コンテンツメニュー

Niitani Makoto


A Study of Capsizing Maritime Disasters involving Fishing Boats

Journal of National Fisheries University Volume 64 Issue 1 Page 47-56
published_at 2015-12
64-1-47-56.pdf
[fulltext] 1.18 MB
Title
漁船の転覆海難に関する一考察
A Study of Capsizing Maritime Disasters involving Fishing Boats
Creators Sakai Kenichi
Creators Shimokawa Shin-ya
Creators Kawasaki Junji
Creators Matsumoto Hirofumi
Creators Niitani Makoto
Source Identifiers [PISSN] 0370-9361
Creator Keywords
Fishing boat Fishing Maritime disaster Capsizing Domino theory
This study examined maritime disasters, specifically the capsizing of fishing boats, based on marine accident investigation reports issued by the Japan Transport Safety Board(2009-2013). In addition, the Domino theory, advocated by Mr. F. E. Bird Jr., was applied to analyze the cause of the accidents. The results are as follows:(1)of the total number of maritime disasters, capsizing accounts for 75% of fishing boat disasters of boats less than 5 gross tonnage;(2)the fishing types predominantly involved in capsizing disasters are gill net, cage, pole and line, beam trawl fishing, and scallop culture;(3)capsizing disasters occur mostly in calm conditions and are caused by human error;(4)the amount of human damage from these accidents is enormous in that the probability of dying or becoming missing was 35% per accident; and(5)when the causes of the accidents were analyzed by the Domino theory, improvements to the "basic concepts" stage, fishing operational judgment, ship handling, or operation method could be effective in accident prevention. In the future, it will be necessary to collect information in detail from marine accident investigation reports, the Japan Fisheries Cooperatives, and fellow working ships for effective prevention measures according to individual situation, fishing types and boat class.
Languages jpn
Resource Type departmental bulletin paper
Publishers National Fisheries University
Date Issued 2015-12
File Version Version of Record
Access Rights open access
Relations
[ISSN]0370-9361