The ISO Standard for the ECS Database01/01/1970 |
| ISO 19379 |
| The Electronic Chart situation has developed in an unexpected way. When the first standards for chart systems were being written, the concentration was on those installations which would become the legal equivalent of a paper nautical chart. IMO produced a Performance Standard for ECDIS, and IHO prepared a companion standard for the ECDIS display; both were intended to define systems that would replace paper charts on board SOLAS vessels. IEC then produced a test standard to demonstrate compliance with these standards. All of these were completed in the late 1990s, and one would expect that by 2002 the world's shipping fleet would be fully fitted with an electronic system of nautical charts, replacing paper once and for all. But that is not the case. |
| Mortimer Rogoff, President of Digital Directions Co, USA |
For many proper and understandable reasons, the Hydrographic Offices of the world have not supplied the essential databases that the ECDIS standards require, making it difficult, if not impossible to operate ECDIS on most of the world's shipping routes. Electronic Chart Systems (ECS) have filled this vacuum. ECS is now being used in all the world's waters, supplied by many companies, and fitted with both vector and raster databases which cover virtually all of the world's routes. However, since IHO and IMO have decided that they will not produce standards for ECS, these thousands of installations are functioning without the benefit of any standard of performance, and their databases are not covered by any standard of content, quality or updating. This is a dangerous situation.
Quality:
Updating:
Testing for compliance with the provisions of this standard:
Certification Procedures A number of companies who may act as auditors will be interviewed in order to prepare certification procedures under the provisions of the standard. These will include Classification Societies which are already engaged in various testing operations and any other companies suitably qualified. Chart producing companies will make individual arrangements with an auditor to obtain certification. Certificates of Compliance will be issued for those products that meet the requirements of the test procedures. Use of the Standard It is expected that a number of national maritime administrations will employ the standard as they write regulations concerning the use of ECS in their waters. This will be the case especially when AIS regulations permit the use of ECS as its display platform. In these cases, the need to assure a safe chart background for this anti-collision data will make obvious the need for standardised levels of quality, content and updating of the database. Each country is expected to write its own regulations calling for application of the standard. The standard is intended to make ECS chart displays as safe as the paper charts in use today, and as safe as the corresponding ECDIS displays. Every effort is being made to produce content and accuracy levels on a par with that of the ENC of the same area. Considering the fact that in the future the ECS database will most likely be derived from a digital database produced by national administrations, this goal of safety is logical and readily attainable. In addition, it is expected that shipping companies which are purchasing databases will require compliance with the ISO standard as a qualification for supplying the product. Conclusions There is no doubt that the original intentions of the IMO and IHO have not materialised as quickly as were expected in 1987 when their standards were first proposed. As a result, the intervening thirteen years (more than a generation in this computer age) have seen considerable progress beyond the state of the art which existed when the initiative began. The advantage of the ECS database standard is that it does not exclude these advances. Its only concern is that the content be consistent with navigation safety. It does not consider the way in which data is formatted nor require any particular cartographic style. The only test is: “is it safe?” Thus the appearance of a compliant chart may change, but with the assurance that safety is preserved. Secondly, the ISO database standard allows maritime authorities the ability to regulate and even mandate the use of ECS under conditions which promote safety. This has not been the case up until now, where the large bulk of installed systems of electronic charts have been used without the benefit of any acceptable standard. With time we expect that the ISO database standard will be used and accepted throughout the maritime world. With that being the case, it should be possible to look forward to a time when an ECS database compliant with this standard produces a display that is treated as a legal chart, without the need for the simultaneous presence of a paper chart on board. |
| Biography of the author Mortimer Rogoff (Convenor) is an electrical engineer, businessman, author, inventor and programmer who has spent his professional life in the fields of telecommunications, navigation and data processing. He was among the first to integrate a computer, electronic positioning and radar into a modern electronic chart system, with demonstrations in 1981. He initiated the ISO project for the ECS database, and has led that activity from its outset. He is President of Digital Directions Co, a consulting firm. |
