Title: Maritime Affairs
1Maritime Affairs
2what drives Maritime Affairs
Sustainable growth Governance
Integrated Maritime Policy
Maritime Affairs
Research
GMES
Environment
Fisheries
Transport
Economy
Energy
Security
3the context vertical drivers
- Marine Environment
- Maritime Transport (goods and people)
- Fisheries
- Other economic activities related to the seas and
oceans (for competitiveness and growth) - Maritime Security
- Energy
- Most are, or will become, subject to rules and
regulations at many levels - (international, regional, EU, national or even
local) - To ensure protection, safety, application of
customs law, security, management and enforcement
for fisheries, maritime border security etc.
4the context horizontal drivers
- These are aimed at integration, coordination,
focus and support - Integrated Maritime Policy (MPTF)
- integration, coordination
- Research (e.g. protection of marine environment,
growth and competitiveness of maritime
industries) support - GMES (of DG ENTR) focus for governance
5the context marine environment
- Thematic Strategy on the Protection and
Conservation of the Marine Environment (the
Marine Strategy) aims to achieve good
environmental status of EU marine waters by 2020. - Is a Directive since December 2007
- Largest territorial expansion of EU environmental
law - Based on Marine Regions managed by MS (Med,
Baltic, Northeast Atlantic, Black Sea) - Requires detailed environmental assessments,
definition of good environmental status
(through indicators), targets, measures and
monitoring programmes for each region - Marine strategies (one per region) should ensure
collective pressure from human activity within
sustainable limits - Science and technology is needed to implement the
various stages - Beyond EU waters, control and enforcement
activities are foreseen - Constitutes the environmental pillar of the new
integrated maritime policy
6the context maritime transport
- 2001 Transport White Paper (EU Transport Policy
for 2010 time to decide) with Action Programme
of 60 measures - Objective adapt transport policy to the needs
of sustainable development from environmental and
socio-economic viewpoints - Mid-term review (2001-2006)
- Successes reinforcement of legal framework in
maritime safety, promotion of intermodal
transport (Marco Polo) - Priorities mobility, protection (of the
environment, of the citizen, of energy supply),
innovation, international dimension - Waterborne transport actions Common European
Maritime Space White Paper (2008), EU ports
policy (congestion, hinterlands, intermodal
nodes), e-maritime systems (positioning,
pre-arrival info, surveillance, e-services),
inland waterways (rivers, canals) - security issues minimum standards for maritime
security, sea-side port protection
7the context fisheries
- The Common Fisheries Policy (CFP) is the EUs
instrument for the management of fisheries - 2002 Reform of CFP to ensure
- the sustainable development of fishing activities
from an environmental and socio-economic
viewpoint - Improved and transparent scientific advice,
increased participation of stakeholders - Challenges
- Long term approach to fisheries management
- Balance resources with fleet capacity
(overcapacity) - Enforce the rules (e.g. limits on effort, quotas)
- Reduce adverse impacts to the marine ecosystem
- Make the sector economically viable
8the context maritime border security
- EU outer maritime border
- Illegal immigration, smuggling (plus saving lives
at sea) - Organised cross-border crime, terrorism (2nd and
3rd pillar) - JLS communication on EUROSUR
- integrated EU border surveillance system
- phased implementation 2008-2013
- start with southern maritime border
- major driver for maritime surveillance
9the context MPTF
- June 2006 Green paper Towards a future Maritime
Policy for the Union A European vision for the
oceans and the seas accompanied by 12 background
papers - October 2007 Blue Book and Action Plan
- Actions are a first step towards implementation
- Key objectives
- Sustainable use of the oceans
- Building a knowledge/innovation base for maritime
policy - Highest quality of life in coastal regions
- Promoting EU leadership in international maritime
affairs - Raising the visibility of Maritime Europe
- First round of tools for integration
- Integrated approach to data collection/processing/
delivery (public data infrastructures to
stimulate value-added services) - Coordination of surveillance and monitoring
activities (across sectors, across MS) - Maritime Spatial planning (i.e. to address
competing uses of coasts and seas) - IPSC involved in the first 2.
10the context research
- 600MEuro funding for FP6 projects in the
maritime sector (ERA-NETs, Space, Food,
Transport, Environment, Energy, Policy Support,
International Co-operation, Marie Curie,
Infrastructures etc.) - June 2008 Planned Commission Communication on a
European Maritime Research Strategy - objectives integrating marine science and
technology, synergy between Member State
research, integrating research-policy
making-industrysociety - using
- foresight mechanisms, cross-cutting calls,
conferences, ERA-Nets, Maritime Days, links to EU
financial instruments (EIB,FP7, Structural
Funds), support for specialized infrastructures
etc. - next step Interservice group opening to all DGs
starting in March 2008
11Maritime Affairs Unit what is there
- ECCAIRS, FISHREG, MASURE
- Impressive roster of skills (gt12 disciplines)
- Very strong policy impact (all actions) customer
base includes FISH, TREN, EMSA, OLAF (for
customs) and the MPTF - Strong research component (for FISHREG, MASURE)
14 FP6/FP7 projects, many peer-review
publications - Strong networking
- Staff mix (young, very high on visiting, too high
on competitive) - External finance (65 AAs, 35 SCAs)
- Sciences/Technologies involved
12Maritime Affairs Unit policy support
- Fisheries management, fisheries economics, data
quality, fisheries enforcement (monitoring
campaigns, electronic reporting systems, data
exchange, best practices, training) - Maritime surveillance (ship detection, vessel
traffic patterns) and data infrastructures
(integrating across sectors, maritime borders,
maritime safety and security, monitoring marine
pollution for oil spills) - Maritime accident reporting
- Port security implementation
- Monitoring and risk analysis for containers to
detect customs fraud and other illegal activities
13Maritime Affairs Unit research
- Modelling for fisheries management (e.g. fish
population, bio-economic, harvest control rules),
cost of fisheries management, common research
infrastructures, fisheries enforcement
techniques (e.g. origin assignment, predictions
of catch and quota uptakes), cost of enforcement,
ecosystem approach management - Innovative maritime surveillance systems and
concepts (e.g. satellite AIS, use of UAVs,
further automation of sensor data analysis,
maritime surveillance technology platform
(validate industry solutions, pilot new
technologies) - Ship inspection technologies, underwater
technologies, safety risk assessment for ports,
autonomous surveillance - Risk analysis for the containerized goods supply
chain
14Case Research in maritime surveillance, ship and
oil spills
Research Ship / oil detection in satellite
images Integration of vessel traffic data
Systems interoperability Communication,
distributed systems Novel sensors New
satellite sensors UAVs
Policy support Fisheries control Maritime
borders control Marine (oil) pollution Maritime
safety (risks) Supply line security Spatial
planning Maritime governance Maritime
security Outside EU
Clients FISH, CFCA JLS, Frontex ENV,
EMSA TREN RELEX MPTF MPTF Council, EDA RELEX,
DEV, FAO
- a cluster of research lines
- contributes as a whole to different policy lines
/ clients - on the themes security, safety, resource
protection, sustainable growth
15Possible cross-Institute activities
- Support
- Oil pollution response (with IES)
- Research
- Global emissions (with IES)
- Security of energy supply (with IE)
- Arctic shipping (with IES)
- (these three relate to global maritime routes)
- Monitoring aquaculture (with IHCP)
16Networking
- Fisheries enforcement
- All EU Fisheries Control authorities ( FMCs,
Coast Guards, MS Inspection Services, Joint
Inspections) - NEAFC (Northeast Atlantic Fisheries Commission)
- Maritime surveillance
- FRONTEX (e.g. EPN project)
- Monitoring Maritime Pollution
- EGEMP (European Group of Experts on Monitoring
Maritime Pollution) - Container monitoring and risk analysis
- MA (Mutual assistance between customs
administrations) - Autonomous Underwater Vehicles
- Freesub.net (Marie Curie training network)
- ECCAIRS co-operative network
- EU transport authorities, EU accident
investigation bodies, EU transport agencies,
non-EU authorities etc - Fisheries management
- STECF (Scientific, Technical and Economic
Committee on Fisheries) for scientific advice,
including SGECA for economic data - EU Fisheries Research institutes in the context
of the DCR (Data Collection Regulation) - ICES (International Council for the Exploration
of the Sea), ICES/WGAGFM (WG on genetics) - FAO/GFCM (General Fisheries Commission for the
Mediterranean)
17Our key partners in the EU
- TREN.G (Maritime Transport, Logistics,
Innovation), TREN.J (Security Protection of
persons, assets and facilities, TREN.I (Air
Transport) - EMSA (European Maritime Safety Agency)
- EASA (European Aviation Safety Agency)
- OLAF.C (Operational Intelligence)
- JLS.B (Immigration, Asylum and Borders)
- FRONTEX (RD, Operations)
- EDA (for maritime surveillance)
- FISH.A (Conservation Policy), FISH.E (for
economic analysis), FISH.D (Control and
Enforcement) - CFCA (Community Fisheries Control Agency)
- MPTF (Maritime Policy Task Force)
- RTD.H (Transport)
- National Authorities / Regional Organizations /
Industry / International Organizations
18Detailed view of activities
- See Table of all areas and their dimensions
(protection, security, research, policy support)
19port operations
vessel inspections
autonomous surveillance
accident reporting
underwater technologies
transport safety
container monitoring
VDS development
routes analysis
surveillance solutions
pollution detection
surveillance technologies
crisis response
data integration
L-T monitoring
port security
VMS anti-tampering
pollution networking
security
protection
critical routes
STECF
border security
origin assignment
management risk
enforcement costs
management cost
data analysis
stock assessment
e-logbooks
modelling
fisheries campaigns
spatial planning
data collection
training
fisheries socio-economics
remote areas
data infrastructures
energy carriage
data quality
global emissions
energy efficiency
arctic shipping
20the way ahead
- Reduce pressure from AAs and gradually change the
staff mix to put more resources on institutional
research - Identify areas where more research effort is
needed (e.g. maritime surveillance research
cluster, sea side port protection, analysis of
trade patterns, bio-economic modelling,
socio-economic impact assessments) - Consolidate some activities, prioritize and focus
some others - Take advantage of new opportunities (like the
trend for more Navy-civilian collaboration and
information sharing across sectors in general) - Contribute to research for important
cross-cutting themes (like global emissions from
shipping, maritime energy carriage, etc.)