Whether you are dealing with recreational craft, passenger or cargo vessels, ISO standards help you enhance the safety, environmental performance, and efficiency of your marine technology, boats and ships.

Insights

By Rick Gould on

Towards a net-zero logistics sector

Moving cargo around the world is a carbon-intensive business, and new guidance launched at Davos will go a long way to getting freight back on track.

Sea port entrance framed to the right by the base of a modern-looking control tower.

By Rick Gould on

Shaping shipping

As technology advances and industry dynamics evolve, more and more maritime businesses are focusing their time, energy and resources on digitalization. Technological advances are expected to make shipping – and the whole supply chain – much more efficient for the more than 11 billion tonnes of goods that are traded annually by sea across the globe. This move will have numerous benefits for trading, safety, security and the environment, with ISO standards playing a key role in this process.

A container ship at sea.

By Maria Lazarte on

Greening the deep blue

Over the past few years, the tides of the maritime industry have been changing. There’s a push for safer, smarter, more environment-friendly and energy-efficient sea transport. What no one expected is that these actions are not only bringing economic benefits, they are also leading to the servitization of the shipbuilding industry.

Top standards

Small craft — Stability and buoyancy assessment and categorization
Part 3: Boats of hull length less than 6 m

Small craft — Hull construction and scantlings
Part 5: Design pressures for monohulls, design stresses, scantlings determination

Ships and marine technology — Pilot ladders
Part 2: Maintenance, use, survey, and inspection