Lloyd’s Register warns about “alarm fatigue” on board, an underestimated risk

Lloyd’s Register is sounding the alarm on a very concrete problem: the proliferation of alerts and alarms on board eventually reduces the effectiveness of safety itself. When the systems trigger notifications continuously, the crew can fall into a form of saturation: they treat the emergency as routine, and the routine as noise.
The analysis is based on a significant volume of alarm-related events, and the message is simple: too many alerts kill the alert. The challenge is not to eliminate monitoring, but to better prioritize, filter, and contextualize the signals. This involves technical choices (configuration, integration, sensor quality) and human choices (procedures, training, operational discipline).
On the supply chain side, the link is direct: the more navigation becomes digital and “assisted,” the greater the risk of information overload. And each maritime security incident has a domino effect: delays, reroutings, insurance premiums, port constraints, and scheduling disruptions.
The post Lloyd’s Register warns about “alarm fatigue” on board, an underestimated risk appeared first on The Logistic News.
Share this post
Related
Posts
The United States seizes a 7th tanker: pressure mounts on sanctioned ships
New episode in the maritime tug-of-war over sanctions: the United States has seized a seventh tanker suspected of operating in...
China replaces US barrels with Canada: new impact on tanker routes
The geography of oil is shifting, and shipping feels it immediately. According to analyzes reported by BIMCO, Chinese crude oil...
The Port of Klaipėda Signs a Record Year Driven by Containers, LNG, and Ro-Ro
The Lithuanian port of Klaipėda announces a historic performance in 2025: 39 million tons handled, despite a tense geopolitical context...
Ocean Alliance maintains the detour via the Cape, while preparing a “Suez plan”
The Ocean Alliance (CMA CGM, COSCO Shipping, Evergreen, and OOCL) has just unveiled its “Day 10” East-West network, which will...