TOPIC 3 Nav. Lesson 1 2
TOPIC 3 Nav. Lesson 1 2
CHARTS
Lesson 1: Requirements for charts in
navigation
3. A type approved ECDIS operating with ENC and with adequate and
up to date paper charts to serve as a back-up necessary to complete
the intended voyage.
•Electronic Navigational Chart Requirements and Standards
• Official ENCs must follow several international legal standards. The
1974 IMO SOLAS Convention lays down the basic regulatory framework
for using ENCs and ECDIS. Since then, numerous International Maritime
Organization (IMO) Resolutions have created a more thorough set of
performance standards. As the capabilities and importance of electronic
navigation grew over the years, the International Hydrographic
Organization (IHO) also developed further detailed standards on ENCs in
several publications.
• In 2002, the International Maritime Organization (IMO) made a major
amendment to Chapter V of the International Convention for the Safety of
Life At Sea (SOLAS). Under the revised Chapter V, the most relevant
regulations are Regulation 2-Legal definition of vector charts, Regulation
19-Describes carriage requirements for shipborne navigational systems
and equipment and Regulation 27-Requirements for crews to keep charts
and publications up to date.
Carriage Requirement
Passenger Vessels > 500 GT
New Build – By July 2012
Existing Build – By 2014 (Built before 1 July 2012)
Tankers > 3000 GT
New Build – By July 2012
Existing Build – By 2015
Cargo Vessels > 10000 GT
New Build – By July 2013
Existing Build – By 2018 (Built before 1 July 2013)
Cargo Vessels > 3000 GT
New Build – By July 2014
Cargo Vessels > 50000 GT
Existing Build – By 2016
Cargo Vessels > 20000 GT
Existing Build – By 2017
• Lesson 2: Paper
charts and Electronic
Navigational Charts
Paper Charts or
Nautical charts
A nautical chart is one of the most
fundamental tools available to the mariner.
It is a map that depicts the configuration of
the shoreline and seafloor. It provides
water depths, locations of dangers to
navigation, locations and characteristics of
aids to navigation, anchorages, and other
features.
Nautical charts provide hydrographical, nautical and
topographical information to the Mariner. The amount of
information provided on a nautical chart depends on its scale.
The larger the scale, the more information is provided. A large
scale chart at a scale of 1:30.000 provides very detailed
information about a specific area. Inversely, small scale nautical
charts, such as those at 1:2.000.000, provide little detailed
information and are most appropriate for general route planning.
Chart corrections are often made to the largest scale charts. This
is one of many reasons for using large scale charts wherever
appropriate.
Printing
New chart
Possible dangers
Routes
Maritime limits
Aids to navigation
Depths
Nature of the seabed
Elevations
Configuration and characteristics of the coast
Vector charts enable sailors to create customized
displays, depth alerts and more via a the ECDIS.
The user can gain a broader visualization by
collapsing elements, or access more detailed
information about an area by selecting it. These
quality of life features make navigation a much
simpler, less strenuous process. As a result,
electronic navigational charts are entirely
indispensable to the modern sailor.
ENC (Electronic Navigational Chart) Layers
Not all ships are fitted with ECDIS and hence one cannot be
sure of technical ability with regard to positioning as well as
navigation; the kind that ECDIS provides.
It is never prudent for the OOW to depend
solely on the information on the ECDIS. It
is only an aid to navigation and never
replaces the human quotient which brings
in the skill and expertise with experience
that an ECDIS can never provide.
Comparison Between Paper and Electronic Charts
The biggest single advantage of electronic charts over paper
systems to the professional navigator is the ease of correction.
Both raster and vector systems allow for automatic electronic
correction of the charts onboard, with no real work on the part of
the navigator. This means that the corrections are inserted
exactly as intended by the marine cartographer. The potential
labor reductions for a ship with a worldwide portfolio of 2000–
3000 charts are also significant. It is estimated that there are
10,000–15,000 manual corrections which need to be made by the
navigator in a typical year for a worldwide paper portfolio of this
size.
The electronic corrections also lend themselves to electronic
transmission so that corrections can be passed immediately
to the ship, even while at sea. This is a vast improvement on
the traditional paper-based system where corrections often
took months to reach a ship by post, although paper chart
small corrections can now be transmitted electronically and
printed out onboard. The electronic systems also allow the
electronic transmission of whole new charts. This could be
either because of unexpected passage changes at sea or the
issue of a new chart edition when it would usually be
impractical to get the chart to the ship at sea in a paper-
based system.
Another significant advantage is the ability to easily add
extra information, overlaid on top of the electronic chart.
This can include routes, notes, links to extra material
(pictures, videos and text documents), tidal currents and
lines of safety. Moreover this information can be saved
as both a permanent record and also brought back from
storage for reusing when a vessel undertakes a second
transit of the same area in the same direction. The
paper chart requires much laborious preparation and
rubbing out on every occasion it is used. It will wear out
in time and need replacement.
The improvement over the paper system means that the
ship’s position is continuously plotted rather than sampled at
intervals convenient to the navigator and the possibility of
human plotting error is eliminated. There is usually an option
to stabilize the chart display on the vessel’s position so the
chart always shows the area around the current position,
that is the chart moves past the ship. In these cases, the
ship does not have to be at the center of the display, but can
be offset to show a feature of land or to see further ahead
than astern. There is also a provision to put in the vessel’s
length and breadth so that a scaled ship shape can be
displayed when the chart scale in use is appropriate.
Currently, the main disadvantage of the
electronic chart is screen size, although large
displays of more than 40 inches are becoming
affordable. The minimum size of display for an
approved ECDIS is 21 inches, which provides
about a sixth of the coverage area of the
traditional paper chart. This is why zooming and
panning facilities are useful, together with the
ability to have different windows on the chart
area open and available for easy viewing.
The other main disadvantage is the reliance on
electronic equipment and the need for a power
supply. Hence, there is a requirement for
emergency power supplies and a backup chart
system that may be a duplicate system and/or a
minimal number of paper charts intended to get a
vessel to a pilot station.