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MARINESHELF

Monday, March 18, 2013

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Basic Concepts of the GMDSS

Functional requirements

The GMDSS regulations (chapter IV of the International SOLAS Convention), require that every GMDSS equipped ship shall be capable of;
  • transmitting ship-to-shore Distress Alerts by at least two separate and independent means, each using a different radio communication service;
  • receiving shore-to-ship Distress Alerts; transmitting and receiving ship-to-ship Distress Alerts;
  • transmitting and receiving search and rescue co-ordinating communications;
  • transmitting and receiving on-scene communications;
  • transmitting and receiving locating signals;
  • receiving maritime safety information;
  • transmitting and receiving general radiocommunications relating to the management and operation of the vessel;
  • transmitting and receiving bridge-to-bridge communications.

Application

The GMDSS applies to vessels subject to the SOLAS Convention - that is:
Commercial vessels of 300 Gross Registered Tons (GRT) and above, engaged on international voyages.
The GMDSS became mandatory for such vessels
as at February 1, 1999.
Commercial vessels under 300 GRT, or those above 300 GRT engaged on domestic voyages only are subject to the requirements of their Flag State. Some Flag States have incorporated GMDSS requirements into their domestic marine radio legislation - however many have not.

Equipment vs Operational requirements

The major difference between the GMDSS and its predecessor systems is that the radio communications equipment to be fitted to a GMDSS ship is determined by the ship's area of operation, rather than by its size.
Because the various radio systems used in the GMDSS have different limitations with regards to range and services provided, the new system divides the world's oceans into 4 areas:
  • Area A1 lies within range of shore-based VHF coast stations (20 to 30 nautical miles);
  • Area A2 lies within range of shore based MF coast stations (excluding A1 areas) (approximately 100 - 150 nautical miles);
  • Area A3 lies within the coverage area of Inmarsat communications satellites (excluding A1 and A2 areas - approximately latitude 70 degrees north to latitude 70 degrees south); and
  • Area A4 comprises the remaining sea areas outside areas A1, A2 and A3 (the polar regions).
Australia and its surrounding SAR area are declared as Sea Area A3. There are no A1 or A2 areas in Aust

GMDSS communication systems

The GMDSS utilises both satellite and terrestrial (ie: conventional) radio systems.
Sea Area A1 requires short range radio services - VHF is used to provide voice and automated distress alerting via Digital Selective Calling (DSC).
Sea Area A2 requires medium range services - Medium Frequencies (MF - 2 MHz) are used for voice and DSC.
Sea Areas A3 and A4 require long range alerting - High Frequencies (HF - 3 to 30 MHz) are used for voice, DSC and Narrow Band Direct Printing (NBDP - aka radio telex).
Equipment requirements vary according to the area the ship is trading to or through. Accordingly, it is quite possible that a small 300 ton cargo vessel may carry the same amount of communications equipment as a 300,000 ton oil tanker, if they are both operating in the same area....this is a marked change from the pre-GMDSS systems.


Equipment requirements

As discussed above, equipment fit requirements vary according to the Sea Area(s) a vessel operates in or through.
It should be noted that the requirements are cumulative in nature - ie: an A4 vessel is also equipped, by definition, with equipment for A1, A2 and A3 Sea Areas.
In areas where A1 Services are provided, coastal vessels are only required to fit VHF equipment, provided of course that they remain within the declared Sea Area - normally within 20 to 30 nautical miles of the coast.
Vessels that trade further from land are required to carry MF equipment, in addition to VHF.
Ocean going vessels fit VHF, MF, HF and Inmarsat equipment. 

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