Master TMSA 1 - 1
Master TMSA 1 - 1
Master TMSA 1 - 1
Rudolf Kreutzer
Introduction
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Introduction
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Activity
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ISM
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Differences Inspection -- Audit
Inspections Audit
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Internal
R
8 ev 13.0Auditing ISM ISPS MLC
Why Audit?
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Audit Definition:
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Definition of an Audit
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Types of Audits
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Introduction
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Chemical Distribution Institute (CDI)
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Oil Companies International Marine Forum
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Vetting
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Vetting
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The Vetting process
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Vetting
The vetting criteria varies amongst the oil majors, but typically, in
order to be considered acceptable to an oil major, a ship must
satisfy the following criteria:
• there must be an up-to-date (no more than six months old)
SIRE report evidencing minimal defects with the ship and it’s
on-board systems and maintenance;
• the ship must have a good safety record;
• the ‘crew matrix’ and shore-based management systems must
be adequate; and
• any other ships within the same managed fleet should have a
good safety record.
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Vetting – Crew Matrix – Example Repsol
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Introduction
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TMSA
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TMSA History
/OCIMF/
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TMSA Element
No. Element
1 Leadership and the Safety Management System
2 Recruitment and Management of Shore-Based Personnel
3 Recruitment, Management and Wellbeing of Vessel Personnel
4 Vessel Reliability and Maintenance including critical Equipment
5 Navigational safety
6 Cargo, Ballast, Tank Cleaning, Bunkering, Mooring and Anchoring Operations
7 Management of change
8 Incident Reporting, Investigation and Analysis
9 Safety management
10 Environmental and Energy management
11 Emergency Preparedness and contingency Planning
12 Measurement, Analysis and Improvement
13 Maritime Security
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TMSA Element 3
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TMSA
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TMSA
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TMSA
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TMSA
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TMSA
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TMSA Element 11/ 11a - Example
/www.premuda.com/
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TMSA Element 11/ 11a - Example
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TMSA Element 11/ 11a - Example
/www.damen.com/
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TMSA Element 11 - Example
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TMSA Element 11 - Example
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TMSA Element 11a - Example
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TMSA
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Offshore Vessel Management and Self Assessment (OVMSA)
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ISM and TMSA
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ISM and TMSA
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If you cannot measure it, you cannot
. control it.
If you cannot control it, you cannot manage it.
If you cannot manage it, you cannot improve it
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Key Performance Indicators
• Key Performance Indicators are not new as a tool used within the
management of companies.
• This applies especially for financial KPIs which have been used for
ages, even if they were not named KPIs, Return on Investment is
such an example.
• In addition to the financial aspects of performance measurement
in recent decades, the industry has begun to measure also quality
aspects through KPIs which promise a comparative advantage for
the respective company.
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Key Performance Indicators
KPIs are:
• a numerical, objective measurement of performance
• a key to the strategic business objective
• actionable and influenced by the relevant stakeholder/ manager
• accountable to stakeholder/ manager
• output orientated, not focused on the input or activity
• possible to calculate with limited efforts and within limited time
/MARINTEK/
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Key Performance Indicators
/MARINTEK/
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KPI Development Process
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Key Performance Indicators and OVMSA
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Shipping KPIs
https://www.shipping-kpi.org/book/pages/introduction
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Shipping KPIs
The BIMCO Shipping KPI System is a global shipping industry tool for defining,
measuring and reporting information on operational performance. The Shipping
KPI System is used by shipping companies to:
• compare their ships performance against the industry standard and
potentially identify where efficiency improvements could be made
• communicate their ship operational performance, both internally and
externally
• gain specific and accurate comparison of both own and other users’ ships or
groups of ships
• utilise filtering of benchmarking results in terms of: age of ships, Class, DWT,
flag, ship status, ship type, etc.
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Shipping KPIs
• The Shipping KPI offers shipping organisations the ability to produce a visual representation of
how a ship or group of ships performs during a specific time period. It uses a unique standard of
Key Performance Indicators (KPIs) and the Ship Attributes that allows users to filter information
according to different type and sector of ships. This will allow the user to produce ship reports
and benchmark ships across different types and sectors.
• KPI Groups:
• Environmental
• Health and Safety
• HR Management
• Navigational Safety
• Operational
• Security
• Technical
• Port State Control
• Cost
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Shipping KPIs
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Shipping KPIs
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Shipping KPIs
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Shipping KPIs
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Shipping KPIs
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Shipping KPIs
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Shipping KPIs
• The absolute KPI Ranking is derived from a descending list sorted by the
highest to lowest performance rank returning the actual position of the ship
within its ranking criteria. For example rank 4 out of 500.
• The relative KPI Value is mathematical combination of relevant Performance
Indicator Values. The return value is a percentile position within the ranking
criteria on a scale between 0% and 100%. The KPI Value allows users to target
their performance to top 5%, 10% or similar value. For example rank 4 out of
500 translates to 99,21%
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Shipping KPIs
KPI accepted as part of the Shipping KPI performance hierarchy must be:
• Observable and quantifiable
A KPI is a mathematical formula on basis of unambiguous, observable performance measurements.
• Valid indicator of performance
A KPI expresses performance within an area which the Ship Manager needs to perform well. Also the
Ship Manager needs to have complete control of the factors affecting the performance measured.
• Robust against manipulation
A KPI must relate to a large extent to unambiguous descriptions of the needed measurements and
not leave room for “favourable interpretations”.
• Sensitive to change
A KPI will reflect actual changes in the Ship Manager’s performance well (by increase/decrease) over
time.
• Transparent and easy to understand
A KPI is interpreted by all users in the same manner.
• Compatible
A KPI is harmonized with the rest of the performance hierarchy. The KPI must be compatible with
other KPIs to prevent the decision-makers receiving contradictory control signals.
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Shipping Performance Index
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