of tight calendars, conceiv-
able under-manning of ships, poor administration, inconsistent or low pay rates,
old or generally deficient hardware or innovation, the security culture of the organ-
ization and its enrollment arrangement, are, among others, factors that influence
the wellbeing at the sea from the group perspective that a solitary group or party
can barely, or by any means, change or impact. These hierarchical components are
frequently communicated; however, once in a while, they are really examined inside
and out (Berg et al., 2013). Human resources management’s (HRM’s) job is vital
to the general activity of the vessel. It is an organizing job that includes contact
between the specialized supervisor/shipowner and the seafarers (Anastasiou, 2017,
p. 75). Technical issues are intense in the training of seafarers, but limited training
is provided to improve management skills, which requires crew resource managers
to provide such kind of education and training. As mentioned above, the issues
that cause ship accidents are largely related to seafarers.
Human resources managers of shipping companies play an important role in
preventing ship accidents. Therefore, the human resources management philosophy
The Future of Seafarers and the Seafarers of the Future 221
plays a key role in the safe management of ships. This mission of human resources
management will increase in the future. The younger generation is looking for
equality, innovation, and first and foremost, a purpose that connects the crew
(Crew Connect Global, 2017, p. 6). This is because, in the future, ship operators
will have to employ more qualified seafarers than today. A ship manager needs to
ensure the organizational commitment of the seafarers, increase job satisfaction
and prevent seafarers from leaving their job. The job turnover rate in the maritime
sector is higher than those in other sectors. This undermines safe ship management.
Shipping companies become effective by focusing on the human element, for
which clear and determined human resource management policies are required.
These human resources policies, of course, should be planned for both land
and sea staff. The skill and stability of the seafarer’s experience should be given
importance by the human resources manager. Seafarers must gain different skills
and talents from today to the future.
The management of crew depends on the following: (1) an individual consid-
eration of obligation through high correspondence levels between experienced
ship and shore staff; building up a stage for beneficial cooperation with two-way
criticism; (2) drawing in a setup and respectable system of keeping an eye on
organizations; (3) securing the crew (alongside the land and property) from mari-
time risk; (4) observing their welfare by guaranteeing the accessibility of sufficient
protection covers and a wellbeing-oriented, honest condition both locally avail-
able and on the ship and shore; (5) giving persistent preparation to the upgrade of
shipboard execution and consistency with global quality standards (Anastasiou,
2017, p. 74).
Nowadays, development is simply a part of the procedure, seafarers’ skillsets,
jobs and roles will change along with the innovation of Industry 4.0. Esben Pouls-
son, who is the Chairman of the International Chamber of Shipping, stated that
One of the most important impacts of Industry 4.0 is the decrease in employ-
ment rates. Frase stated that: The fear of automation is, perversely, a fear too
much: Shipping is a profoundly global, multicultural and technological indus-
try, and it faces solid requests on financial effectiveness and gainfulness. We are
going to need to think in a different structure than we do today (Esben P oulsson,
2018). The is an urgent intrigue particularly on that technological advances have
chopped down the number of crewmembers, from what used to be 40–50 to
around 20–25 even on mega carrier ships (Ljung, 2010).
The other big challenge is to predict future skills needs, especially between
now and the time of increased automation. We may be sure that the skillsets and
training need to be required in the immediate, medium-term and long-term future
of the shipping industry will be different than those of today. An additional
222 Aziz Muslu
challenge then might be that other sectors will be competing over the same skilled
people as the shipping sector. However, this is also an opportunity and shows that
future skill needs in the maritime sector may be useful elsewhere, providing flex-
ibility of individual career paths (The Maritime Executive, 2018).
Although there is an assumption that older generations are unwilling to learn
to use new technologies, Borromeo views this as a failure of communication
among various parts of the industry (Crew Connect Global, 2017, p. 11). This
shows us that the new generation of seafarers will be preferred more by enter-
prises in the future.
Background
The maritime sector is important as the most economical way of transportation
from the past to the present. The maritime sector is widely known as an important
mode of transportation. In this study, it is aimed to emphasize the importance
of human resources management in operating ships for maritime transportation
companies.
HRM, which is an important management approach for businesses, has been
ignored by maritime businesses. A number of mandatory regulations have been
introduced by International Maritime Organization (IMO) concerning seafarers
and human resources management. The rapid change in technology will make
it necessary for maritime businesses to invest in human resources. In this study,
seafarers who will be demanded in the future are examined in terms of previ-
ous studies and expert opinions. Industry 4.0 has been determined in the light
of the current developments in the maritime business and legal regulations. In
this context, it is important to examine why human resource management and
investment in human capital in the maritime sector are necessary for shipping
businesses.
ships were functionally divided into sections and organized. Today, the organiza-
tion of ships still consists of two main departments: engines and deck. To date,
ships have been managed by a Taylorist style. Due to its maritime job culture and
structure, this industry has limited access to new management paradigms. In the
Third Industrial Revolution, there were no significant changes in the management
and organization of ships, despite automation and computers (Fig. 1).
Until the 1960s, shipping companies, for the most part, utilized crew from their
own nations, and the universities in maritime countries were all around subsidized
and upheld by legislatures. With the appearance of freedom to have the conveni-
ent flag and the opportunity to employ seafarers from any nation, the pivot of
the crew-providing countries moved out to developing economies. Universities in
these nations were neither well-financed nor upheld by legislatures (Chawla, 2015,
p. 4). During the period of 1970s, developed countries’ seafarers quit working in
the sea. In this period, to reduce ship operating costs, ships started to use free of
convenience flags of offshore countries which started with Hong Kong.
As there is a cost for preferred position that emerges with an expanded yield of
manufacturing and goods, for this situation, the issue is the seafarer. The unit cost
per seafarer is hypothetically diminished, and seafarers’ wages are brought down
as stock increments. The ship owner’s working costs are diminished, and earnings
are increased (Anastasiou, 2017, p. 77). Shipowners aim to decrease the operat-
ing costs, and for this reason, some shipowners started to work with ship man-
agement companies for employment of foreign seafarers. Especially Philippines’
seafarers entered the employment the global shipping market rapidly. Crews were
usually employed from cadet seafarers. The job descriptions of seafarers con-
sisted of a legal seafarer certificate (Fig. 2).
Nowadays, crew management and third-party ship management have become
widespread all over the world. A ship management company might be depicted
as somebody answerable for and responsible for jobs crafted by others or some-
body who plays out the assignments of the executives whether the person in ques-
tion has any control over others (Dickie, 2014, p. 58). For the ship and the crew,
the executives incorporate the fascination, recognizable proof, determination,
enlistment, preparation and improvement, business, maintenance and execution
the board of seafarers in consistence with statutory and global regulations and
understanding with client prerequisites (Anastasiou, 2017, p. 73).
One of the most important problems of today is substandard ships and
seafarers on these kinds of ships. The most important reasons for decreas-
ing quality in shipping businesses are third-party ship management and free
of convenience flags. The MLC 2006 convention on port state controls was
particularly effective, especially in terms of combating substandard vessels
and their organization.
The rapid change in technology has shown an effect on shipping organiza-
tions. Seafarers need to enhance different abilities. This issue imposes further
responsibility on ship operators. In the procedure of ship management, the man-
ager is definitely not in a different capacity inside the association, however, iden-
tifies with every one of the exercises of the association. There might be numerous
divisions inside an association (specialized, operational, contracting and HR, for
instance) and every one of them will have executive capacities and their inward
administration structure (Dickie, 2014, p. 58). However, one of the most impor-
tant functions of HRM is crew training. Ship operators should pay attention to
crew training for successful ship organizations. The skills and knowledge required
by Industry 4.0 must be provided to seafarers with a comprehension of lifelong
continuing training. Unlike the functional division of the ship organization of
the future, it should have the ability to do all sorts of work on the ship with de-
jobbing. Seafarers must know software, robotics technologies and engineering
SHIP
SEAFARER ITF MANAGEMENT
COMPANY
skills. On all that will be reduced, all that is considered trivial, data that is already
accessible from other places will be exchanged automatically. So, I think that
ships and seafarers will shortly feel a change, and we will start to develop the
industry to a more paperless industry, so I would say that that is in the short
run (Nordseth, 2018). The maritime business is known to be a part of a high
pace of deadly wounds and a significant level of undertaking unpredictability.
Incomprehensibly, progression in computerization and innovation has extraor-
dinarily upgraded security, yet, it has likewise created new difficulties for coop-
eration among people and innovation. According to a few specialists (Lutzhoft
& Dekker, 2002), people talk about disruption, but I prefer to say a technology
jump. To me, a technology jump is something that completely changes that way
that we work (Nordseth, 2018).
Seafarers get their testaments as per the IMO STCW Convention. The Inter-
national Convention and Code on Standards of Training, Certification and
Watchkeeping for Seafarers (STCW) is one of the significant foundations of sea
enactment. The STCW Code is divided into two sections as Part A: mandatory
arrangements to which explicit reference is made in the addition to the STCW
Convention and which give the base gauges required to be kept up by parties so as
to give full and complete impact to the arrangements of the STCW Convention
and Part B: prescribed direction to help gatherings to the STCW Convention and
those associated with actualizing, applying or authorizing its measures to give the
STCW Convention full and complete impact in a uniform way (Dickie, 2014, p.1).
With the advancement of enactment, innovation and dramatic developments
in the maritime sector, the definition and comprehension of seafarers and seafar-
ers’ social rights keep on evolving (Zhang, 2016, p. 9). It is seen that many mari-
time organizations carry out studies on management of seafarers. In this regard,
IMO, the EU has introduced many new regulations. The most important global
regulation is MLC 2006 (Zhang, 2016, p. 9). It is seen that numerous maritime
associations do have considerations in regard to the executives of seafarers. In
such a manner, IMO, the EU has presented numerous new guidelines. The most
significant worldwide guideline is MLC 2006 (International Labour Organization
(ILO), 2019). These endeavors to orchestrate crafted by the ILO and the IMO are
most welcome and forecast well for the stability and security of global maritime
labor law (Christodoulou & Pentsov, 2008).
The reason for the International Safety Management (ISM) Code is to pro-
vide a global standard to the protected administration and activity of ships and
The Future of Seafarers and the Seafarers of the Future 227
ITF ISF
IMO
SEAFARER SHIPOWNER
global sulfur limit, low energy vessel navigation, innovation and renewable energy
will bring fundamental changes to the maritime sector.
In 2014, the British luxury car manufacturer Rolls-Royce announced that it
would build autonomous ships. The Autonomous Ship Technology Symposium
held in 2016 in Amsterdam, they shared the details of their work on this issue.
Rolls-Royce, who heads the consortium Advanced Autonomous Floating Appli-
cations, including Finferries, Tampere University of Technology, Brighthouse
Intelligence and ESL Shipping, plans to implement this project by 2020.
Another of the earliest research projects on Autonomous Ships was the
European venture named the “Maritime Unmanned Navigation through Intel-
ligence in Networks (MUNIN)” project (2018). MUNIN, co-subsidized by the
European Commission under its Seventh Framework Program, set forward
another idea for an autonomous ship with the possibility to handle probably
the most testing issues in the field of self-sufficient marine transportation, for
example, noteworthy increment in transport volume, developing ecological pre-
requisites and a deficiency of seafarers (Zereik, Bibuli, Miškovi’c, Ridao, &
Pascoal, 2018, p. 365).
With the agreement signed between Rolls-Royce and Google, it will increase
the safety of existing ships, developing intelligent awareness systems that will
enable autonomous ships to come to actualize (Journal of Maritime Trade, 2017,
p. 74). Computerized innovation may be a huge empowering effect of develop-
ment and advancement. However, its capacity is not just to improve, yet also
disturbing. With the exponential digitalization of our reality, it should not shock
anyone that advanced disturbance is one of the consuming issues all pieces of the
society look at (Global Maritime Issues Monitor, 2018, p, 14). The agreement
signed between Rolls-Royce and Google on October 3, 2017 aims to develop intel-
ligent awareness systems that will increase the safety of existing ships and enable
autonomous ships to be implemented.
Norway is another country working on this issue. Although they started their
work later than the United Kingdom, they take the race ahead. Norwegian-based
Wound and marine technology company Kongsberg had come together for the
electric autonomous cargo ship project.
Autonomous ships will certainly create a reduction in employment. On the
other hand, it is a fact that the need for seafarers with other skills will emerge.
One of the most important expectations of unmanned ships is to close the gap of
a seafarer. There is no international regulation for the operation of autonomous
ships [Shore Control Center (SCC)]. It is unclear what the SCC’s responsibility
will be. Will the SCC be able to bear the responsibilities of the captain? There is
uncertainty in this matter.
This is ambiguous. It is clear that, in the Industry 4.0 era, the importance of the
human resources management philosophy is getting higher for the maritime sec-
tor more than today. Industry 4.0 brings more responsibility for human resources
managers to train and educate seafarers to respond to this new form of the ship-
ping industry.
In the longer run, we are talking about the next generation of seafarers, or the
coming generations, I think we will see a change in the working functions. Very
traditionally, we have three categories of seafarers. We have the deck department,
we have the engine department, and we have the catering department … and
I think these departments are facing a dissolution, and it will dissolve into more
of a multi-flexible thing where in the future, if you were a seafarer, you would be
able to do everything (Nordseth, 2018).
One of the most important jobs conducted by the HRM department is job
analysis. These analyses determine what job requirements and job descriptions
are. In the age of Industry 4.0, job analysis needs to be re-performed in mari-
time businesses. According to the needs created by Industry 4.0, job descriptions
should be created by creating new job requirements.
Present-day ships are getting exceptionally computerized and are progressively
subject to programing-based control frameworks. Propelled programing and
reenactment abilities will bring about progressively complex frameworks being
constrained by programing, while continuous assessment potential outcomes will
be accessible, joined by proposals for restorative activities by the crew and giving
the inventory network the executives’ choice help. Expanded digitalization and
accessibility of high-unwavering quality, programing-controlled, digital-physical
frameworks will take into consideration progresses in autonomous and remotely
controlled tasks (Digitalization of Shipping, DNV-GL, 2018). We often get com-
plaints about paperwork, a Captain aboard any given ship spends a lot of his
time on paperwork, and I think we will see that, soon, this will change (Nordseth,
2018).
While we work with worldwide relationships of various kinds, as GlobalMet,
Intertanko, BIMCO, ISF, NI, and so on in our endeavors to contribute in the field
of instruction, preparation and human variables influencing the general ability
of these, we accept that there is an earnest requirement for the maritime business
to concentrate on different components of crew skill. It should further be valued
that, thinking about the quick advances in innovation, there is a requirement for
an extra arrangement of capabilities when contrasted with the decades that have
passed by (Chawla, 2015, p. 5)
In the age of Industry 4.0, more communication skills will become more
important than ever for the safety and quality of ship management. English will
remain valid as the maritime language. English-speaking seafarers will be pre-
ferred in hiring. Many other ship accident factors to be improved are procedures
for communication, better selection of personnel and improved design of mari-
time equipment and technology, including means for communication (Pyne &
Koester, 2005). In addition to the obligations arising from technology and inte-
gration, these have also brought stringent obligations to seafarers in terms of
sustainable maritime transport.
The Future of Seafarers and the Seafarers of the Future 231
Conclusion
Human resource management functions, human resource planning, job descrip-
tions, recruitment and placement, training and development, performance
evaluation, career planning and development, employee motivation and salary
management, employee health and safety and industrial relations are areas that will
become even more important in the next century. Therefore, the methods and poli-
cies discussed in terms of human resources management will gain more importance.
The changes brought by Industry 4.0 for shipping will lead to the emergence of
what is considered as Maritime 4.0. A complete change in the management and
organization of ships is inevitable. The qualities that will be expected from sea-
farers in this period will include software coding knowledge, computing literacy,
flexibility, mindfulness, awareness and safety culture.
Although automation will increase each day, there will always be a need for
seafarers. From programing to maintenance of the robot and engine, the human
The Future of Seafarers and the Seafarers of the Future 235
being is the leading actor. It will be necessary to employ qualified seafarers with all
these qualifications to prevent them from leaving the job and increase their moti-
vation and job satisfaction. These issues, which are important responsibilities of
human resources departments, will become more important in the age of Industry
4.0. Ship operators who cannot invest in human resources will not be able to man-
age their ships by conventional methods. Ship management will become a more
technical business in the future. Demand for third-party shipping companies will
increase. Ship management companies capable of managing talent, overcoming
complex technical tasks and managing ships safely will be the indispensable insti-
tutions of the maritime industry in the age of Industry 4.0. The success of these
organizations will depend entirely on human resources management.
The Fourth industrial revolution, whether positive or negative, is a concept pro-
posing a future where robots have become an inevitable part of the maritime busi-
ness, and these seafarers and robots must act together and be managed in harmony.
Labor markets in the maritime sector are changing in the process with the
effects of political, economic and conjectural change. However, with Industry
4.0, it is clear that the number of employees will decrease, while the demand for
qualified and trained seafarers in the market will increase.
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