Inmarsat seminar Thriving in the Digital Age: A Blueprint for Success
highlighted the rapid transformation of an increasingly connected,
digitalised, and automated offshore industry while emphasising the
importance of a motivated and well-trained workforce.
Against a backdrop of persistent crewing issues, an ever-evolving
regulatory framework, and fast-developing technology, the offshore
industry is undergoing rapid transformation.
With connectivity as an enabler, offshore supply vessel (OSV) operators
are transferring unprecedented volumes of data from ship to shore,
allowing shore-based personnel to monitor onboard processes and
machinery, provide support, and even execute certain tasks remotely.
Further easing the burden on OSV crews is process automation, with
artificial intelligence and machine learning-based solutions performing
tasks almost instantaneously that would have previously taken hours for a
human to complete.
The objective is clear: seeking to reap the rewards of optimised
efficiency, enhanced safety, and regulatory compliance, the offshore
sector has its sights set on the increasing interconnection,
digitalisation, and automation of its operations.
This was the consensus from a panel of leading OSV owners at the
Inmarsat seminar Thriving in the Digital Age: A Blueprint for Success,
which was organised to coincide with the International Workboat Show
2024 in New Orleans.
According to Ron Welles, C-Comm Manager at Marine Technologies, an
Edison Chouest Offshore (ECO) company, ECO can now roll out fleetwide
updates “on the fly” through cloud operations. “Things are happening in a
day that used to take months,” he said. “That’s where we see the
advantage of digitalisation.”
In another move targeting enhanced operational efficiency, ECO has been
working towards “reducing the number of people needed on board the
vessel” by employing shore-based staff to provide remote assistance,
Welles added.
“Instead of needing 10 chief engineers, having one who can access the
data on 10 vessels and assist the crew on board – that’s the general
direction we’ve been trying to push in to increase efficiency and make
the boats that have our system on board work better,” he said.
The offshore industry’s diminishing reliance on onboard personnel also
promises improved safety. This is an opportunity SEACOR Marine is
looking to grasp, with the company engaged in internal discussions
regarding a project to implement remote jacking operations.
“Our lift boats are high-value assets, and operating out in the Gulf of
Mexico poses a major risk,” commented Kyle Pemberton, SEACOR’s Vice
President of Engineering. “We’re now using digitalisation to operate
safely. To eliminate human risk, we’re exploring options to reduce the
number of people on jack-up vessels and using connectivity to perform
some jacking tasks remotely.”
While the industry’s accelerating digitalisation gives cause for
excitement, the speakers were keen to highlight the ongoing role of the
human element in OSV operations – and the urgent need for education to
ensure crew members are equipped to thrive in the digital age.
Bo Jardine, Advisory Partner at 1852 Solutions Ltd, explained that “AI
is there to make your life a little bit better and to help you make
better decisions” – not, he added to “take over the world”.
Yet Jardine also acknowledged the extent to which the technology – and
digitalisation as a whole – is transforming the offshore landscape,
resulting in new training and educational requirements. “It used to be a
mechanical engineer’s world on a vessel; now it’s an electrical
engineer’s world,” he said. “These things are evolving, and the
skillsets people are taught need to change too.”
Dain Detillier, Executive VP – LNG Operations at Harvey Gulf
International Marine, LLC, echoed Bo Jardine in calling for renewed
focus on crew education as AI becomes more prevalent.
“AI is out there, and there are all kinds of ways you can use it to
better your company,” he noted. “We’re obviously looking at those
things, but if you don’t educate employees about how the AI system works
and what it’s used for, it won’t help.” Harvey Gulf is therefore
investing significant time and resources into AI-focused education for
its staff, Detillier added.
The speakers were also united in reiterating the importance of crew
connectivity, with Detillier describing high-speed onboard internet as a
“must” and Welles noting that hiring personnel today means providing
them with the ability to “talk to their families wherever we send them”.
With the panel in agreement that humans would remain firmly ‘in the
loop’ for the foreseeable future, Kyle Pemberton reasoned that autonomy,
in the first instance, would apply to onboard equipment rather than
vessels as a whole.
“If we can get machinery to make better decisions on its own and
interact with other machinery, then we can start having the discussion
about removing people from the vessel – but the first step is to have
autonomy down to the equipment level,” he concluded.
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Source: Inmarsat
https://www.xindemarinenews.com/en/worldreview/2025/0108/57925.html