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Future Sustainable Maritime Sector: Fishing Carriers and their Adoption to the Environmental Regulations. Part I

Abstract

The study explored the legislative database for the maritime sector to be sustainable and have an intact blue economy. The problem for organizations with shipowners that have fishing boats older than 20 years is stated. Decision-making authorities face challenges nowadays. To be in the fleet for the next decade, shipowners for their ships should deploy energy efficiency projects for marine system retrofitting to improve energy efficiency and meet environmental regulations. The Ship Energy Efficiency Management Plan’s development principles are discussed due to the current need for its deployment from 2021, so shipowners can contribute to the fast adoption of new regulations by the International Maritime Organization. In this work it is being offered to incorporate energy management issues with guidelines for upcoming regulations as well as those that are currently enforced. To improve energy efficiency, reduce environmental impact and cut fuel consumption costs, marine system retrofitting has been proposed. In this paper the focus is being put on studying energy management strengths and weaknesses which can lead to a qualitative understanding of the performance of the organizational structure, this work also focuses on the management settings concerning energy efficiency. If the organization wants to win by integrating energy policy, high-quality communication or promotion of energy efficiency issues should be employed. Marine plastic debris challenges fishing carriers on the African Union route. A possible beneficial solution for shipowners is discussed in this study.

Keywords:

Maritime Sustainable Scenario Policy, Energy Management, Energy Efficiency, Fishing Carrier, Marine Plastic Debris

Details

Issue
Vol. 29 No. 3 (2022)
Section
Latest Articles
Published
25-11-2022
DOI:
https://doi.org/10.2478/pomr-2022-0027
Licencja:
Creative Commons License

This work is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial-NoDerivatives 4.0 International License.

Open Access License

This journal provides immediate open access to its content under the Creative Commons BY 4.0 license. Authors who publish with this journal retain all copyrights and agree to the terms of the CC BY 4.0 license.

 

Authors

  • Viktor Yalama

    Odesa National University of Technology, Refrigeration and Air-Conditioning Systems Department (RACS), V.S. Martynovsky Institute of Refrigeration, Cryotechnologies and Ecoenergetics, Ukraine
  • Olga Yakovleva

    Odesa National University of Technology, Refrigeration and Air-Conditioning Systems Department (RACS), V.S. Martynovsky Institute of Refrigeration, Cryotechnologies and Ecoenergetics, Ukraine
  • Volodymyr Trandafilov

    Odesa National University of Technology, Refrigeration and Air-Conditioning Systems Department (RACS), V.S. Martynovsky Institute of Refrigeration, Cryotechnologies and Ecoenergetics, Ukraine
  • Mykhailo Khmelniuk

    Odesa National University of Technology, Refrigeration and Air-Conditioning Systems Department (RACS), V.S. Martynovsky Institute of Refrigeration, Cryotechnologies and Ecoenergetics, Ukraine

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