The Preventive Advantage: Evolving Biofouling Management Alongside a Changing Ocean
Executive Summary
Ocean thermal conditions in the Southwest Pacific reached unprecedented levels in 2024 (World Meteorological Organization, 2025), fundamentally altering the biological and chemical environment in which marine vessels and infrastructure operate. These changes manifest as accelerated biofouling accumulation rates and enhanced electrochemical corrosion processes that directly impact operational performance, asset lifecycle costs, and biosecurity responsibilities across all maritime sectors.
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The Dual Challenge: Performance Impacts and Biosecurity Risk
Understanding the Operational and Environmental Threat
Biofouling represents a convergent challenge affecting both vessel performance and global marine ecosystems. The accumulation of biological organisms on submerged surfaces, from initial bacterial biofilms to mature macrofouling communities, creates measurable operational penalties while simultaneously serving as one of the primary vectors for the transfer of invasive aquatic species (IAS) globally (International Maritime Organization, 2023).
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Performance and Economic Impact
Research demonstrates that even light biofilm layers create surface roughness that increases frictional resistance by more than 10% (Arndt et al., 2021). As fouling progresses to heavy calcareous formations like barnacles and tubeworms, power requirements can increase by up to 80% to maintain speed. Computational fluid dynamics analyses confirm frictional resistance can increase by 85.7% under moderate fouling conditions (Choi et al., 2024).
This drag penalty forces a choice between reduced operational speeds or dramatically increased fuel consumption. For commercial vessels, where fuel constitutes approximately 50% of operating costs, these increases have direct and severe economic impact (Arndt et al., 2021). Beyond straight-line performance, biofouling significantly impairs vessel manoeuvrability, increased hydrodynamic volume and surface roughness degrade rudder effectiveness and turning response, extending turning circles and compromising station-keeping capability critical for offshore support vessels, research platforms, and operations in confined waters (Choi et al., 2024).
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Biosecurity and Environmental Impact
Biofouling represents far more than an operational inconvenience. The accumulation of biological organisms on submerged vessel surfaces has been identified as one of the primary vectors for the transfer of IAS globally (International Maritime Organization, 2023; GloFouling Partnerships, n.d.). Research indicates that shipping may be responsible for 55% to 70% of established coastal and estuarine invasive species introductions, with biofouling potentially contributing to more introductions than ballast water in many regions (GloFouling Partnerships, n.d.).
The introduction of harmful aquatic organisms to new environments poses major threats to marine biodiversity, with consequences that extend across ecological, economic, and social dimensions (International Maritime Organization, 2023). Invasive species disrupt native ecosystems by outcompeting indigenous species for resources, introducing novel pathogens, and fundamentally altering habitat structures. The consequences are dual in nature, where the irreversible degradation of native ecosystems exacerbates direct economic losses, which reach hundreds of millions of dollars annually through devastated fisheries, damaged coastal infrastructure, and disrupted maritime operations (GloFouling Partnerships, n.d.).
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The Accelerating Environmental Context
While biofouling has always presented biosecurity risks, environmental changes are dramatically intensifying the challenge. The Southwest Pacific documented water temperatures in 2024 that exceeded all historical records (World Meteorological Organization, 2025; The Strategist, 2025). These elevated temperatures accelerate fouling organism growth rates, shorten reproductive cycles, and extend seasonal activity periods that historically showed winter dormancy (Arndt et al., 2021).
Ocean acidity has increased by approximately 30 per cent since the pre-industrial era, with surface ocean pH declining by 0.1 units, from approximately 8.2 to 8.1 (NOAA, n.d.; IAEA, n.d.; Secretariat of the Pacific Community, 2022). Because the pH scale is logarithmic, this seemingly small change represents a substantial increase in hydrogen ion concentration. This acidification not only accelerates corrosion (The Strategist, 2025) but also affects the survival and establishment success of transported species in new environments. Marine heatwaves trigger increased frequency and intensity of algal blooms, creating pulses of elevated fouling pressure that contribute directly to IAS transfer during vessel transit (World Meteorological Organization, 2025).
The key finding: Regions previously characterised by moderate fouling pressure are now experiencing tropical-level biofouling rates (Arndt et al., 2021). This geographic expansion of high-risk zones means vessels operating across broader areas face elevated biosecurity responsibilities.
A Fundamental Shift in Perspective: The Case for Intentional Biofouling Management
The maritime industry is at a technological and operational inflection point. Legacy maintenance cycles, designed for a different era, are fundamentally misaligned with today's operational and environmental realities. Our warmer, more acidic oceans, and increasing commercial demand, have rendered historical fouling accumulation models obsolete, making traditional drydocking schedules both economically and operationally unsustainable (The Strategist, 2025).
The transition from reactive to preventive maintenance represents more than operational change. It requires reconceptualising how we think about biofouling. This transition aligns with proven asset integrity models already established in aviation and advanced manufacturing, where condition-based and predictive maintenance are standard. The maritime sector's adoption is now driven by the convergence of advanced innovative technology, clear operational cost-benefit analyses, and stringent environmental compliance requirements (International Maritime Organization, 2023).
The accelerating environmental changes documented in this analysis make this transition more urgent. Fouling rates are increasing. Corrosion is accelerating (The Strategist, 2025). The gap between historical maintenance assumptions and current reality widens each year. Organisations that adapt will maintain competitive advantage. Those that don't will face escalating costs, declining asset performance and decreased navigational freedom.
The implementation of this strategy centres on integrating technology-enabled, in-water sustainment within a structured maintenance framework. This approach is not a simple substitution for drydocking but an essential component of a holistic asset integrity ecosystem. Its objective is the continuous maintenance of hydrodynamic efficiency and the mitigation of corrosion, thereby optimising drydocking intervals. This systematic management of biofouling directly enhances operational performance, ensures regulatory compliance (International Maritime Organization, 2023, 2025a, 2025b), and transforms a variable operational cost into a controlled, strategic investment in asset value and competitive positioning.
A Future Powered by MarineStream
MarineStream provides the integrated systems and expertise required to implement this operational transition. We deliver the complete technological infrastructure and subsea hardware necessary for effective, internationally compliant in-water biofouling management, customised to specific asset profiles and operational patterns. Our approach integrates biofouling control within a broader technology-enabled underwater sustainment scope. We partner with industry leaders to achieve definitive outcomes: enhanced operational efficiency, guaranteed regulatory compliance, and demonstrable environmental stewardship.
MarineStream's advanced filtration hardware has reintroduced compliant in-water hull cleaning to global operations. Developed to meet the highest national and international biosecurity requirements, including IMO Biofouling Guidelines and local port state regulations, our systems enable in-water intervention in lieu of dry docking. This capability ensures continuous operational availability while maintaining full regulatory compliance through captured cleaning processes and blockchain-verified reporting. MarineStream provides the technological infrastructure to execute hull cleaning as part of a comprehensive underwater sustainment strategy, delivering both immediate operational benefits and long-term asset performance optimisation.
MarineStream transforms asset monitoring from an outsourced service into a core operational capability. Our remotely operated vehicles, integrated with the MarineStream platform, provide complete control over inspection data, enabling in-house predictive maintenance and strategic lifecycle management. This unified system delivers transparency through live streaming, enhances operational efficiency, and ensures traceability and compliance with immutable blockchain-backed reporting.
Effective subsea asset management requires a tailored operational model. We provide the integrated technology and validated operational framework to support either strategic approach: developing internal capabilities or establishing a managed service partnership. Our role is to ensure your chosen sustainment strategy is executed effectively and at peak performance.
→ Ready to implement IMO-aligned biofouling management? Contact MarineStream to discuss how our technology-enabled monitoring and compliance solutions can protect your operational access and demonstrate biosecurity leadership.
Conclusion: The Path Forward
The data is unequivocal. Environmental conditions have shifted beyond historical parameters (World Meteorological Organization, 2025), and with them, the fundamental calculus of marine asset management has changed. Ocean warming and acidification are not transient challenges awaiting resolution. They represent the new operational baseline against which all maintenance strategies must be measured (The Strategist, 2025; NOAA, n.d.; IAEA, n.d.).
The question confronting vessel operators and asset managers is not whether to adopt preventive biofouling management, but rather how rapidly they can implement systematic programmes that align maintenance practices with current environmental realities.
We are witnessing the emergence of a new leadership benchmark, where biofouling management is treated not as a maintenance cost, but as a central pillar of operational excellence. The organisations that pivot to this strategic model first will define the competitive landscape of tomorrow.
References and Sources
Arndt, E., Robinson, A., and Hester, S. (2021). Factors That Influence Vessel Biofouling and its Prevention and Management. Final Report for CEBRA Project 190803. Melbourne, VIC: Centre of Excellence for Biosecurity Risk Analysis (CEBRA). Available at: https://cebra.unimelb.edu.au/__data/assets/pdf_file/0010/3822922/Endorsed-CEBRA-190803-Final-Report.pdf
Choi, J., et al. (2024). Resistance and speed penalty of a naval ship with hull roughness. Ocean Engineering. Available at: https://strathprints.strath.ac.uk/90318/1/Choi-etal-OE-2024-Resistance-and-speed-penalty-of-a-naval-ship-with-hull-roughness.pdf
Davidson, I., Cahill, P., Hinz, A., Kluza, D., Scianni, C., Georgiades, E. (2021). A Review of Biofouling of Ships' Internal Seawater Systems. Frontiers in Marine Science. Available at: https://www.frontiersin.org/journals/marine-science/articles/10.3389/fmars.2021.761531/full
GloFouling Partnerships. (n.d.). Biofouling and Invasive Aquatic Species. Available at: https://www.glofouling.imo.org/the-issue
International Atomic Energy Agency (IAEA). (n.d.). What is Ocean Acidification? Available at: https://www.iaea.org/newscenter/news/what-is-ocean-acidification
International Maritime Organization. (2023). 2023 Guidelines for the control and management of ships' biofouling to minimize the transfer of invasive aquatic species. Resolution MEPC.378(80). Available at: https://wwwcdn.imo.org/localresources/en/KnowledgeCentre/IndexofIMOResolutions/MEPCDocuments/MEPC.378(80).pdf
International Maritime Organization. (2025a). Guidance on in-water cleaning of ships' biofouling. MEPC.1/Circ.918. Available at: https://www.imo.org/en/ourwork/environment/pages/biofouling.aspx
International Maritime Organization. (2025b). Marine Environment Protection Committee (MEPC 83), 7 to 11 April 2025. Available at: https://www.imo.org/en/mediacentre/meetingsummaries/pages/mepc-83rd-session.aspx
International Maritime Organization. (n.d.). Biofouling. Available at: https://www.imo.org/en/ourwork/environment/pages/biofouling.aspx
National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration (NOAA). (n.d.). Ocean Acidification. Available at: https://www.noaa.gov/education/resource-collections/ocean-coasts/ocean-acidification
Secretariat of the Pacific Community. (2022). Ocean acidification: A tide of challenges for Pacific Islanders. Available at: http://www.spc.int/updates/blog/2022/08/ocean-acidification-a-tide-of-challenges-for-pacific-islanders
The Strategist - Australian Strategic Policy Institute. (2025). More hull fouling, more corrosion: effects of warmer South Pacific waters on navies. Available at: https://www.aspistrategist.org.au/more-hull-fouling-more-corrosion-effects-of-warmer-south-pacific-waters-on-navies/
World Meteorological Organization. (2025). Pacific 2024 Climate Report. Available at: https://wmo.int/sites/default/files/2025-06/Pacific_2024%20final.pdf