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AI at Sea: Shipmanagement Industry Grapples With Promise and Reality

By MGN EditorialJune 4, 2026 at 09:21 PM

Artificial intelligence is dominating conversations across the shipmanagement sector, but honest assessments reveal the industry still has significant ground to cover before realising its full potential.

# AI at Sea: Shipmanagement Industry Grapples With Promise and Reality Artificial intelligence has become one of the most talked-about topics in shipmanagement, yet candid voices within the sector are urging caution against overstating how ready the industry truly is to harness its capabilities, according to analysis published by Splash247. The assessment, drawn from a new shipmanagement magazine that has attracted considerable attention at this week's **Posidonia** conference in Athens, examines the gap between the enthusiasm surrounding AI adoption and the practical realities facing operators today. From **emissions reporting** to **autonomous watchkeeping**, the applications being explored are wide-ranging and, in many cases, genuinely transformative in their potential. AI-driven tools are increasingly being positioned as solutions to some of the industry's most persistent challenges — crew fatigue, regulatory compliance burdens, fuel optimisation, and predictive maintenance among them. However, Splash247 notes that fewer industry participants are being forthright about the fragile foundations underpinning many of these ambitions. Data quality and availability remain a fundamental obstacle. Shipboard systems often operate in siloed environments, generating inconsistent or incomplete datasets that limit the effectiveness of machine learning applications. Without clean, standardised data pipelines, even the most sophisticated AI models risk producing unreliable outputs. The human element presents an equally complex challenge. Integrating AI tools into shipboard operations requires not only technological infrastructure but also crew training, cultural buy-in, and clearly defined protocols for when and how automated recommendations should be acted upon — or overridden. Regulatory frameworks have also yet to fully catch up with the pace of technological development. Classification societies and flag states are working to establish guidelines around autonomous and AI-assisted operations, but the absence of a unified international framework continues to create uncertainty for operators considering significant investment in these technologies. The Posidonia platform, one of the most prominent gatherings in global shipping, has provided a timely backdrop for these discussions. The biennial event draws shipowners, managers, and technology providers from across the world, making it a bellwether for where industry sentiment and investment priorities are heading. The consensus emerging from informed quarters appears to be one of measured optimism. AI holds genuine, substantial promise for improving safety, efficiency, and environmental performance across the maritime sector. But realising that promise will require the industry to address foundational issues around data infrastructure, workforce development, and regulatory clarity — work that is still very much in progress. *Source: Splash247*

Source: Splash247

#artificial intelligence#shipmanagement#autonomous vessels#Posidonia#emissions reporting#maritime technology#digitalisation#watchkeeping

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