Applying Advanced Information Systems to Ports and Waterways Management

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Title
A01=Commission on Engineering and Technical Systems
A01=Division on Engineering and Physical Sciences
A01=Marine Board
Author_Commission on Engineering and Technical Systems
Author_Division on Engineering and Physical Sciences
Author_Marine Board
Category=KNG
eq_business-finance-law
eq_isMigrated=1
eq_non-fiction

Product details

  • ISBN 9780309063807
  • Dimensions: 216 x 279mm
  • Publication Date: 17 Apr 1999
  • Publisher: National Academies Press
  • Publication City/Country: US
  • Product Form: Paperback
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The future safety of maritime transportation in the United States—a major factor in the nation's international trade and economic well-being—will depend heavily on the quality of port and waterways information systems. Many U.S. ports and waterways lack adequate information services, although certain elements of advanced systems are now available in some locations. Barriers to improvements in information systems include the division of responsibilities for waterways management among multiple agencies at all levels of government, a lack of coordination among the federal agencies responsible for waterways management, inadequate budgets for some critical maritime programs, the high costs of some specialized technologies, stakeholder opposition to user fees, limited access to certain key data, the incompatibility of many independently developed systems, and the absence of standards for some attractive technologies.

In this report, the second phase of a three-year study by the Committee on Maritime Advanced Information Systems of the National Research Council, a strategy is presented for overcoming the major barriers and deficiencies and providing a minimum level of maritime safety information nationwide. In this phase of the study, the committee concentrated on maritime information systems that promote safety, which is the area of greatest need. The committee did not examine in detail the relationship between navigation safety and maritime transportation efficiency or evaluate information systems that promote efficiency; the committee believes, however, that these issues deserve further attention.

Table of Contents
  • Front Matter
  • Executive Summary
  • 1 Need for Improved Navigation Information Systems
  • 2 Federal, State, and Private Roles
  • 3 Enhancing Navigation Safety Information Systems
  • 4 Vision of the Future and How to Achieve It
  • 5 Conclusions and Recommendations
  • A Biographies of Committee Members
  • B Excerpt from the National Dialog on Vessel Traffic Services, April 1997
  • C Maritime Advanced Information Systems, Puget Sound Region
  • D Maritime Information Systems, Port of Charleston, South Carolina
  • E Arrival-to-Departure Information Exchange