Shipping talks a lot about automation.
Smart vessels.
Digital fleets.
AI driven optimisation.
The narrative sounds impressive.
But step onboard many vessels and the picture often looks different.
Crew exporting data to spreadsheets.
Reports compiled manually.
Systems that do not talk to each other.
The same information entered multiple times.
Automation is discussed everywhere.
Manual workflows remain everywhere.

The industry often approaches automation from the wrong end. The focus goes to advanced tools, dashboards, and algorithms.
But automation does not start with AI.
It starts with integration.
If systems are not connected, processes cannot be automated. If data structures differ between platforms, automation becomes fragile. If ownership of systems and data is unclear, integration stops.
What remains is digital tooling around manual work.
The result is more screens.
More dashboards.
More software.
But not necessarily less work.
True automation removes friction from daily operations. It eliminates repetition. It allows crews and onshore teams to focus on decisions rather than administration.
But that requires foundations that are rarely discussed.
Architecture.
Data governance.
System integration.
Operational ownership.
Without those, automation becomes a presentation slide.
Not an operational capability.

The automation gap in shipping is not primarily technological.
It is structural.
And until that gap is addressed, the industry will continue to talk about automation more than it actually experiences it.
The real question is not how advanced the tools are.
It is how much manual work still sits behind them.

