Analysis of the impact of deploying thermal protective immersion suits on evacuation time for passenger ships operating in polar waters
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https://hdl.handle.net/10037/30565Date
2023-06-22Type
Journal articleTidsskriftartikkel
Peer reviewed
Author
Azizpour, Hooshyar; Galea, Edwin R.; Deere, Steven; Erland, Sveinung; Batalden, Bjørn-Morten; Oltedal, Helle AsgjerdAbstract
For passenger vessels operating in polar waters, the Polar Code requires that in case of possibility of immersion in
polar waters, thermal protective immersion suits (TPIS) should be available for all passengers. Thus, international standards require that TPIS can be donned within 2 min and that walking speeds are reduced by no more
than 25%. Clearlythese requirements are arbitrary and do not reflect their potential impact on evacuation
performance. Other IMO requirements specify the maximum time permitted for assembly and abandonment
times for passenger ships, which can be assessed using agent-based evacuation modelling (ABEM). However,
these requirements currently ignore the impact of TPIS and employ a safety factor of 25% to represent all factors
ignored when modelling evacuation. Here we explore the impact of TPIS on both the assembly and abandonment
times of a hypothetical vessel using ABEM. The results demonstrate that requiring the donning of a TPIS can
increase assembly times by as much as 65% and negatively impacts the abandonment process. It is thus essential
that additional requirements associated with evacuation of vessels in polar waters are reflected within the IMO
passenger ship evacuation certification guidelines. The paper suggests several ways in which this can be
achieved.
Publisher
ElsevierCitation
Azizpour, Galea, Deere, Erland, Batalden, Oltedal. Analysis of the impact of deploying thermal protective immersion suits on evacuation time for passenger ships operating in polar waters. Ocean Engineering. 2023;283Metadata
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