论文标题
COVID-19对全球海上流动性的影响
COVID-19 Impact on Global Maritime Mobility
论文作者
论文摘要
为了防止冠状病毒疾病爆发(Covid-19),世界上许多国家陷入了锁定,并采取了前所未有的遏制措施。这些限制逐渐改变了社会行为和全球流动性模式,显然破坏了社会和经济活动。在这里,使用通过AIS接收器的全球网络收集的海上交通数据,我们分析了Covid-19大流行和遏制措施对航运业的影响,该行业仅占世界贸易的80%以上。我们依靠多个数据驱动的海上流动指数来定量评估给定时间单位的船舶移动性。此处介绍的移动性分析具有全球范围的范围,并基于以下计算:所有船舶的CNM的计算,通过AIS报告其位置和导航状态,主动和空闲船的数量以及车队的平均速度。为了强调运输路线和运营模式的重大变化,我们还计算和比较了全球和局部密度图。我们将2020年的移动性水平与前几年的流动性水平进行比较,假设将实现不变的增长率,即使不是为了获得Covid-19。爆发后,我们发现所有类别的商业运输中的海上流动性下降了。除少数例外,从3月到6月,最严重的限制是有效的,通常可以观察到活动。我们量化了容器船的迁移率变化在-5.62%和-13.77%之间,干散装量在 +2.28%和-3.32%之间,湿额的潮湿量在-0.22%和-9.27%之间,客运流量之间的迁移率在-0.22%和-9.27%之间,在-19.57%和-42.77%之间。这项研究是史无前例的,因为该数据集的独特性和完整性是由50000艘船在全球范围内广播的数万亿AIS消息,这一数字与世界商人车队的规模紧密相似。
To prevent the outbreak of the Coronavirus disease (COVID-19), many countries around the world went into lockdown and imposed unprecedented containment measures. These restrictions progressively produced changes to social behavior and global mobility patterns, evidently disrupting social and economic activities. Here, using maritime traffic data collected via a global network of AIS receivers, we analyze the effects that the COVID-19 pandemic and containment measures had on the shipping industry, which accounts alone for more than 80% of the world trade. We rely on multiple data-driven maritime mobility indexes to quantitatively assess ship mobility in a given unit of time. The mobility analysis here presented has a worldwide extent and is based on the computation of: CNM of all ships reporting their position and navigational status via AIS, number of active and idle ships, and fleet average speed. To highlight significant changes in shipping routes and operational patterns, we also compute and compare global and local density maps. We compare 2020 mobility levels to those of previous years assuming that an unchanged growth rate would have been achieved, if not for COVID-19. Following the outbreak, we find an unprecedented drop in maritime mobility, across all categories of commercial shipping. With few exceptions, a generally reduced activity is observable from March to June, when the most severe restrictions were in force. We quantify a variation of mobility between -5.62% and -13.77% for container ships, between +2.28% and -3.32% for dry bulk, between -0.22% and -9.27% for wet bulk, and between -19.57% and -42.77% for passenger traffic. This study is unprecedented for the uniqueness and completeness of the employed dataset, which comprises a trillion AIS messages broadcast worldwide by 50000 ships, a figure that closely parallels the documented size of the world merchant fleet.