Exclusive: Singapore wants robots to run its ports
Interview with Kenneth Lim, Chief Technology Officer of the Maritime and Port Authority of Singapore.

The port industry has a traditional structure, but tech is turning this upside down. Officers can now work with fintech applications to reduce the amount of paperwork required; and partner with healthcare startups to keep tabs on the wellbeing of crew who have spent a long time away from home.
Lim wants to look outside the maritime sector in providing solutions, such as in the use of UAVs. “Drones seem to be very mature on land. But in the sea actually they face a different problem; they cannot land autonomously because of the sea state,” explains the chief technology officer.
[blockquote]“They cannot land autonomously because of the sea state."[/blockquote]
Local Startups can help tackle this problem. “What are the other solutions that are used in other sectors? Or can I have very niche kind of solutions that can be used for specific problems?” These are the kind of questions Lim wants industry players to start asking.
The MPA is bringing the port to startups by “plugging into the bigger startup ecosystem,” with Pier71 (Port Innovation Ecosystem Re-imagined) - a programme which bridges startups with the maritime industry. Lim says it is about creating an environment where you can matchmake startup technology providers to specific pain points in the industry.
Practical steps not theories
Lim wants to bring startups together with experienced older sailors and let them experiment together. He is doing that through his ‘Living Labs’ programme, where workers can try out the latest ideas. “You have all these technology, but you need to bring them down to a level where maritime colleagues can see and feel, “ he says.
Yet a perennial problem may yet hold things back, Lim warns. Cyber security is “the second side of the same coin”. There are so many files and records in the port system, it’s essential to be proactive in stopping data getting hacked.
International cooperation is crucial. Ports share lessons on threats with one another. They can also work to subvert time-sensitive ransomware by making use of different time zones, he says. “This becomes a global community who work together to prevent some of these cyber liabilities or threats from disrupting the whole maritime [industry] because it has a big repercussion to the supply chain, logistics and end users”, he warns.
Cyber risks exist across every industry, however, and it isn’t holding back the MPA. The whole industry is changing where traditional players are feeling the heat - and not just from their competitors, but from customers who are coming up with their own solutions.
He is determined to keep his colleagues in the know, and up to date with the latest tech. “Otherwise they may think that [change] is five years down the road, but actually it’s just six months away”.
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