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| # SONARIS Research Notes | |
| This file is a running scientific journal for the SONARIS project. Every | |
| significant research finding, dataset assessment, methodology decision, and | |
| literature reference is logged here during development. Entries feed directly | |
| into the methodology and literature review sections of the SONARIS research paper. | |
| **Usage rules:** | |
| - New entries go at the top of the file, below this header. | |
| - Each entry must carry a date in ISO format (YYYY-MM-DD). | |
| - If an entry is based on published literature, include the full reference at the | |
| bottom of that entry. | |
| - Write for a technical reader who is encountering this topic for the first time | |
| in this project's context. | |
| --- | |
| ## 2026-03-03 — IMO MEPC.1/Circ.906 Rev.1 (2024): Regulatory Gap and Project Motivation | |
| ### What the guidelines require | |
| IMO MEPC.1/Circ.906 Rev.1 (2024) is the current iteration of the IMO's voluntary | |
| guidelines for the reduction of underwater noise from commercial shipping. The | |
| circular applies to all new-build vessels and requests that shipowners and operators | |
| monitor, manage, and where practicable reduce underwater radiated noise (URN) across | |
| the ship's operational speed range. The guidelines specify that URN should be | |
| characterized using 1/3-octave band measurements and reported in dB re 1 μPa at 1 m, | |
| covering the frequency range relevant to marine mammal hearing (approximately 10 Hz | |
| to 20 kHz depending on species). Vessels are categorised by type (bulk carrier, | |
| container ship, tanker, passenger vessel, and others), and the guidelines provide | |
| recommended management practices for each category. Crucially, the 2024 revision | |
| sharpened the language from the 2014 original: shipyards and operators are now | |
| explicitly encouraged to apply URN prediction tools at the design stage, not only | |
| during sea trials. | |
| ### The gap: no open-source design-phase tool exists | |
| The IMO GloNoise Partnership Programme conducted a structured gap analysis in October | |
| 2025. Its finding was direct: while IMO mandates URN management and design-stage | |
| assessment, no open-source prediction or compliance-checking tool exists for | |
| shipyards and researchers to use during the design phase. The only tools capable | |
| of performing full-spectrum URN prediction (dBSea, ANSYS Fluent with acoustic | |
| modules, GL ShipNoise) are commercial, proprietary, and priced out of reach for | |
| most of the world's shipyards. A small shipyard in Southeast Asia, a research | |
| institution in West Africa, or a student designing a vessel for a class project | |
| cannot access these tools. This is not a niche gap: the IMO GloNoise report | |
| notes that the majority of the global shipbuilding output by vessel count comes | |
| from yards in developing economies where no licensed acoustic software is in use. | |
| The consequence of this gap is that URN compliance is assessed, when it is assessed | |
| at all, only at the sea trial stage. By that point the hull form is fixed, the | |
| propeller is installed, and the engine mounts are set. Retrofitting for noise | |
| reduction at sea trial is expensive and typically limited to operational adjustments | |
| (speed reduction, routing) rather than design-level changes. The entire value of | |
| design-stage prediction is lost. | |
| ### The frequency bands that matter | |
| The IMO guidelines and the underlying marine bioacoustics literature converge on | |
| three frequency bands of primary concern: | |
| **Low frequency: 10 Hz to 1000 Hz.** This is the primary hearing range of baleen | |
| whales (mysticetes), including blue, fin, sei, minke, and humpback whales. | |
| Commercial shipping noise is dominated in this band by engine tonal components, | |
| propeller shaft harmonics, and hull flow noise. The overlap is severe: fin whale | |
| 20 Hz calls sit directly in the band occupied by machinery noise from large | |
| slow-speed diesel engines. This band is the primary driver of the chronic acoustic | |
| masking problem for large whales in shipping lanes. | |
| **Mid frequency: 1 kHz to 10 kHz.** This is the primary communication and | |
| echolocation range of dolphins, porpoises, and toothed whales (odontocetes). | |
| Propeller cavitation noise, which typically peaks between 1 kHz and 5 kHz | |
| depending on ship speed and propeller design, falls directly in this band. | |
| Bottlenose dolphin signature whistles, which are critical for individual | |
| identification and group cohesion, occupy 3 kHz to 20 kHz. The interference | |
| in this band is intermittent (tied to cavitation onset at specific speeds) but | |
| acoustically intense. | |
| **The blade-pass overlap zone: 50 Hz to 500 Hz.** The propeller blade-pass | |
| frequency (BPF) is calculated as RPM/60 × blade count. For a typical | |
| large commercial vessel running at 100 RPM with a 5-blade propeller, BPF is | |
| approximately 8.3 Hz, with harmonics at 16.6 Hz, 25 Hz, and so on. At higher | |
| shaft speeds typical of medium vessels, these harmonics fall squarely in the | |
| 50 Hz to 500 Hz range where both baleen whale low-frequency calls and toothed | |
| whale social calls are concentrated. This harmonic overlap is what makes the | |
| SONARIS Module 4 BIS calculation non-trivial: it is not sufficient to compare | |
| broadband levels. Tonal interference at specific harmonics must be resolved. | |
| This is precisely where the audio-engineering concept of spectral masking, as | |
| used in perceptual audio codecs and MFCC-based speech analysis, applies directly | |
| to the bioacoustic problem. | |
| ### Industry confirmation of demand | |
| In October 2024, BIMCO (Baltic and International Maritime Council) and ICS | |
| (International Chamber of Shipping), the two largest shipping industry bodies by | |
| member tonnage, published a joint URN Management Guide. The guide explicitly | |
| recommends that all member operators implement URN monitoring and compliance | |
| workflows and calls on the industry to develop accessible tools for design-stage | |
| prediction. This is the clearest statement from industry itself that demand for | |
| a tool like SONARIS exists and that the current commercial tool landscape does not | |
| meet it. | |
| ### Connection to SONARIS modules | |
| Module 2 (URN Prediction Core) closes the prediction gap identified by the IMO | |
| GloNoise analysis by producing a full 1/3-octave band spectrum at design stage | |
| from vessel geometry and operational parameters alone, without requiring a physical | |
| prototype or sea trial. | |
| Module 3 (IMO Compliance Checker) closes the compliance assessment gap by | |
| directly mapping the Module 2 output against the MEPC.1/Circ.906 Rev.1 (2024) | |
| limit tables and issuing a structured pass/fail report, formatted for inclusion | |
| in a ship's technical documentation package. | |
| Module 4 (Marine Bioacoustic Impact Module) goes beyond what IMO currently | |
| requires. The BIS metric provides a species-specific, frequency-resolved measure | |
| of biological harm that the IMO guidelines acknowledge in principle but do not | |
| operationalize. This positions SONARIS as a tool not just for compliance but for | |
| genuine environmental assessment. | |
| ### References | |
| - IMO MEPC.1/Circ.906 Rev.1 (2024). *2024 Guidelines for the Reduction of | |
| Underwater Noise from Commercial Shipping to Address Adverse Impacts on Marine | |
| Life.* International Maritime Organization, London. | |
| - IMO GloNoise Partnership Programme (October 2025). *Gap Analysis: Underwater | |
| Radiated Noise Management Tools for Design-Phase Application.* International | |
| Maritime Organization, London. | |
| - BIMCO and ICS (October 2024). *URN Management Guide for Shipping Operators.* | |
| Baltic and International Maritime Council / International Chamber of Shipping. |