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Marine Surveyor Perspective · Lean Management

Explaining 6S Lean Management
from a Marine Surveyor's Perspective

6S extends the familiar 5S approach used in lean management: Sort, Set in Order, Shine, Standardize, and Sustain, with Safety added as the sixth element. For ships, 6S is not only a factory or warehouse housekeeping method. It can also support ship surveys, engine-room rounds, deck operations, maintenance, and onboard safety management. From a marine surveyor's perspective, the point is not whether a ship merely looks clean, but whether it can continue to operate safely, reliably, and efficiently.

5S + Safety Make safety risk control explicit instead of assuming it is implicit.
Onboard condition Observe whether sorting, ordering, cleaning, and standardization are actually maintained.
Safety culture Assess whether the ship can sustain good condition over time.
Why 6S matters onboard

1. Why should marine surveyors care about 6S?

The condition seen onboard often reflects the vessel's maintenance discipline, emergency readiness, and safety management capability.

Common 6S observations onboard

  • Oil stains, leaks, or wet deck plates in the engine room.
  • Tools, spare parts, or removed components left in working areas.
  • Fire-fighting appliances, life-saving appliances, or escape routes blocked.
  • Cables, pipelines, valves, and switches with unclear markings.
  • Dangerous goods, chemicals, or paint stored improperly.
  • PPE not used correctly, or high-risk jobs carried out without proper safeguards.
6S in Ship Survey

2. What 6S means in ship survey practice

For a marine surveyor, each S is not an abstract slogan. It is a management element that can be observed, questioned, verified, and followed up onboard.

1S
SortRemove unnecessary items

Keep only what is needed

Confirm that working areas contain only necessary items, so unnecessary material does not become an accident source.

Survey focus
  • Waste material, old parts, or unnecessary spares in the engine room.
  • Unused ropes, steel pieces, timber, or other loose items on deck.
  • Obstructions around fire stations or life-saving appliances.
  • Expired or unidentified items in the paint locker or chemical locker.
Sort is not just about making the ship look tidy. It reduces tripping, fire, pollution, and blocked-escape-route risks.
2S
Set in OrderA place for everything

Every item has a fixed location

Tools, spares, and safety equipment should have clear locations and be quickly available when needed.

Survey focus
  • Whether tools are stored in designated locations.
  • Whether fire-fighting equipment is readily accessible.
  • Whether lifejackets, breathing apparatus, and stretchers are in assigned places.
  • Whether valves, pipelines, and electrical switches are clearly marked.
  • Whether spare parts are categorized and supported by inventory records.
In an emergency, crew members do not have time to search for equipment. Good ordering improves response speed.
3S
ShineCleaning as inspection

Cleaning is also inspection

Onboard, cleaning is not merely housekeeping. It is part of preventive inspection.

Survey focus
  • Oil contamination on engine-room floor plates.
  • Oil, water, or air leaks from the main engine, auxiliary engines, or pumps.
  • Dust, moisture, or corrosion inside switchboards and control boxes.
  • Blocked deck scuppers or drains.
  • Cleanliness around bilges and oily water separator areas.
Oil marks, water traces, corrosion, and abnormal dust can be early signs of defects or inadequate maintenance.
4S
StandardizeConsistent methods

Make checks and work practices consistent

Shipboard management should not rely only on individual experience. It needs consistent procedures, checklists, and standards.

Survey focus
  • Engine-room round checklists.
  • Maintenance records for fire-fighting and life-saving appliances.
  • Enclosed space entry procedures.
  • Hot work permit procedures.
  • Hazardous chemical management procedures.
  • Deficiency follow-up and corrective action records.
Standardization moves ship management from memory-based practice to system-based practice, but records must match the actual onboard condition.
5S
SustainDaily discipline

Make good condition routine

6S should not be performed only before a survey. It should be part of normal shipboard management.

Survey focus
  • Whether crew members continue routine rounds.
  • Whether deficiencies are tracked and corrected.
  • Whether drills and training are conducted regularly.
  • Whether the master and chief engineer have effective supervision in place.
  • Whether internal audits are effective.
  • Whether similar deficiencies recur.
If the ship is only tidied up before survey, the management system is not mature. Sustain reflects the ship's safety culture.
6S
SafetyThe core element

The core of 6S

A ship is a high-risk workplace. Safety should not be assumed to be covered by 5S. It should be checked and managed explicitly.

Survey focus
  • Whether escape routes are clear.
  • Whether fire-fighting and life-saving appliances are complete and ready for use.
  • Whether slip, burn, pinch, and fall-from-height hazards are controlled.
  • Whether enclosed space entry includes atmosphere testing.
  • Whether hot work is supported by permits and fire watch arrangements.
  • Whether PPE is used correctly.
A clean and tidy ship is not automatically safe, but a genuinely safe ship usually shows good 6S management.
Engine Room Example

3. Example: applying 6S during an engine-room inspection

The engine room is one of the clearest areas for assessing 6S maturity because it combines high temperature, rotating machinery, fuel oil, slip hazards, electrical hazards, and emergency response needs.

6S item What the surveyor checks Possible risk On-site judgement point
Sort Waste parts, oil drums, or miscellaneous items left in the area. Fire, tripping, pollution. Unnecessary items are removed and working areas remain passable.
Set in Order Tools, spare parts, and fire-fighting equipment are stored in designated places. Equipment cannot be found during an emergency. Markings are clear and crew members know where equipment is located.
Shine Oil residue, leakage, or accumulated water. Slips, fire, equipment failure. Cleanliness helps abnormal conditions be detected early.
Standardize Round checklists, maintenance records, and work procedures. Inconsistent work and recurring deficiencies. Records match the actual condition observed onboard.
Sustain Whether the area is kept in good condition over time. Last-minute clean-up before survey and weak daily control. Similar deficiencies do not repeatedly appear and supervision is effective.
Safety PPE, warning signs, isolation, and emergency measures. Personal injury or major casualty. High-risk work is supported by permits, isolation, monitoring, and emergency readiness.
Hierarchy of Controls

4. How 6S relates to the hierarchy of controls

When assessing safety improvements, a surveyor should consider not only whether action was taken, but also whether the control is genuinely effective. The hierarchy of controls helps judge the maturity of risk control.

1Elimination
Remove the hazard directly

For example, remove unnecessary obstructions on deck to prevent crew members from tripping. This is usually the most effective control.

2Substitution
Replace the hazard with a safer method or material

For example, use a lower-hazard cleaning agent instead of a highly volatile chemical to reduce exposure and fire risk.

3Engineering Controls
Isolate the hazard through equipment or design

For example, install guards, non-slip flooring, ventilation, or barriers so that personnel are less likely to contact the hazard directly.

4Administrative Controls
Change the way work is carried out through procedures and management

For example, establish enclosed space entry procedures, hot work permits, round checklists, training, and deficiency follow-up.

5PPE
Protect personnel with equipment

Examples include safety helmets, goggles, safety shoes, gloves, protective clothing, and respirators. PPE is important, but it is usually the last line of defence.

Surveyor's Conclusion

5. A surveyor's conclusion

For ships, 6S is a practical tool that connects onboard safety, quality management, and risk prevention.

6S helps a surveyor assess whether the vessel has:

Onboard condition controlWorking areas are orderly, passable, and inspectable.
Maintenance disciplineEquipment abnormalities can be detected and followed up early.
Safety cultureCrew members maintain safe behaviours during normal operations.
Emergency readinessFire-fighting, life-saving, and emergency equipment can be used immediately.
Deficiency preventionSimilar issues are prevented from recurring.
Operational reliabilityThe risks of accidents, delays, and survey deficiencies are reduced.