We are proud to announce that the STEAM project has been nominated for the IAPH (International Association of Ports and Harbors) 2022 Sustainability Awards in the field of Digitalization (Figure 1).
The result of the jury evaluation (70%) and the public vote (30%) will jointly determine the six final winners (one for each category), to be announced during the IAPH World Ports Conference Gala Dinner in Vancouver on May 17, 2022.
For more information see https://sustainableworldports.org/expert-jury-to-assess-iaph2022-sustainability-awards-candidates-in-six-categories-ahead-of-the-iaph-world-ports-conference-in-vancouver/ .
Figure 1: The STEAM project has been nominated for receiving the IAPH 2022 Sustainability Awards in the field of Digitalization.
The STEAM Project – Port of Limassol is currently catalogued in the IAPH’s World Ports Sustainability Program (WPSP) as one of 237 port projects worldwide applying UN Sustainable Development Goals in practice.
The STEAM Project is catalogued in three (3) different categories: (i) Digitalization, (ii) Environmental Care, (iii) Health Safety and Security; as related to UN SDGs 3, 8, 9, 14 and 17; corresponding to good health and wellbeing; decent work and economic growth; industry, innovation, and infrastructure; life below water; and partnerships for the goals; respectively.
For more information see https://sustainableworldports.org/project/port-of-limassol-steam-project/ .
Figure 2: The STEAM Project – Port of Limassol is currently catalogued in the IAPH’s World Ports Sustainability Program (WPSP) as one of 237 port projects worldwide applying UN Sustainable Development Goals in practice.
IAPH is a non-governmental organization (NGO) based in Tokyo, Japan. In November 1955, about 100 world Port leaders gathered in Los Angeles to announce the creation of IAPH. Over the past six decades, IAPH has grown into a global ports’ alliance, currently representing about 160 ports and 120 port-related businesses in 87 countries. Member ports together handle over 60% of global maritime trade and over 60% of global container traffic. To make IAPH more important to its members and more widely promoted in the global port and maritime community, IAPH adopted a new Constitution in 2016. It was the first time in its history spanning over 60 years that the Constitution was entirely rewritten to meet the demands of the day.
STEAM (Sea Traffic Management in the Eastern Mediterranean) is a three-year project that has started in Jan. 2019 with a budget of approximately one million EUR. The project is coordinated by the Cyprus University of Technology (CUT) with the Research Institutes of Sweden (RISE) participating in the project as a Foreign Research Organization. Furthermore, the STEAM consortium consists of the Cyprus Ports Authority, the Cyprus Shipping Association and the private companies Tototheo Maritime, A.T. DeLevant Business Solutions, and Cyprus Subsea Consulting and Services. Also, very important is the participation in the project as associated partners of established stakeholders of the Cyprus maritime sector including the Cyprus Shipping Chamber, the Maritime Institute of Eastern Mediterranean (Mar.In.E.M.), and the private companies that currently handle the operations at the Port of Limassol: DP WORLD Limassol, EUROGATE Limassol Container Terminal και P&O Maritime.
The primary goal of STEAM is to develop the Port of Limassol to become a world-class transshipment and information hub adopting modern digital technologies brought to the maritime sector, as well as a driver for short sea shipping in the Eastern Mediterranean. For more information see https://steam.cut.ac.cy/.
This work was co-funded by the European Regional Development Fund and the Republic of Cyprus through the Research and Innovation Foundation (STEAM Project: INTEGRATED/0916/0063).
Contact: michalis.michaelides@cut.ac.cy
Michalis Michaelides, Assistant Professor, Department of Electrical Engineering, Computer Engineering and Informatics
ΤΕΠΑΚ και ΕΥ ΖΗΝ διοργανώνουν τον 4ο εταιρικό φιλανθρωπικό αγώνα σκυταλοδρομίας ΟΠΑΠ RUN4ALL
We are proud to announce that the STEAM project has been nominated for the IAPH (International Association of Ports and Harbors) 2022 Sustainability Awards in the field of Digitalization (Figure 1).
The result of the jury evaluation (70%) and the public vote (30%) will jointly determine the six final winners (one for each category), to be announced during the IAPH World Ports Conference Gala Dinner in Vancouver on May 17, 2022.
For more information see https://sustainableworldports.org/expert-jury-to-assess-iaph2022-sustainability-awards-candidates-in-six-categories-ahead-of-the-iaph-world-ports-conference-in-vancouver/ .
Figure 1: The STEAM project has been nominated for receiving the IAPH 2022 Sustainability Awards in the field of Digitalization.
The STEAM Project – Port of Limassol is currently catalogued in the IAPH’s World Ports Sustainability Program (WPSP) as one of 237 port projects worldwide applying UN Sustainable Development Goals in practice.
The STEAM Project is catalogued in three (3) different categories: (i) Digitalization, (ii) Environmental Care, (iii) Health Safety and Security; as related to UN SDGs 3, 8, 9, 14 and 17; corresponding to good health and wellbeing; decent work and economic growth; industry, innovation, and infrastructure; life below water; and partnerships for the goals; respectively.
For more information see https://sustainableworldports.org/project/port-of-limassol-steam-project/ .
Figure 2: The STEAM Project – Port of Limassol is currently catalogued in the IAPH’s World Ports Sustainability Program (WPSP) as one of 237 port projects worldwide applying UN Sustainable Development Goals in practice.
IAPH is a non-governmental organization (NGO) based in Tokyo, Japan. In November 1955, about 100 world Port leaders gathered in Los Angeles to announce the creation of IAPH. Over the past six decades, IAPH has grown into a global ports’ alliance, currently representing about 160 ports and 120 port-related businesses in 87 countries. Member ports together handle over 60% of global maritime trade and over 60% of global container traffic. To make IAPH more important to its members and more widely promoted in the global port and maritime community, IAPH adopted a new Constitution in 2016. It was the first time in its history spanning over 60 years that the Constitution was entirely rewritten to meet the demands of the day.
STEAM (Sea Traffic Management in the Eastern Mediterranean) is a three-year project that has started in Jan. 2019 with a budget of approximately one million EUR. The project is coordinated by the Cyprus University of Technology (CUT) with the Research Institutes of Sweden (RISE) participating in the project as a Foreign Research Organization. Furthermore, the STEAM consortium consists of the Cyprus Ports Authority, the Cyprus Shipping Association and the private companies Tototheo Maritime, A.T. DeLevant Business Solutions, and Cyprus Subsea Consulting and Services. Also, very important is the participation in the project as associated partners of established stakeholders of the Cyprus maritime sector including the Cyprus Shipping Chamber, the Maritime Institute of Eastern Mediterranean (Mar.In.E.M.), and the private companies that currently handle the operations at the Port of Limassol: DP WORLD Limassol, EUROGATE Limassol Container Terminal και P&O Maritime.
The primary goal of STEAM is to develop the Port of Limassol to become a world-class transshipment and information hub adopting modern digital technologies brought to the maritime sector, as well as a driver for short sea shipping in the Eastern Mediterranean. For more information see https://steam.cut.ac.cy/.
This work was co-funded by the European Regional Development Fund and the Republic of Cyprus through the Research and Innovation Foundation (STEAM Project: INTEGRATED/0916/0063).
Contact: michalis.michaelides@cut.ac.cy
Michalis Michaelides, Assistant Professor, Department of Electrical Engineering, Computer Engineering and Informatics