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Why Sexual Harassment Awareness Training Is Essential for Today’s Maritime Workplace

Why Sexual Harassment Awareness Training Is Essential for Today’s Maritime Workplace

As vessels, ports, and offshore facilities diversify and globalise, the need for clear, consistent sexual harassment awareness training has never been greater. In early 2026, we will be proud to release our fully online, Introduction to Sexual Harassment Awareness for the Maritime Workplace course, a new course designed specifically for maritime professionals, crews, supervisors, and shoreside personnel. This course addresses a long-standing gap in industry training and supports a healthier, safer, and more productive maritime environment.

A Unique Environment Requires Industry-Specific Training

Life and work at sea differ from traditional workplaces in every way. Crew members live where they work. Teams operate in close quarters for extended periods. Cultural backgrounds vary widely. Hierarchical structures are deeply ingrained.

These factors create a unique environment, one in which misunderstandings can escalate quickly, and inappropriate behaviour may go unreported due to isolation, fear of retaliation, or uncertainty about what constitutes harassment.

Generic corporate training simply doesn’t reflect these realities. Our new course is built around scenarios, challenges, and communication dynamics that maritime workers actually encounter, whether on deck, in the engine room, on the bridge, or in port.

The Growing Demand for Safer, More Inclusive Maritime Workplaces

Global maritime organisations, unions, and regulators have increasingly emphasised psychological safety, inclusion, and the prevention of harassment and bullying. This shift is driven by several industry-wide trends:

  1. Recruitment & Retention Challenges

As the industry works to attract new talent, particularly women and younger workers, addressing harassment is essential to building trust and ensuring that seafarers feel safe and valued.

  1. Regulatory & Organisational Expectations

Many flag states, operators, and charterers are strengthening their policies and requiring documented training related to workplace conduct. Compliance isn’t just a legal responsibility; it’s a professional standard.

  1. Improved Safety & Operational Performance

Research consistently shows that crews who feel respected communicate better, experience fewer conflicts, and perform more effectively during routine work and emergencies.

What This New Course Offers

Our 2026 Introduction to Sexual Harassment Awareness for the Maritime Workplace course is designed to be accessible, practical, and immediately applicable. Key features include:

  • Clear definitions and examples tailored to maritime operations
  • Realistic case studies drawn from life at sea and port environments
  • Guidance for bystanders and supervisors on how to respond appropriately
  • Strategies for building respectful onboard culture
  • Confidential reporting guidance adapted to maritime settings
  • Interactive assessments that reinforce learning and comprehension

The course is suitable for all ranks and roles, and it supports the development of stronger, safer crew cultures.

Why This Matters Now

The maritime industry is at a turning point. As technology advances, global shipping expands, and crew demographics evolve, the expectation for professional, respectful behaviour is becoming just as important as technical competence.

Harassment undermines trust, damages morale, and jeopardizes operational safety. Awareness training is not a “nice to have”, it is essential risk management, leadership development, and human-cantered safety practice.

By equipping maritime professionals with the knowledge and confidence to recognise and address harassment, we strengthen not just individual vessels, but the industry as a whole.

Looking Ahead

We’re excited to support organisations and seafarers as they build safer, more inclusive workplaces in 2026 and beyond. Our new course will help crews foster respect, improve communication, and uphold the highest standards of professionalism; whether at sea or ashore.

If your company or crew is committed to creating a healthier and more respectful maritime culture, this training is an important step toward that goal.

Every Maritime Workplace Deserves to be Safe

Every seafarer deserves respect. Make harassment prevention a core part of your safety culture. Register your crew for our 2026 training program and lead the change our industry needs. Contact us to discuss how we will assist your company in providing this training.

An Article By: Steve Richards | VIRSEC Director