For centuries, seaworthiness has meant one thing: a vessel fit for its intended voyage. Hull integrity. Proper crew. Maintained machinery. Operational safety.
Today, that definition is incomplete. A vessel can leave port structurally perfect, and still be unseaworthy. The reason? Cyber risk.
What is cyber seaworthiness?
Cyber seaworthiness refers to a vessel’s ability to safely and reliably conduct its voyage without unacceptable cyber risk exposure affecting the following:
Modern vessels are no longer purely mechanical assets; they are floating, interconnected digital environments. When those digital systems fail, or are manipulated, the consequences can be just as severe as a mechanical breakdown.
Unlike storms or collisions, cyber incidents often leave no visible trace, creating catastrophic outcomes. There may be no hull breach, no fire, and no physical damage.
Ransomware may lock bridge navigation systems mid transit. GPS spoofing can alter a vessel’s perceived location. Compromised operational technology networks can disable propulsion. Even port access can be blocked if a port authority’s systems are attacked.
In each of these scenarios, the vessel remains physically intact, yet the voyage is interrupted, cargo is delayed, contractual penalties apply, and liabilities multiply.
The ship appears seaworthy, but functionally, it’s not.
A major cyber incident can generate significant business interruption losses, trigger charterparty disputes, lead to cargo deterioration claims, damage reputation, invite regulatory scrutiny, increase insurance premiums, and cause coverage disputes over seaworthiness warranties.
Traditionally seaworthiness has been tied to physical condition, however cyber vulnerability is now being assessed through the same legal lens.
The legal question that emerges is if the owner knew, or should have known that systems were vulnerable, then was the vessel truly seaworthy?
Underwriters are increasingly asking if there is cyber risk governance, whether operational and IT technology systems are properly segmented, whether a documented incident response capability exists onboard, whether the crew is trained in cyber hygiene, and if patching and access control is documented.
Cyber seaworthiness is no longer theoretical. It is becoming an underwriting reality.
