Subscribe to our Mailing Lists (It's free!)
Tuesday, July 15, 2025
SAFETY4SEA
  • Home
  • Safety
    • All
    • Accidents
    • Alerts
    • Loss Prevention
    • Maritime Health
    • Regulation
    • Safety
    • Seafarers
    • Security
    2024 IMO Bravery Awards honor tanker and tugboat crews for heroic acts

    Officer to receive IMO bravery award for saving 12 crew members

    Panama

    BMA: Sanctions imposed against Russia

    Work,Safety,Concept.,Wooden,Cube,Blocks,With,Icon,Of,Safety

    DNV: Key IMO safety developments

    seafarers

    Philippines DMW issues call to protect seafarers from warlike areas

  • SEAFiT
    • All
    • Intellectual
    • Mental
    • Physical
    • Social
    • Spiritual
    friendship

    Exploring the human need for friendship: A lifeline at sea and on shore

    neck pain

    Neck pain: A growing health concern for maritime workers

    Book Review: Building leaders the MMMA way

    Book Review: Feel grounded and think positive in 10 simple steps

    time

    Stay SEAFiT: Time is non-renewable – invest it wisely

  • Green
    • All
    • Arctic
    • Ballast
    • Emissions
    • Fuels
    • Green Shipping
    • Pollution
    • Ship Recycling
    • Technology
    ammonia bunkering vessel

    Company orders ammonia bunkering vessel for use in Singapore

    WSC

    WSC proposes alignment of EU ETS with IMO Net Zero Framework

    IMO Council World Maritime Day

    IMO: World Maritime Day two-year theme to take policy to practice

    BIMCO FuelEU Maritime Regulation

    EU issues low-carbon hydrogen fuel standards

  • Smart
    • All
    • Connectivity
    • Cyber Security
    • E-navigation
    • Energy Efficiency
    • Maritime Software
    • Smart
    vr training

    Companies team up for virtual reality training to better prepare crew

    digital tools onboard

    Company signs for AI autonomous navigation system for PCTC fleet

    Trafigura, ZeroNorth join forces to advance decarbonization solutions

    Trafigura, ZeroNorth join forces to advance decarbonization solutions

    floating data centres

    New partnership to develop floating data center on retrofitted vessel

  • Risk
    • All
    • CIC
    • Detentions
    • Fines
    • PSC Focus
    • Vetting
    AMSA fine

    NorthStandard: Tips to avoid pollution fines in Turkey

    OCIMF

    OCIMF Annual Report 2025: SIRE 2.0 a welcome change for the industry

    USCG

    ABS PSC Report Q1 2025: 526 total vessels detained

    paris mou lists

    Paris MoU 2024 Performance lists

  • Others
    • All
    • Diversity in shipping
    • Maritime Knowledge
    • Offshore
    • Ports
    • Shipping
    • Sustainability
    • Videos
    China

    China lays out vision for smarter and greener shipping

    Sanctions Russia

    EU plans to impose new Russian oil price cap

    EU US

    US plans to hit EU and Mexico with 30% tariff starting August

    Dr. Rosalie Balkin

    Dr. Rosalie Balkin to receive IMO International Maritime Prize

  • Columns
    Career Paths: Syb ten Cate Hoedemaker, Maritime Battery Forum

    Career Paths: Syb ten Cate Hoedemaker, Maritime Battery Forum

    GSR Services: The Hong Kong Convention sets the rules for total ship lifecycle responsibility

    NorthStandard: Data sharing to drive technology and improve crew wellbeing

    GSR Services: The Hong Kong Convention sets the rules for total ship lifecycle responsibility

    GSR Services: The Hong Kong Convention sets the rules for total ship lifecycle responsibility

    Trending Tags

    • Anchor Your Health
    • Book Review
    • Career Paths
    • Human Performance
    • Industry Voices
    • Interviews
    • Maripedia
    • Maritime History
    • Regulatory Update
    • Resilience
    • Seafarers Stories
    • SeaSense
    • Training & Development
    • Wellness Corner
    • Wellness Tips
  • Events
  • Plus
No Result
View All Result
  • Home
  • Safety
    • All
    • Accidents
    • Alerts
    • Loss Prevention
    • Maritime Health
    • Regulation
    • Safety
    • Seafarers
    • Security
    2024 IMO Bravery Awards honor tanker and tugboat crews for heroic acts

    Officer to receive IMO bravery award for saving 12 crew members

    Panama

    BMA: Sanctions imposed against Russia

    Work,Safety,Concept.,Wooden,Cube,Blocks,With,Icon,Of,Safety

    DNV: Key IMO safety developments

    seafarers

    Philippines DMW issues call to protect seafarers from warlike areas

  • SEAFiT
    • All
    • Intellectual
    • Mental
    • Physical
    • Social
    • Spiritual
    friendship

    Exploring the human need for friendship: A lifeline at sea and on shore

    neck pain

    Neck pain: A growing health concern for maritime workers

    Book Review: Building leaders the MMMA way

    Book Review: Feel grounded and think positive in 10 simple steps

    time

    Stay SEAFiT: Time is non-renewable – invest it wisely

  • Green
    • All
    • Arctic
    • Ballast
    • Emissions
    • Fuels
    • Green Shipping
    • Pollution
    • Ship Recycling
    • Technology
    ammonia bunkering vessel

    Company orders ammonia bunkering vessel for use in Singapore

    WSC

    WSC proposes alignment of EU ETS with IMO Net Zero Framework

    IMO Council World Maritime Day

    IMO: World Maritime Day two-year theme to take policy to practice

    BIMCO FuelEU Maritime Regulation

    EU issues low-carbon hydrogen fuel standards

  • Smart
    • All
    • Connectivity
    • Cyber Security
    • E-navigation
    • Energy Efficiency
    • Maritime Software
    • Smart
    vr training

    Companies team up for virtual reality training to better prepare crew

    digital tools onboard

    Company signs for AI autonomous navigation system for PCTC fleet

    Trafigura, ZeroNorth join forces to advance decarbonization solutions

    Trafigura, ZeroNorth join forces to advance decarbonization solutions

    floating data centres

    New partnership to develop floating data center on retrofitted vessel

  • Risk
    • All
    • CIC
    • Detentions
    • Fines
    • PSC Focus
    • Vetting
    AMSA fine

    NorthStandard: Tips to avoid pollution fines in Turkey

    OCIMF

    OCIMF Annual Report 2025: SIRE 2.0 a welcome change for the industry

    USCG

    ABS PSC Report Q1 2025: 526 total vessels detained

    paris mou lists

    Paris MoU 2024 Performance lists

  • Others
    • All
    • Diversity in shipping
    • Maritime Knowledge
    • Offshore
    • Ports
    • Shipping
    • Sustainability
    • Videos
    China

    China lays out vision for smarter and greener shipping

    Sanctions Russia

    EU plans to impose new Russian oil price cap

    EU US

    US plans to hit EU and Mexico with 30% tariff starting August

    Dr. Rosalie Balkin

    Dr. Rosalie Balkin to receive IMO International Maritime Prize

  • Columns
    Career Paths: Syb ten Cate Hoedemaker, Maritime Battery Forum

    Career Paths: Syb ten Cate Hoedemaker, Maritime Battery Forum

    GSR Services: The Hong Kong Convention sets the rules for total ship lifecycle responsibility

    NorthStandard: Data sharing to drive technology and improve crew wellbeing

    GSR Services: The Hong Kong Convention sets the rules for total ship lifecycle responsibility

    GSR Services: The Hong Kong Convention sets the rules for total ship lifecycle responsibility

    Trending Tags

    • Anchor Your Health
    • Book Review
    • Career Paths
    • Human Performance
    • Industry Voices
    • Interviews
    • Maripedia
    • Maritime History
    • Regulatory Update
    • Resilience
    • Seafarers Stories
    • SeaSense
    • Training & Development
    • Wellness Corner
    • Wellness Tips
  • Events
  • Plus
No Result
View All Result
SAFETY4SEA

Final report on MV RENA published

by The Editorial Team
December 18, 2014
in Accidents
Final report on MV RENA published
FacebookTwitterEmailLinkedin

TAIC report includes key lessons learnt, recommendations and safety issues

The Final Report on MV RENA has been published at TAIC (Transport Accident Investigation Commission) website on November 2014 including safety issues, recommendations and key lessons learnt.


The Liberian-registered container ship Rena had left the New Zealand port of Napier at 1020 on 4 October 2011 and was bound for the New Zealand port of Tauranga. The master had given an estimated time of arrival at the Tauranga pilot station of 0300 the next day. The master calculated the estimated time of arrival by dividing the distance to go by the Rena’s normal service speed. The calculation did not account for the unfavourable currents that normally prevailed down that stretch of coastline.

After departure from Napier the master learned from notes on the chart of the unfavourable currents. He then authorised the watchkeepers to deviate from the planned course lines on the chart to shorten the distance, and to search for the least unfavourable currents.

RelatedNews

Lessons learned: Unsafe workarounds reveal unsafe systems

Singapore tops global maritime center ranking for 12th straight year

The Rena’s second mate took over the watch shortly after midnight on 4 October. He calculated that the Rena would arrive at the port of Tauranga pilot station at 0300 at the ship’s then current speed. Times for ships entering and leaving Tauranga Harbour are limited by the depth of water and the strength of the tidal currents in the entrance channel. Tauranga Harbour Control informed the second mate that the latest time the Rena could take the harbour pilot on board was 0300.

The planned course to the Tauranga pilot station was to pass two nautical miles north of Astrolabe Reef before making the final adjustment in course to the pilot station. The second mate decided to reduce the two miles to one mile in order to save time. The second mate then made a series of small course adjustments towards Astrolabe Reef to make the shortcut. In doing so he altered the course 5 degrees past the required track and did not make an allowance for any compass error or sideways “drift”, and as a consequence the Rena was making a ground track directly for Astrolabe Reef. Meanwhile the master had been woken and arrived on the bridge to prepare for arrival at the port.

The master and second mate discussed preparations for arrival at the pilot station. The master then assumed control of the ship, having received virtually no information on where the ship was, where it was heading, and what immediate dangers to navigation he needed to consider.

During this period of handover no-one was monitoring the position of the ship. At 0214 the Rena ran aground at full speed on Astrolabe Reef. The ship remained stuck fast on the reef and in the ensuing months it broke in two. The aft section moved off the reef and sank. About 200 tonnes of heavy fuel oil were lost to the sea. A substantial amount of cargo in the containers was lost. The vessel became a total loss on 11 October 2011.

The Transport Accident Investigation Commission (the Commission) concluded that the Rena grounding was not in any way attributable to the malfunction of any on-board machinery or equipment, including on-board navigational equipment.

Factors that directly contributed to the grounding included the crew:

  • not following standard good practice for planning and executing the voyage
  • not following standard good practice for navigation watchkeeping
  • not following standard good practice when taking over control of the ship.

Safety issues that the Commission identified in the wider context included:

  • CIEL Shipmanagement S.A.’s oversight of the Rena’s safety management system was not sufficient to prevent a high number of port state control deficiencies identified during two port state control “initial” inspections about three months prior to the grounding, and routine violations of some company procedures for voyage planning and navigation
  • an independent audit had found that the Philippines’ maritime education, training and certification system did not meet the mandatory standards specified in the Convention
  • on Standards of Training, Certification and Watchkeeping for Seafarers 1978 (the STCW Convention)
  • the current auditing protocols of the STCW Convention lack the transparency that would assist member states to decide whether other countries’ training systems meet the standards of competency required by the STCW Convention, and therefore whether to recognise certificates of competency issued by those countries.

The report also discusses two other considerations that were raised during the inquiry – whether there is a need for ship routing in some form around the New Zealand coast, and how far maritime authorities should go in marking hazards to navigation such as Astrolabe Reef.

The Commission identified two issues: first, with regard to shipping, there is insufficient data being collected to make a meaningful analysis of shipping movements around the New Zealand coast; and secondly, with regard to marking hazards, a new type of “virtual aid to navigation” is being used for marking hazards to navigation before this system has been fully tested and endorsed by the International Association of Marine Aids to Navigation and Lighthouse Authorities.

The Commission made recommendations to:

  • CIEL Shipmanagement S.A. to evaluate the effectiveness of its safety management system to ensure that the issues identified with that system as applied on board the Rena do not affect other vessels within its fleet
  • Maritime New Zealand to promote, through the International Maritime Organization, the transparency of the system for auditing countries’ seafarer training systems
  • Maritime New Zealand to collect sufficient data on shipping movements around the New Zealand coast, and monitor and control the use of virtual aids to navigation around the New Zealand coast.

The key lessons learnt from the inquiry into this accident were:

  • ship managers must ensure that their safety management systems are delivering safe ship operations for every ship in their fleets
  • ships’ crews must comply with the mandatory requirements and recommended best industry practice for passage planning, navigation and watchkeeping if similar groundings and other equally catastrophic maritime casualties are to be avoided
  • countries’ maritime education, training and certification systems must be capable of meeting the standards required by the STCW Convention to ensure that seafarers emerging from the system are trained to an appropriate standard.

    Further details may be found by reading the report here

    Source: TAIC


    Final report on MV RENA publishedFinal report on MV RENA published
    Final report on MV RENA publishedFinal report on MV RENA published
    Tags: incident investigationlessons learnedMV RENANew Zealandreports
    Previous Post

    100 New species of marine life discovered in Gulf of Mexico

    Next Post

    Port of Amsterdam to reward Green Award-certified barges

    SUGGESTED FOR YOU

    UNCTAD
    Shipping

    UNCTAD: Global trade endures policy changes and uncertainty

    July 10, 2025
    ReCAAP ISC
    Security

    ReCAAP ISC: Half Yearly Report 2025, Piracy and Armed Robbery Against Ships in Asia

    July 10, 2025
    Lessons learned
    Safety

    Lessons learned: Ensure there are compatible adapters onboard

    July 9, 2025
    IMB piracy
    Security

    IMB: 50% increase in piracy incidents in first six months of 2025

    July 9, 2025
    Norway
    Accidents

    Norwegian Maritime Authority: 589 incidents in first half of 2025

    July 9, 2025
    Lessons learned: Never cross the gantry crane rails while the crane is in use
    Accidents

    Lessons learned: Faults in design should be considered

    July 8, 2025

    Leave a Reply Cancel reply

    Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

    Explore more

    No Result
    View All Result
    MARITIME EVENTS

    Explore

    • Safety
    • SEAFiT
    • Green
    • Smart
    • Risk
    • Others
    • SAFETY4SEA Events
    • SAFETY4SEA Plus Subscription

    Useful Links

    • About
    • Disclaimer
    • Editorial Policies
    • Advertising
    • Content Marketing
    • Contact

    © 2025 SAFETY4SEA

    No Result
    View All Result
    • Safety
      • Accidents
      • Alerts
      • Loss Prevention
      • Maritime Health
      • Regulation
      • Safety
      • Seafarers
      • Security
    • SEAFiT
      • Intellectual
      • Mental
      • Physical
      • Social
      • Spiritual
    • Green
      • Arctic
      • Ballast
      • Emissions
      • Fuels
      • Green Shipping
      • Pollution
      • Ship Recycling
      • Technology
    • Smart
      • Connectivity
      • Cyber Security
      • E-navigation
      • Energy Efficiency
      • Maritime Software
      • Smart
    • Risk
      • CIC
      • Detentions
      • Fines
      • PSC Case Studies
      • PSC Focus
      • Vetting
    • Others
      • Diversity in shipping
      • Maritime Knowledge
      • Offshore
      • Ports
      • Shipping
      • Sustainability
      • Videos
    • Columns
      • Anchor Your Health
      • Book Review
      • Career Paths
      • Human Performance
      • Industry Voices
      • Interviews
      • Maripedia
      • Maritime History
      • Opinions
      • Regulatory Update
      • Resilience
      • Seafarers Stories
      • SeaSense
      • Tip of the day
      • Training & Development
      • Wellness Corner
      • Wellness Tips
    • SAFETY4SEA Events
    • SAFETY4SEA Plus Subscription

    © 2025 SAFETY4SEA

    Manage your privacy
    We use technologies like cookies to store and/or access device information. We do this to improve browsing experience and to show (non-) personalized ads. Consenting to these technologies will allow us to process data such as browsing behavior or unique IDs on this site. Not consenting or withdrawing consent, may adversely affect certain features and functions.
    Functional Always active
    The technical storage or access is strictly necessary for the legitimate purpose of enabling the use of a specific service explicitly requested by the subscriber or user, or for the sole purpose of carrying out the transmission of a communication over an electronic communications network.
    Preferences
    The technical storage or access is necessary for the legitimate purpose of storing preferences that are not requested by the subscriber or user.
    Statistics
    The technical storage or access that is used exclusively for statistical purposes. The technical storage or access that is used exclusively for anonymous statistical purposes. Without a subpoena, voluntary compliance on the part of your Internet Service Provider, or additional records from a third party, information stored or retrieved for this purpose alone cannot usually be used to identify you.
    Marketing
    The technical storage or access is required to create user profiles to send advertising, or to track the user on a website or across several websites for similar marketing purposes.
    Manage options Manage services Manage {vendor_count} vendors Read more about these purposes
    Manage options
    {title} {title} {title}
    No Result
    View All Result
    • Safety
      • Accidents
      • Alerts
      • Loss Prevention
      • Maritime Health
      • Regulation
      • Safety
      • Seafarers
      • Security
    • SEAFiT
      • Intellectual
      • Mental
      • Physical
      • Social
      • Spiritual
    • Green
      • Arctic
      • Ballast
      • Emissions
      • Fuels
      • Green Shipping
      • Pollution
      • Ship Recycling
      • Technology
    • Smart
      • Connectivity
      • Cyber Security
      • E-navigation
      • Energy Efficiency
      • Maritime Software
      • Smart
    • Risk
      • CIC
      • Detentions
      • Fines
      • PSC Case Studies
      • PSC Focus
      • Vetting
    • Others
      • Diversity in shipping
      • Maritime Knowledge
      • Offshore
      • Ports
      • Shipping
      • Sustainability
      • Videos
    • Columns
      • Anchor Your Health
      • Book Review
      • Career Paths
      • Human Performance
      • Industry Voices
      • Interviews
      • Maripedia
      • Maritime History
      • Opinions
      • Regulatory Update
      • Resilience
      • Seafarers Stories
      • SeaSense
      • Tip of the day
      • Training & Development
      • Wellness Corner
      • Wellness Tips
    • SAFETY4SEA Events
    • SAFETY4SEA Plus Subscription

    © 2025 SAFETY4SEA