18
July
2013

Maritime Safety Tour for MSEA Students

Safety of passengers and crew members has been at the top of IMO's agenda, and a focus of all stakeholders in the maritime business, since well before the Costa Concordia disaster. Ensuring the safety of life at sea and providing reliable legal and administrative frameworks, as well as equipment that can save lives in the event of a ship sinking after grounding, collision, fire, or other hazardous event, is a challenge. Policy makers, administrations, manufacturers of safety equipment, those involved in maritime research and technological development, and maritime education and training institutions, are aware of these challenges. It is crucial to have reliable and easy to use life-saving equipment such as life jackets and life rafts available in the event of an emergency.

As an essential element of their Maritime Safety Systems course, WMU MSEA students visited the VIKING LIFE-SAVING EQUIPMENT A/S company headquarters in Esbjerg on the west coast of Denmark. Organized by Anette Chapman, Secretary of Business Development & Marketing, and Julian Slowey, Service Executive for the Global Network, and the team at VIKING, the students participated in an ambitious training-program from 26-28 June that included lectures and seminars on life saving appliances, an introduction of the facilities for manufacturing personal protection suits and life rafts, and practical exercises at VIKING's partner FALCK NUTEC training center. During the life raft exercise, the students learned how to safely abandon a ship, jump into water, and experienced the challenges of entering a life raft from the sea surface. The intensively focused team building event enriched the students' knowledge about maritime safety and its administration which will be a benefit in their future positions.

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