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IMO FAL Committee Approves Maritime Digitalization Strategy and Cybersecurity Measures

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Summary

The IMO Facilitation Committee (FAL) at its 50th session (23-27 March) approved the IMO Strategy on Maritime Digitalization, establishing digitalization as an overarching IMO policy to be integrated into the Organization's Strategic Plan, with the goal of improving efficiency, reducing administrative burdens, and strengthening ships' environmental performance. The Committee also approved amendments to the Annex of the FAL Convention mandating cybersecurity measures for maritime single windows (MSWs) and permitting Advance Passenger/Crew Information (API) and Booking/Reservation Information (BRI) in the maritime sector. Both amendment packages will be submitted for adoption at FAL 51 in 2027 with an expected entry into force date of 1 January 2029.

“These amendments require Contracting Governments to implement mandatory cybersecurity measures to protect maritime single windows, in line with national legislation.”

IMO , verbatim from source
Why this matters

Maritime single window operators and port authorities should initiate gap assessments against the approved cybersecurity amendment requirements now, as the 1 January 2029 entry-into-force date allows approximately three years for implementation planning and national legislative alignment. The FAL Convention's API/BRI provisions, once adopted, will require updates to passenger and crew data collection systems at ports.

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What changed

The IMO FAL Committee approved two sets of amendments to the FAL Convention Annex at its 50th session: mandatory cybersecurity measures for maritime single windows (MSWs) and the introduction of API and BRI information exchange in maritime transport. The Committee also endorsed the IMO Strategy on Maritime Digitalization as an overarching policy to be applied across all IMO bodies, emphasizing interoperability, system standardization, data-sharing, and effective data governance.\n\nMaritime administrations, port authorities, and shipping companies will need to prepare for these changes, as both amendment packages are expected to enter into force on 1 January 2029 following adoption at FAL 51 in 2027. Governments implementing maritime single windows will be required to implement cybersecurity measures consistent with national legislation to protect these systems from cyber risks.

What to do next

  1. Contact your national maritime administration for implementation guidance
  2. Review and align national legislation with FAL Convention cybersecurity amendment requirements

Archived snapshot

Apr 23, 2026

GovPing captured this document from the original source. If the source has since changed or been removed, this is the text as it existed at that time.

31 March 2026

Facilitation Committee approves digitalization strategy and cyber security measures

IMO continues progress on digitalization to enhance maritime safety and security

​IMO's Facilitation Committee (FAL) deals with matters related to the facilitation of international maritime traffic, including the arrival, stay and departure of ships, persons and cargo from ports.

The Facilitation Committee (FAL) of the International Maritime Organization (IMO) has approved a global strategy for maritime digitalization as well as cybersecurity measures for maritime single windows.

IMO Strategy on Maritime Digitalization

Meeting in London for its 50th session (23 - 27 March), the Committee approved the IMO Strategy on Maritime Digitalization, aimed at transforming global maritime operations. It emphasizes interoperability, system standardization, data-sharing and effective data governance across organizations and jurisdictions.

The Strategy establishes maritime digitalization as an overarching IMO policy, to be integrated into the Organization’s Strategic Plan and applied across all IMO bodies and processes. This includes engagement with maritime administrations, the shipping industry and seafarers.

The goal is to improve efficiency and reduce administrative burdens by facilitating the sharing, verification and renewal of seafarer credentials, passenger identification and ship certificates. The Strategy also uses data to enhance navigation safety and strengthen ships’ environmental performance, promoting human-centred systems that are resilient to disruptions, cyber threats and environmental challenges.

Following FAL Committee approval, the Strategy will be shared with the IMO’s Legal, Marine Environment, and Maritime Safety Committees for further review before being submitted for adoption to the IMO Assembly’s 35th session in 2027.

Cybersecurity for maritime single windows

As digitalization increases, so do cyber threats that could cause operational, safety, or security failures. To address this, the FAL Committee approved amendments to the Annex of the Convention on Facilitation of International Maritime Traffic, 1965 (FAL Convention). These amendments require Contracting Governments to implement mandatory cybersecurity measures to protect maritime single windows, in line with national legislation.

Maritime Single Windows (MSWs) are one-stop digital platforms established by maritime authorities to facilitate information exchange between ships and government agencies. The amendments aim to protect these systems - which are key to streamlining procedures for arrival, stay and departure at ports - from cyber risks.

The amendments will be submitted for adoption at the next Committee session (FAL 51) in 2027, with expected entry into force on 1 January 2029.

Introduction of API and BRI in maritime transport

The FAL Committee approved amendments to the Annex of the FAL Convention that will allow Contracting Governments to implement Advance Passenger and Crew Information (API) and Booking and Reservation Information (BRI) information in the maritime sector. These measures represent a notable step forward in strengthening the management of crew and passenger information, enhancing both border control processes and operational efficiency.

The amendments will be submitted for adoption at FAL 51 in 2027, with expected entry into force on 1 January 2029.

Other key decisions

The Committee also:

  • Approved a new version of the IMO Compendium on Facilitation and Electronic Business, including new datasets, for adoption at FAL 51;
  • Adopted amendments to the Annex of the FAL Convention related to vaccinations and medical care for crews during international public health emergencies. These recommend that governments consider IMO guidance on crew vaccination within national programmes and ensure access to medical care during public health emergencies of international concern and will enter into force on 1 January 2028;
  • Adopted new Guidelines on the prevention of access by stowaways and the allocation of responsibilities to seek the successful resolution of stowaway cases.
    A full meeting summary will be published in due course. See also:

  • About the Facilitation Committee

  • FAL 50 photo gallery

  • Secretary-General's opening and closing remarks

Named provisions

IMO Strategy on Maritime Digitalization Cybersecurity for Maritime Single Windows API and BRI in Maritime Transport FAL Convention Annex Amendments

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Last updated

Classification

Agency
IMO
Published
March 31st, 2026
Compliance deadline
January 1st, 2029 (984 days)
Instrument
Rule
Branch
International
Legal weight
Binding
Stage
Final
Change scope
Substantive

Who this affects

Applies to
Government agencies Transportation companies Healthcare providers
Industry sector
4831 Maritime & Shipping
Activity scope
Maritime digitalization Port administration Cybersecurity compliance
Geographic scope
European Union EU

Taxonomy

Primary area
Transportation
Operational domain
Compliance
Topics
Cybersecurity Data Privacy Consumer Protection

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