To
deliver a reliable, efficient and cost-effective
network of Aids to Navigation for the benefit
and safety of all Mariners
The
Northern Lighthouse Board's principal concern is
with safety: the safety of the mariner at sea;
the safety of our own people employed in or around
some of the world's most dangerous coastlines;
and the safety of environment in which we, and
those who come after us, must live and work.
The
Northern Lighthouse Board has long been at the
forefront of navigational technology. The programme
to automate all major lighthouses was successfully
completed on 31 March 1998. The Board completed
the conversion of all its statutory lit buoyage
to solar power in 1997. Thereafter, an ongoing
programme of modernisation and overhaul will continue
well into the 21st Century.
The
Board has always prided itself on its efficiency
and cost effectiveness. For the future, it aims
to provide a reliable, low-maintenance and cost-effective
network of Aids to Navigation, backed by a safe,
efficient and professional support organisation.
The
joint General Lighthouse Authorities' policy is
based on the continuing requirement for the foreseeable
future for a base-level of traditional visual aids
to navigation, in the form of lights, beacons and
buoyage, but a decreasing reliance of these "traditional" aids
to navigation and an increasing reliance on high-precision
radio aids. The Joint GLAs' policy also provides
a mechanism for the ongoing review of tasking and
policies.
Board's Objectives 2008/2009