IMO T134E-2006 AUTOMATIC IDENTIFICATION SYSTEMS.pdf
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1、MODEL COURSE r 7 INTERNATIONAL MARITIME ORGANIZATION AUTO M ATlC IDENTIFICATIO; SYSTIYS 4 L1 I - A L MODEL COURSE 1.34 AUTOMATIC IDENTIFICATION SYSTEMS 2006 Edition INTERNATIONAL MARITIME ORGANIZATION London, 2006 First published in 2006 by the INTERNATIONAL MARITIME ORGANIZATION 4 Albert Embankment
2、, London SE1 7SR Printed in the United Kingdom by Ashford Press 2 4 6 8 10 9 7 5 3 1 IMO PUBLICATION Sales number: T134E ISBN-13 978-92-801-4227-3 ISBN-10 92-801-4227-5 Acknowledgements The Organization would like to thank: the International Association of Marine Aids to Navigation and Lighthouse Au
3、thorities (IALA) for permission to reproduce the illustration used in figure 1 ; Videotel Ltd. for permission to reproduce the illustrations used in figures 2 and 3. Copyright 0 IMO 2006 All rights reserved. No part of this publication may be reproduced, stored in a retrieval system or transmitted i
4、n any form or by any means without prior permission in writing from the International Maritime Organization. Foreword Since its inception, the International Maritime Organization (IMO) has recognized the importance of human resources to the development of the maritime industry and has given the high
5、est priority to assisting developing countries in enhancing their maritime training capabilities through the provision or improvement of maritime training facilities at national and regional levels. IMO has also responded to the needs of developing countries for postgraduate training for senior pers
6、onnel in administrations, ports, shipping companies and maritime training institutes by establishing the world Maritime University in Malmo, Sweden, in 1983. Following the adoption of the International Convention on Standards of Training, Certification and Watchkeeping for Seafarers (STCW), 1978, a
7、number of IMO Member Governments suggested that IMO should develop model training courses to assist in the implementation of the Convention and in achieving a more rapid transfer of information and skills regarding new developments in maritime technology. IMO training advisers and consultants also s
8、ubsequently determined from their visits to training establishments in developing countries that the provision of model courses could help instructors improve the quality of their existing courses and enhance their implementation of associated Conference and IMO Assembly resolutions. In addition, it
9、 was appreciated that a comprehensive set of short model courses in various fields of maritime training would supplement the instruction provided by maritime academies and allow administrators and technical specialists already employed in maritime administrations, ports and shipping companies to imp
10、rove their knowledge and skills in certain specialized fields. With the generous assistance of the Government of Norway, IMO developed model courses in response to these generally identified needs and now keeps them updated through a regular revision process, taking into account any amendments to th
11、e requirements prescribed in IMO instruments and any technological developments in the field. These model courses may be used by any training institution and, when the requisite financing is available, the Organization is prepared to assist developing countries in implementing any course. E. E. MITR
12、OPOULOS Secretary General iii Contents Introduction Part A: Course framework Part B: Course outline and timetable Part C: Detailed teaching syllabus Part D: Instructor manual Guidance on specific subject areas 1 AIS concepts 2 AIS data 3 AIS ship installations 4 Use of AIS at sea 5 Training and fami
13、liarization Guidance on simulator exercises Annex I Familiarization training: note for manufacturers Annex II Resolution A.917(22), as amended by resolution A.956(23): Guidelines for the on-board operational use of shipborne automatic identification systems (AIS) Annex 1 Description of AIS Annex 2 T
14、echnical description Annex 111 Resolution A.956(23): Amendments to the guidelines for the on-board operational use of shipborne automatic identification systems (AS) (Resolution A.917(22) Guidance on the Implementation of Model Courses Previous page is blank Page 1 4 8 10 15 18 27 33 37 58 60 64 67
15、77 79 80 81 V - INTRODUCTION Introduction U Purpose of the model courses The purpose of the IMO model courses is to assist maritime training institutes and their teaching staff in organizing and introducing new training courses or in enhancing, updating or supplementing existing training material wh
16、ere the quality and effectiveness of the training courses may thereby be improved. It is not the intention of the model course programme to present instructors with a rigid “teaching package” which they are expected to “follow blindly”. Nor is it the intention to substitute audio-visual or “programm
17、ed” material for the instructors presence. As in all training endeavours, the knowledge, skills and dedication of the instructors are the key components in the transfer of knowledge and skills to those being trained through IMO model course material. Because educational systems and the cultural back
18、grounds of trainees in maritime subjects vary considerably from country to country, the model course material has been designed to identify the basic entry requirements and trainee target group for each course in universally applicable terms, and to specify clearly the technical content and levels o
19、f knowledge and skill necessary to meet the technical intent of IMO conventions and related recommendations. U Automatic Identification Systems The Organization has mandated in SOLAS Chapter V the carriage of equipment meeting the requirements of the Universal Shipborne Automatic Identification Syst
20、em (AIS) on all larger ships (as defined in Section 3.1 of this model course) to enhance the safety of life at sea, the safety of navigation and the protection of the marine environment. It does this by identifying vessels and other collaborative targets, assisting in target tracking, aiding situati
21、onal awareness (and thereby collision avoidance), and in simplifying the exchange of safety and security-related information between ships and between ships and the shore. The on-board AIS equipment takes inputs from the ships navigational sensors and, together with information concerning the ship a
22、nd its voyage, transmits to surrounding vessels and shore stations. It also receives information from other vessels, shore stations and AIS-fitted aids-to-navigation. The received data is displayed on the ship as alpha-numeric lists on a dedicated display, optionally assisted by showing graphically
23、the position, heading, course and speed of targets. Ideally, AIS targets are displayed on a radar screen or on ECDIS (that can also display radar tracked targets). All radars fitted from 1 July 2008 must be able to display AIS data in this way. Shore stations use the data for Vessel Traffic Services
24、 (VTS) and for national vessel monitoring purposes, including security enhancement. The data is normally displayed with radar at these stations. The on-board operator has to input accurate information concerning own-ship, some of which is voyage dependent, and hence needs to be kept updated. In conj
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