Close Menu
  • Home
  • Maritime
  • Offshore
  • Port
  • Oil & Gas
  • Energy
  • Technology
  • Incidents
  • Environment
  • Events
    • Maritime
    • Offshore
    • Oil & Gas
    • Energy
  • Advertising
  • Contact
Facebook X (Twitter) Instagram LinkedIn
Trending
  • European refiners could drive green hydrogen momentum, with maritime sector playing important role
  • North Sea yields ‘significant’ black gold discovery
  • Falmouth Scientific, Inc. Receives ISO 9001:2015 Quality Certification
  • New leadership for Oceanbird – Splash247
  • Boats Group lawsuit alleges monopoly in US listings
  • Hollandse Kust West Beta cable tests completed
  • New Fred. Olsen 1848 floating solar lead brings experience from SolarDuck, Equinor
  • Strohm’s TCP jumpers make their way to Malaysian deepwater sector
Facebook X (Twitter) Instagram LinkedIn
Maritime247.comMaritime247.com
  • Home
  • Maritime
  • Offshore
  • Port
  • Oil & Gas
  • Energy
  • Tech
  • Incidents
  • Environment
  • Events
    • Maritime
    • Oil & Gas
    • Offshore
    • Energy
  • Advertising
Maritime247.comMaritime247.com
Home»Maritime»Geopolitical Conflicts Highlight A Ship’s Need For
Maritime

Geopolitical Conflicts Highlight A Ship’s Need For

June 20, 2025
Facebook Twitter LinkedIn WhatsApp Reddit Tumblr Email
Share
Facebook Twitter LinkedIn Email

The Urgent Need for AI-Based Situational Awareness in Maritime Navigation

Yarden Gross, CEO and Co-founder of maritime technology company Orca AI, reflects on the recent tanker collision in the Strait of Hormuz, arguing that as GPS interference becomes more common, ships urgently need AI-based situational awareness to support crews and maintain safe navigation when traditional tools are compromised.


The recent collision between the tankers Front Eagle and the Adalynn in the Strait of Hormuz is more than a tragic incident – it’s a stark warning to the maritime industry. Both vessels were operating in an area reportedly impacted by intense satellite jamming and AIS spoofing in the days leading up to the crash. The Adalynn is allegedly part of the so-called ‘dark fleet’ — a loosely connected group of tankers that operate without AIS transponders, often to obscure their movements and evade sanctions. Meanwhile, the VLCC Front Eagle was apparently shown in vessel tracking data to be onshore in Iran two days before the collision, in a strong indication of GPS interference.

This event illustrates just how fragile maritime situational awareness has become in high-risk regions. The digital infrastructure we’ve long relied on – GPS, AIS, and electronic charts – is increasingly vulnerable to manipulation, especially in geopolitically tense chokepoints like the Strait of Hormuz. Bridge crews are being asked to navigate in a kind of digital fog, where position data can be corrupted, nearby ships may be invisible by design, and critical seconds for decision-making are lost to uncertainty.

We cannot continue to expect human watchkeepers to bear that burden alone.

See also  MOL and ITOCHU Plan Ammonia Bunkering Demonstrations in Singapore

AI-Powered Situational Awareness Systems: Enhancing Navigation Resilience

AI-powered situational awareness systems, especially those based on computer vision, offer a critical second layer of perception. These tools can detect, classify, and track vessels (and other objects) in real-time, regardless of whether they are transmitting AIS or whether GPS is functioning accurately. They act as a digital co-pilot, alerting the crew to nearby threats and enabling faster, more confident decisions even when traditional tools fail.

Radar, of course, remains the primary and most trusted anti-collision tool, and its importance cannot be overstated. In fact, when AIS and GPS are degraded, Radar often becomes the only reliable means of detecting surrounding traffic. But even Radar has limitations: interpreting Radar returns can be challenging in heavy-trafficked waterways, small targets may be lost in noise, and there is no automatic identification. This is where advanced technologies like AI-powered situational awareness based on highly sensitive computer vision can play a vital supporting role.

According to tracking data reconstructions, the Front Eagle made a sharp starboard turn just before the collision. In that kind of moment – when an unreported or unidentified vessel suddenly emerges in close quarters – the value of a redundant, independent perception system becomes obvious. Computer vision sees what’s physically there, not what compromised data might suggest.

This isn’t about replacing Radar or human vigilance – it’s about strengthening both. In areas where spoofing and jamming are increasingly common, and where there is dark-fleet activity more specifically, AI and computer vision can serve as a vital safeguard to detect the undetectable, confirm the uncertain, and ensure crews remain situationally aware when traditional inputs are in doubt.

See also  Birdon Begins Construction on First Waterways Commerce Cutter

We’ve long accepted redundancy in mechanical systems as a maritime safety principle. We double up critical systems, train for worst-case scenarios, and insist on backup plans. It’s time to apply the same logic to navigational awareness. Because when the digital map becomes unreliable – when GPS falters and AIS goes dark – the ship still moves forward. And what’s needed then is intelligent vision that helps bridge navigators see, and take appropriate action, with clarity.

Conflicts geopolitical Highlight Ships
Share. Facebook Twitter LinkedIn Tumblr Telegram Email

Related Posts

Boats Group lawsuit alleges monopoly in US listings

August 21, 2025

MOL Cruises Names New Ship ‘MITSUI OCEAN SAKURA’ Ahead Of 2026 Launch

August 21, 2025

Panama Canal Adopts Measures To Protect Río Indio

August 21, 2025
Top Posts

Duties of Bosun (Boatswain) on a Ship

February 1, 2025

Sea-Doo Switch recall underway after serious safety concerns

March 2, 2025

China Fights Australia’s Plans to Reclaim Darwin Port Citing U.S. Influence

May 27, 2025

Fire-Stricken Wan Hai 503 Continues to Drift Off Indian Coast as Salvage Efforts Intensify

June 11, 2025
Don't Miss
Energy

Yang Ming books additional three methanol-fueled boxships in Japan

July 25, 2025

Taiwanese Shipping Company Yang Ming Orders Three Additional Methanol Dual-Fuel Containerships Taiwanese shipping company Yang…

Israel Attacks Three Yemeni Ports And Power Plant

July 7, 2025

HII Awarded as One of 2025’s Best Employers by Business Group on Health

April 23, 2025

ADNOC L&S JV bids welcome to inaugural eco-friendly VLEC

August 15, 2025

Subscribe to Updates

Your Weekly Dive into Maritime & Energy News.

About Us
About Us

Stay informed with the latest in maritime, offshore, oil & gas, and energy industries. Explore news, trends, and insights shaping the global energy landscape.

For advertising inquiries, contact us at
info@maritime247.com.

Facebook X (Twitter) YouTube LinkedIn
Our Picks

Demonstration of Emissions Filtering and Carbon Capture for At-Berth Ships

April 17, 2025

Floating Surf Platform Coming to Hamburg

March 7, 2025

Trump Administration Approves Two Major Oil & Gas Export Projects

February 18, 2025

Subscribe to Updates

Your Weekly Dive into Maritime & Energy News.

© 2025 maritime247.com - All rights reserved.
  • Contact
  • Privacy Policy
  • Terms & Conditions
  • Advertising

Type above and press Enter to search. Press Esc to cancel.