Identification of the Most Important Events to the Occurrence of a Disaster Using Maritime Examples
Abstract
:1. Introduction
2. Materials and Methods
2.1. Object of Analysis
2.2. Method of Analysis
2.3. Modelling and Analysis of the Course of Disasters
2.4. Determination of the Importance of Basic Events in the Phases of the Course of Disasters
3. An Example Analysis of a Selected Disaster
4. Results and Discussion
5. Conclusions
Author Contributions
Funding
Institutional Review Board Statement
Informed Consent Statement
Data Availability Statement
Conflicts of Interest
Appendix A
Event Class | Class Characteristics | Abbreviation |
---|---|---|
Operational error | Inefficient or inappropriate use or preparation of equipment; inducing the effect of free liquid surfaces; improper decisions regarding the use of equipment; carelessness when using equipment; improper ballasting of the unit. | BE |
Structural error | Watertight bulkheads too low; multifunctional piping; leaky deck design; location of equipment out of sight of the operator; dependence of facility power supply on extracted or transported product; inadequate bow gate design for loading process; bow gate design not designed for wave action; poorly located vent line; lack of shut-off valves on vent lines; placement of portholes low above the waterline; too few ballast tanks; improper location of ballast tanks; the adverse impact of poorly located equipment on adjacent spaces. | BK |
Navigation error | Too late or improper navigational manoeuvres; arbitrarily changing course contrary to accepted rules of navigation; entering shallow or shoal waters; misjudging the distance from an obstacle; erroneous course correction. | BN |
Procedural error | Failure to apply or violation of procedures; procedures that do not meet quality standards; inadequate fire protection of equipment; inadequate training of crews; poor signage; poor location or poor quality of life-saving equipment; contractual disputes; lack of survey certificates/safety certificates or forged certificates; lack of licences; lack of qualified crews on board; inadequate crew size; lack of inspection activities or supervision; dangerous work being performed by adjacent facilities; lack of (consistency of) documents; lack of proper communication between crew/employees; improper lashing of cargo or failure to lash cargo at all; carelessness in ship management; the refusal of shelter or assistance by the port; illegal transport of passengers or unauthorised cargo. | BP |
Workmanship/production error | Failure to follow or ignore design guidelines. | BW |
Man overboard | Passengers and crew fall into the water; passengers are forced to jump into the water due to the situation. | CB |
Negative physical factors | Excessive rise in the level of liquid, pressure or gas; lack of counter-pressure at the desired time; strong impact caused by wind or force of the water; intense rocking of the ship due to water movement and wind force; water pressure; dead wave action; (transmitted) vibration; sudden deterioration of the weather; evaporation of liquid; smoke; fumes of flammable gas; sudden rise in temperature; melting of equipment due to high temperature; escape of gas; gas intrusion. | CF |
Psychological factor | Exerting pressures of various types (psychological, time, financial, etc.); risk homeostasis; panic; avoidance of confronting facts; delay relative to the accepted schedule; psychological inertia; failure of the lower-level crew to question erroneous decisions made by the higher-level crew; prevailing organisational chaos. | CP |
Object drift | Pushing of the ship by strong winds against the manoeuvres undertaken. | DS |
Explosion | Physicochemical agent; flammable charge; secondary explosions; explosion caused by misoperation of equipment; explosion caused by (released) gas. | EX |
Contact with the seabed | Sailing into the reef. | KD |
Collision/contact with another object | Brushing against another object; hitting the side of another object; hitting a rock; impact with an underwater navigation obstacle. | KO |
Unsuccessful repair/renovation | Failure to repair hydraulic system; failure to repair scrubber; inadequate or incorrect repair of equipment. | NO |
Ineffective modification of the structure | Modification of the ballast system; relocation of equipment to another location; increase in the weight of the vessel; secondary increase in the vessel’s cargo capacity; secondary adaptation of the facility to perform functions other than those originally designed; improper or adverse relocation of equipment or compartments; replacement of portions of the hull; adverse effects of modifications to escape routes. | NK |
Excessive speed | Maintaining or developing a speed unsuitable for the prevailing conditions. | NM |
Ineffective navigation manoeuvre | Properly undertaken manoeuvre that does not produce results. | NN |
Unexpected navigational obstacle | Another vessel or object in the way of a manoeuvre or course; unexpected heavy ship traffic; crowding in the port channel. | NP |
Ineffective rescue/emergency procedure | Evacuation alarm activated too late; rescue action or emergency procedure taken too late, not taken at all, or performed incompetently; improper use of preventive measures or use of improper measures; firefighting action is unsuccessful; continuing rescue action despite its unreasonableness; inability to carry out rescue action or apply rescue measures; ineffective transfer of liquid cargo; lack of human influence on automatic emergency procedure. | NR |
Inefficient equipment | The parameters of either the device or the entire facility are unsuitable for (current) needs; the device does not work, malfunctions, or performs multiple functions and is damaged. | NU |
Inappropriate equipment | Lack of sufficient number of lifeboats, rafts, or life-saving equipment; inadequate or insufficient life-saving equipment; lack of an alarm system; lack of radio communication and locating equipment; hull design unsuitable for the cargo carried. | NW |
Weakening of the mechanical structure | Damage to watertight bulkheads, weakening of the structure due to fire, explosion, or corrosion; lack of fire resistance due to modification; deformation or rupture of bulkheads due to (increasing) pressure | OK |
Reduced psychomotor efficiency of the operator | Effects of alcohol or psychoactive substances; fatigue; illness; falling asleep due to fatigue. | OP |
Object overloading with cargo/passengers | The number of passengers or the quantity/volume/weight of cargo exceeds the permissible limit. | PJ |
Hull breaking | Breaking across or along the ship. | PK |
Movement of cargo | Loosening of cargo fastenings and movement/spillage of cargo; cargo falling overboard; movement of cargo due to external forces; shifting and tipping of cargo due to impact of the unit with another object. | PL |
Fire | Friction causing sparks; sparks from the air-conditioning unit operating continuously at full capacity; ignition of compartment or deck due to physical and chemical agents; spontaneous combustion; spread of fire (to compartments or entire unit); oil fire (on water); ignition due to contact with hot engine room components; ignition caused by an explosion; ignition of gas. | PO |
Object heel/list | Overturning caused by improper mustering of passengers; continuation of mustering during the effects of swirling liquid surfaces; flooding of the craft with water, the pressure of waves or gas on the craft; displacement of cargo; change of stability characteristics; sudden change of course; contact with another object. | PS |
Rupture of/damage to hull plating | Destruction of the forepeak; ripping of the ship’s hull plating; cutting or puncturing of the tank; cutting or tearing of the hull; destruction of fire bulkheads; destruction of windows or doors; unsealing of windows and doors; cracking of the deck or the hull. | RP |
Damage to the on-board power plant | Loss of power supply due to flooding or fire in the generator room. | UE |
Damage to the main propulsion | Inadequacy caused by damage, poor operation, material errors, fatigue wear, or as a result of being hit by another object; shutdown of the engine by the security system. | UG |
People trapped below deck/inside the hull | Trapping of passengers or crew on the lower decks of a ship, below deck, or in a fireproof platform module. | UL |
Loss of manoeuvrability | Ship is not responsible for its movements; ship is difficult to steer as a result of previous events of various types. | UM |
Damage to auxiliary equipment | Loss of anchor; damage to (hydraulic system of) steering gear; rope breakage; mooring winch breakage; cable, pipeline breakage; damaged explosion-proof head; damage to firefighting equipment; non-functioning of radio equipment due to lack of power; compressor interruption due to prior errors of operators of other equipment; damaged or broken gate; unsealed ramp; non-functioning life-saving equipment; corroded ballast tanks; bulkhead damage; damage to (pipe, drainage) mains; tank deformation; door damage (seal, closure device); damage to hydrostatic lifeboat release system; unfit drainage pumps; unobstructed discharge scuppers. | UP |
Loss of life | Death of passengers and/or crew; injuries. | UZ |
Extreme hydro-meteorological conditions | Low water/surface temperature; track icing; fog; poor visibility; darkness; storm; high waves; strong wind; heavy rain; typhoon, eye of typhoon; sudden collapse of the weather. | WH |
Material defect | Brittle rivets, mixing cement with gaseous nitrogen to accelerate cement setting. | WM |
Incomplete knowledge/no knowledge | Lack of or incomplete knowledge of the crew about the modification made to the vessel or equipment; lack of or incomplete knowledge of the captain about the location of passengers, the condition of the equipment, or the failure of the crew to perform their duties; lack of or incomplete knowledge of the hydro-meteorological forecasts for the route taken; lack of knowledge of the crew about being on a collision course; lack of or incomplete knowledge of the crew about the operation of the equipment. | WN |
Leakage of dangerous substances | Overturning of containers (containers and drums); release of substances due to an explosion or hull breakage/splitting of the hull by another object; leakage through piping systems; leakage from an unfit engine; leakage due to inadequate preventive measures; leakage from the wreckage. | WS |
Capsizing | Ship/platform turns upside down. | US |
Change in stability characteristics | Increased or insufficient draft limit of the vessel; change in metacentric height of the vessel; influence on stability characteristics through the movement of the crew, passengers, cargo, structural modification or hydro-meteorological conditions; overballasting or improper ballasting of the object. | ZC |
Compartment flooding | Compartment flooding (engine room, propeller room and generator room); ship/platform/platform column flooding; deck flooding (passenger, car, and rail); hull flooding. | ZP |
Object sinking | Ship or part of it (bow or stern) sinks; production platform collapses. | ZS |
Ship trim/change in trim | Increase in draft at the bow due to flooding of the object with water; increase in trim (for cargo purposes, as a result of overballasting); trim of the ship due to inoperability of the ballast system. | ZT |
Ignoring the threat | Ignoring of warning messages by the crew; carelessness of the crew; willful disobedience of instructions from the supervisor’s or shipowner’s procedures (ISM); ignoring defects in the vessel or equipment by its controllers, manager, shipowner, destination port administration, refuge or crew; concealing the poor condition of equipment or failure to control the vessel. | ZZ |
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Year | Unit Name | The Impact of the Disaster |
---|---|---|
1912 | RMS Titanic | Ship capsizes and sinks, 1517 people die [34,35,36,37,38]. |
1914 | RMS Empress of Ireland and SS Storsted | Shipwreck, death of 1012 people [39,40]. |
1915 | SV Eastland | Ship capsizes, 844 people die [41]. |
1917 | SV Mont Blanc and SS Imo | Loss of ships, deaths of about 2000 people, about 9000 injured, destruction of a city district [42,43]. |
1947 | SV Ramdas | Ship capsizes and sinks, 669 people die [44,45]. |
1954 | SF Tōya Maru | Ship capsizes and sinks, death of about 1170 people [46]. |
1967 | SV Torrey Canyon | Hull breach, oil spills into the sea, ship bombed [47]. |
1978 | MT Amoco Cadiz | Rupture of the hull plating, breakage of the hull, oil spills into the sea, destruction of the ship with deep-sea charges [48,49]. |
1979 | Ixtoc I production platform | Oil spills into the sea, platform collapses [50]. |
1979 | ST Atlantic Empress and ST Aegean Captain | Oil spills into the sea, death of 27 people, sinking of the Atlantic Empress [51]. |
1981 | MV Tampomas II | Ship capsizes and sinks, 666 people die [52]. |
1986 | MV Doña Paz and MT Vector | Sinking of both ships, death of about 4300 people [53]. |
1987 | MF Herald of Free Enterprise | Ship capsizes, 193 people die [54,55]. |
1988 | Piper Alpha production platform | Platform collapses, 167 people die [56]. |
1989 | MT Exxon Valdez | Rupture of plating, oil spills into the sea [57,58]. |
1991 | MV Salem Express | Shipwreck, deaths of around 470 people [59]. |
1993 | MF Jan Hevelius | Ship capsizes and sinks, 55 people die [60]. |
1993 | MF Neptune | Ship capsizes, death of about 1700 people [61]. |
1994 | MF Estonia | Ship sinking, death of around 852 people [62]. |
1999 | MV Erika | Hull breakage, ship sinks, leakage of hazardous substances into the sea [63,64]. |
2001 | Petrobras 36 production platform | Sinking of a platform, death of 11 people, leakage of hazardous substances into the sea [65]. |
2002 | MT Prestige | Hull breach, ship sinks, oil spills into the sea [66,67]. |
2002 | MV Le Joola | Ship capsizes, deaths of about 1220 people [68]. |
2002 | MV Tricolor and MV Kariba, MV Nikola, MV Vicky | Ship capsizes, loss of cargo, leakage of hazardous substances into the sea, sinking of the Tricolor [69,70,71]. |
2006 | MV Al-Salam Boccaccio 98 | Ship capsizes and sinks, 1161 people die [72,73]. |
2008 | MV Princess of the Stars | Ship capsizes and sinks, death of about 814 people [74]. |
2010 | Deepwater Horizon production platform | Platform capsizes and sinks, 11 people die, oil spills into the sea [75,76]. |
2011 | MV Rena | Hull breakage, fuel leakage into the sea, loss of cargo [77,78]. |
2014 | MF Sewol | Ship capsizes, 304 people die [79,80]. |
2019 | MV Grande America | Ship capsizes and sinks, loss of cargo, fuel spills into the sea [81]. |
Event Class | Number of Occurrences of Basic Event in the Analysed Population | Probability of Basic Event |
---|---|---|
BE—Operational error | 19 | 0.0313 |
BK—Structural error | 13 | 0.0214 |
BN—Navigation error | 15 | 0.0247 |
BP—Procedural error | 42 | 0.0691 |
BW—Workmanship/production error | 1 | 0.0016 |
CB—Man overboard | 2 | 0.0033 |
CF—Negative physical factors | 27 | 0.0444 |
CP—Psychological factor | 22 | 0.0362 |
DS—Object drift | 4 | 0.0066 |
EX—Explosion | 12 | 0.0197 |
KD—Contact with the seabed | 3 | 0.0049 |
KO—Collision/contact with another object | 11 | 0.0181 |
NO—Unsuccessful repair/renovation | 4 | 0.0066 |
NK—Ineffective modification of the structure | 10 | 0.0164 |
NM—Excessive speed | 6 | 0.0099 |
NN—Ineffective navigation manoeuvre | 18 | 0.0296 |
NP—Unexpected navigational obstacle | 5 | 0.0082 |
NR—Ineffective rescue/emergency procedure | 47 | 0.0773 |
NU—Inefficient equipment | 18 | 0.0296 |
NW—Inappropriate equipment | 7 | 0.0115 |
OK—Weakening of the mechanical structure | 7 | 0.0115 |
OP—Reduced psychomotor performance of the operator | 7 | 0.0115 |
PJ—Object overloading with cargo/passengers | 7 | 0.0115 |
PK—Hull breaking | 5 | 0.0082 |
PL—Movement of cargo/passengers | 5 | 0.0082 |
PO—Fire | 22 | 0.0362 |
PS—Object heel | 31 | 0.0510 |
RP—Rupture of/damage to hull plating | 14 | 0.0230 |
UE—Damage to the on-board power plant | 4 | 0.0066 |
UG—Damage to the main propulsion | 5 | 0.0082 |
UL—People trapped below deck/inside the hull | 3 | 0.0049 |
UM—Loss of manoeuvrability | 4 | 0.0066 |
UP—Damage to auxiliary equipment | 25 | 0.0411 |
US—Capsizing | 11 | 0.0181 |
UZ—Loss of life | 20 | 0.0329 |
WH—Extreme hydro-meteorological conditions | 32 | 0.0526 |
WM—Material defect | 2 | 0.0033 |
WN—Incomplete knowledge/no knowledge | 9 | 0.0148 |
WS—Leakage of dangerous substances | 16 | 0.0263 |
ZC—Change in stability characteristics | 22 | 0.0362 |
ZP—Compartment flooding | 29 | 0.0477 |
ZS—Object sinking | 19 | 0.0313 |
ZT—Ship trim/change of trim | 5 | 0.0082 |
ZZ—Ignoring the threat | 16 | 0.0263 |
SUM: | 608 | 1.0000 |
Measure of Importance | Interpretation of the Measure in Relation to Analysis of the Structure of the Object (System) | Interpretation of the Measure in Relation to Process Flow Analysis |
---|---|---|
IB | Measure indicates the increase in reliability for which the component contributes most to the reliability of the system. | Measure indicates the escalation of the probability of occurrence that the basic event contributes most to the occurrence of a given disaster phase. |
IBS | Interpretation analogous to IB, except all components are assumed to have the same reliability of 0.5. | Interpretation analogous to IB, except all basic events are assumed to occur with the same probability of 0.5. |
IP | Interpretation analogous to IB, except the reliability of the element is also taken into account. | Interpretation analogous to IB, except the probability of a basic event is also taken into account. |
IV-F | Measure indicates which element is most likely to contribute to system damage (the minimum cross-section containing the element). | Measure indicates which basic event with the highest probability contributes to the occurrence of a given phase of the disaster (the minimum path containing the basic event). |
IC | Measure indicates the probability that failure of a component results in system failure. | Measure indicates the probability that the occurrence of a given basic event results in the occurrence of a given disaster phase. |
Phase | Description | Event Class | Denotation of Basic Event |
---|---|---|---|
Latent | The bow port gate has a design flaw (the design load on the bow port canopy and the assumed load distribution at the joints do not reflect the actual impact of sea waves). | BK | BK-1 |
Canopy interlocks are not made as designed. | BW | BW-2 | |
On the day of the disaster, the wind was 18 m/s and the waves reached about 4 m high. | WH | WH-3 | |
Initiating | Seawater pressure during the storm causes the deformation of the hinges and locks of the bow port canopy. | CF | CF-4 |
The hinges and locking mechanism of the bow gate canopy are unable to hold the gate in the closed position. | NU | NU-5 | |
External forces are pushing on the canopy. | CF | CF-6 | |
The pressure of the canopy under the external forces causes the ramp to partially unseal, which relates to its design flaw. | UP | UP-7 | |
Water flows onto the car deck through the unsealed ramp. | ZP | ZP-8 | |
Ship maintains full speed. | NP | NP-9 | |
Signalling indicators show the closed status for the bow port canopy and the ramp located on the bridge does not indicate unsealing. | NU | NU-10 | |
The canopy is not visible from the navigation bridge. | WN | WN-11 | |
The unsealed port is visible on the CCTV system monitors on the engine room’s manoeuvring and control panel, but the engine room crew does not report the problem to the bridge. | BP | BP-12 | |
Escalating | Under the water pressure, the gate breaks and falls into the sea. | UP | UP-13 |
Water flows in through the ramp. | ZP | ZP-14 | |
Under the influence of an enormous amount of water, the car deck is flooded. | ZP | ZP-15 | |
The ship has a heel of about 15 degrees to starboard, which continues to increase. | PS | PS-16 | |
Watch officers reduce the ship’s speed and make a turn to the port side. | NN | NN-17 | |
Officers instruct the mechanics to compensate for the heel by using the ballast system. | NR | NR-18 | |
Ballast system does not work due to air intake by the pumps. | NU | NU-19 | |
Watch officers close the watertight bulkheads. | NR | NR-20 | |
The ship now has an approximate 30-degree heel to the starboard. | PS | PS-21 | |
Both main engines, one after the other, stop due to a drop in the lubricating oil pressure, which is associated with the excessive tilt. | UG | UG-22 | |
The crew on the bridge broadcasts an SOS signal and declares a lifeboat alert, but an organised rescue operation is not underway. | BP | BP-24 | |
In many cases, rescue equipment does not work. | UP | UP-25 | |
Ship’s lifeboats cannot be lowered due to the heeling. | NR | NR-23 | |
Many passengers are trapped below deck. | UL | UL-26 | |
Critical | Ship drifts starboard toward incoming sea waves. | DS | DS-27 |
Ship now has a heel of more than 40 degrees. | PS | PS-28 | |
The windows and doors of the stern superstructure on the starboard side are destroyed. | RP | RP-29 | |
Unsealed windows and doors cause the rooms to sink. | ZP | ZP-30 | |
Ship’s power plant is flooded and stops operating. | EU | EU-31 | |
Energy release | The ship’s tilt continues to increase. | PS | PS-32 |
Due to the heeling, the Estonia begins to sink (starting with the stern); within a few minutes, the ship has a heel of about 80 degrees, after which it sinks. | ZS | ZS-33 | |
852 people die. | UZ | UZ-34 |
Phase | IB | IBs | IVF | ICR | IIP |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
Latent | WH-3; BK-1; BW-2 | WH-3, BK-1, BW-2 | WH-3; BK-1; BW-2 | WH-3; BK-1; BW-2 | WH-3; BK-1; BW-2 |
Initiating | BP-12; NU-10; NP-9; WN-11; NU-5; CF-4; UP-7; CF-6; ZP-8 | BP-12, NU-10, NP-9, WN-11; NU-5, CF-4; UP-7, CF-6, ZP-8 | BP-12; NU-10; NP-9; WN-11; NU-5, CF-4; UP-7, CF-6, ZP-8 | BP-12; NU-10; NP-9; WN-11; NU-5, CF-4; UP-7, CF-6, ZP-8 | BP-12; NU-10; NP-9; WN-11; NU-5, CF-4; UP-7, CF-6, ZP-8 |
Escalating | NR-18, NR-20; BP-24; UP-25; NN-17; NU-19; UL-26; UG-22; PS-21; NR-23; UP-13, PS-16, ZP-14, ZP-15 | NR-18, NR-20, BP-24, UP-25, NN-17, NU-19, UL-26; UG-22, PS-21, NR-23; UP-13, PS-16, ZP-14, ZP-15 | NR-18, NR-20; BP-24; UP-25; NN-17; NU-19; UL-26; UG-22, PS-21, NR-23; UP-13, PS-16, ZP-14, ZP-15 | NR-18, NR-20; BP-24; UP-25; NN-17; NU-19; UL-26; UG-22, PS-21, NR-23; UP-13, PS-16, ZP-14, ZP-15 | NR-18, NR-20; BP-24; UP-25; NN-17; NU-19; UL-26; UG-22, PS-21, NR-23; UP-13, PS-16, ZP-14, ZP-15 |
Critical | PS-28; RP-29; DS-27; EU-31; ZP-30 | PS-28, RP-29, DS-27; EU-31, ZP-30 | PS-28; RP-29; DS-27; EU-31, ZP-30 | PS-28; RP-29; DS-27; EU-31, ZP-30 | PS-28; RP-29; DS-27; EU-31, ZP-30 |
Energy release | ZS-33; UZ-34; PS-32 | ZS-33, UZ-34, PS-32 | ZS-33, UZ-34, PS-32 | ZS-33, UZ-34, PS-32 | ZS-33, UZ-34, PS-32 |
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Chybowska, D.; Chybowski, L.; Myśków, J.; Manerowski, J. Identification of the Most Important Events to the Occurrence of a Disaster Using Maritime Examples. Sustainability 2023, 15, 10613. https://doi.org/10.3390/su151310613
Chybowska D, Chybowski L, Myśków J, Manerowski J. Identification of the Most Important Events to the Occurrence of a Disaster Using Maritime Examples. Sustainability. 2023; 15(13):10613. https://doi.org/10.3390/su151310613
Chicago/Turabian StyleChybowska, Dorota, Leszek Chybowski, Jarosław Myśków, and Jerzy Manerowski. 2023. "Identification of the Most Important Events to the Occurrence of a Disaster Using Maritime Examples" Sustainability 15, no. 13: 10613. https://doi.org/10.3390/su151310613
APA StyleChybowska, D., Chybowski, L., Myśków, J., & Manerowski, J. (2023). Identification of the Most Important Events to the Occurrence of a Disaster Using Maritime Examples. Sustainability, 15(13), 10613. https://doi.org/10.3390/su151310613