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Will the smart ship also be the liable ship?: An analysis of the application of liability to the ship itself

Will the smart ship also be the liable ship?: An analysis of the application of liability to the ship itself
Will the smart ship also be the liable ship?: An analysis of the application of liability to the ship itself
As engineers develop the future of shipping: unmanned ships, and autonomous operating systems, which do not need a master or crew on board, it is asked: 'who shall be held responsible?'. Research into autonomous systems has considered holding the owner, the manufacturer or programmer responsible by considering the autonomous system as their instrument. Another suggestion is to make the ship liable. The problem is that the idea of the system itself being held liable has not been considered in relation to shipping. It is concluded that it would not be possible to hold the ship liable in international maritime law. Previous research found that it is problematic to impose remedial measures on a system; additionally, in maritime law the system is based on the owner being liable and minimal change being required is needed to ease the introduction of unmanned ships. Therefore, liability will not be imposed on the ships themselves.
Royal Institution of Naval Architects
Stones, H.
9e100445-5088-451c-bbc2-d1222c6d01d8
Stones, H.
9e100445-5088-451c-bbc2-d1222c6d01d8

Stones, H. (2017) Will the smart ship also be the liable ship?: An analysis of the application of liability to the ship itself. In Transaction of RINA. Royal Institution of Naval Architects..

Record type: Conference or Workshop Item (Paper)

Abstract

As engineers develop the future of shipping: unmanned ships, and autonomous operating systems, which do not need a master or crew on board, it is asked: 'who shall be held responsible?'. Research into autonomous systems has considered holding the owner, the manufacturer or programmer responsible by considering the autonomous system as their instrument. Another suggestion is to make the ship liable. The problem is that the idea of the system itself being held liable has not been considered in relation to shipping. It is concluded that it would not be possible to hold the ship liable in international maritime law. Previous research found that it is problematic to impose remedial measures on a system; additionally, in maritime law the system is based on the owner being liable and minimal change being required is needed to ease the introduction of unmanned ships. Therefore, liability will not be imposed on the ships themselves.

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Published date: 25 January 2017

Identifiers

Local EPrints ID: 483398
URI: http://eprints.soton.ac.uk/id/eprint/483398
PURE UUID: f208ab6c-38cf-48e2-8b72-0bba869baef3
ORCID for H. Stones: ORCID iD orcid.org/0000-0002-9326-742X

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Date deposited: 30 Oct 2023 17:34
Last modified: 30 Oct 2023 17:34

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Author: H. Stones ORCID iD

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