COVID-19 Impact on Global Maritime Mobility
Leonardo M. Millefiori, Paolo Braca, Dimitris Zissis, Giannis, Spiliopoulos, Stefano Marano, Peter K. Willett, Sandro Carniel

TL;DR
This study analyzes the global impact of COVID-19 on maritime mobility using extensive AIS data, revealing significant reductions in shipping activity across various sectors during lockdown periods.
Contribution
It provides a comprehensive, data-driven analysis of maritime mobility changes during COVID-19, utilizing a large-scale AIS dataset to quantify impacts on global shipping patterns.
Findings
Maritime mobility decreased by up to 42.77% for passenger ships.
Container ships experienced a mobility drop of 5.62% to 13.77%.
The dataset includes over a trillion AIS messages from 50,000 ships.
Abstract
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…
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