Standard Marine Communication Phrases
The Standard Marine Communication Phrases is a set of key phrases in the English language, supported by the international community for use at sea and developed by the International Maritime Organization external communication phrases – ship to ship and ship to shore communication, 2) onboard communication phrases – communication within the ship.
Background
The SMCP were adopted by the 22nd Assembly of the IMO in November 2001 in a resolution which also promoted the wide circulation of the SMCP to all prospective users and all maritime education authorities.The SMCP includes phrases which have been developed to cover the most important safety-related fields of verbal shore-to-ship, ship-to-ship and on-board communications. The aim is to reduce the problem of language barriers at sea and avoid misunderstandings which can cause accidents.
Examples
- To describe an unmanned and abandoned ship floating adrift, the SMCP gives the correct phrase as, “unlit derelict vessel adrift in vicinity ”
- Being stuck in ice and requesting assistance: “I am fast in ice. I require assistance”.
- Damage to vessel by ice: “I have developed stability problems, heavy icing. Request ice breaker assistance”.
- Ship is sinking: “I am sinking. Please proceed to my assistance. What is your ETA at our distress position?”