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The Work of the International Hydrographic Organisation

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  23 November 2009

Extract

Real Admiral Ritchie, who retired on 1 September 1982 after ten years as President of the Directing Committee of the International Hydrographic Bureau in Monaco, here looks at the work of the International Hydrographic Organisation, more particularly in those areas which are of direct interest to the navigator.

In 1919 an International Hydrographic Conference was called in London at which representatives from the hydrographic services of twenty-four nations attended. After discussing at length cooperation in the fields of charting, Notices to Mariners, and the international exchange of hydrographic data, it was resolved to set up a permanent Bureau. The Conclusion to the Conference reads as follows:

The International Hydrographic Bureau whose formation is here suggested fulfils, in our opinion, an imperative need. Assuring a close and permanent association between the National Hydrographic Services, it allows of the cooperation of the efforts of all maritime Powers to furnish navigators with more perfect and up-to-date nautical documents. Without limiting in any way the liberty and initiative which should be retained by the Offices of the countries concerned, the new organisation will avoid unnecessary effort and wasteful expenditure; it will create amongst the surveyors of the different countries a fruitful rivalry and personal relations which are frequently of great value. We are convinced that its rôle will constantly increase in the future, and that its establishment will tend greatly to advance the Science of Hydrography.

The italics in the above statement are mine. These words still reflect the most important aim of the International Hydrographic Organisation over sixty years later.

Type
Research Article
Copyright
Copyright © The Royal Institute of Navigation 1983

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