Maritime & Ship Management

ISPS Code

International Ship and Port Facility Security Code

The International Ship and Port Facility Security (ISPS) Code is the IMO's mandatory security framework for ships and port facilities, adopted in 2002 and effective from 1 July 2004 in response to 9/11. It is implemented as Chapter XI-2 of SOLAS and applies to passenger ships, cargo ships of 500 GT and above, mobile offshore drilling units, and port facilities serving international shipping.

The Code requires three security levels (1=normal, 2=heightened, 3=exceptional threat), a designated Ship Security Officer (SSO) on each ship, a Port Facility Security Officer (PFSO) at each port, a Ship Security Plan (SSP) and a Port Facility Security Plan (PFSP), both subject to audit and approval by the flag state or its recognised security organisation.

ISPS compliance generates extensive documentation — security drills, exercise records, incident reports, restricted area access logs — all of which must be retained and audit-ready.

Also known as
ISPS Ship Security Code
Related terms
Where this matters at WHIZTEC
All glossary terms
. $wz_csp_nonce = $GLOBALS['wz_csp_nonce'] ?? ''; ?>

Voyez WHIZ dans votre opération.

Un Architecte de Solutions adaptera une démonstration de 30 minutes à vos modules, intégrations et plan de déploiement. Sans engagement.

Réserver une Démo Parler aux ventes