Ship operators face rising compliance pressure, says SmartSea
SmartSea has warned that maritime operators are coming under growing pressure as EU ETS, NIS2 and evolving IMO requirements force shipowners and managers to treat compliance as an operational discipline rather than a reporting exercise. What was once handled across separate technical, compliance and commercial functions is now directly affecting voyage economics, fuel strategy, emissions reporting, cyber resilience and day-to-day fleet performance. As regulatory obligations multiply and scrutiny intensifies, operators relying on fragmented systems and disconnected operational data face higher costs, slower decision-making and greater risk of non-compliance.
Kris Vedat (pictured), CEO of SmartSea, said: “Shipping can no longer afford to treat compliance as something that sits outside operations. When regulation, fuel costs, emissions exposure and vessel performance are all moving at once, operators need clear visibility across the fleet and the ability to act on it in real time. Companies that continue to manage those pressures in silos will face greater cost, complexity and risk.
“Across the sector, fuel monitoring, emissions tracking, weather routing, energy-efficiency analysis and compliance reporting are increasingly being managed as parts of the same operational picture rather than through separate systems. That shift reflects a broader change in shipping, where compliance now carries direct financial and strategic consequences as well as regulatory ones.”
Mr Vedat added: “The industry does not need more dashboards. It needs better operational visibility. The challenge is no longer collecting data for its own sake, but turning fuel, emissions, routing and compliance data into decisions that reduce exposure, improve fleet performance and keep organisations ready for the next regulatory demand, not the last one.”
SmartSea supports vessel and fleet operations with integrated maritime technology and digital services spanning vessel IT, cyber security, connectivity, navigation, fleet performance and terminal digitalisation. Powered by SITA, the company believes the market is entering a period in which resilience, compliance and efficiency will increasingly be judged together rather than separately.