Author
Listed:
- Marko Rosić
(Faculty of Science, University of Split, 21000 Split, Croatia)
- Dean Sumić
(Faculty of Maritime Studies, University of Split, 21000 Split, Croatia)
- Lada Maleš
(Faculty of Humanities and Social Sciences, University of Split, 21000 Split, Croatia)
Abstract
The maritime industry is under increased challenges of balancing operational effectiveness and environmental responsibility. This study examines the application of intelligent agents as a technology that can align these two goals in the triple-bottom-line model that involves social responsibility, environmental footprint, and economic sustainability. An agent architecture taxonomy is outlined and adapted to the maritime industry, distinguishing between reactive, deliberative, hybrid, and multi-agent systems (MAS). The application of these architectures is analysed throughout the maritime domain. In the ship-centric environment, the analysis highlights the role of agents in autonomous navigation, energy-efficient meteorological routing, and predictive maintenance. The analysis in the port and supply-chain domain demonstrates a shift towards decentralized asset orchestration and logistic coordination rather than centralized control. The paper outlines certain barriers to widespread adoption, namely the reality gap of simulation-based training and the lack of transparency in deep-learning models (“black box” problem). The paper concludes by outlining a future research agenda proposing a use of explainable artificial intelligence (XAI), high-fidelity simulation-to-real transfer, and communication protocol standardization to continue the trend of developing strong autonomous capabilities in sustainable maritime logistics.
Suggested Citation
Marko Rosić & Dean Sumić & Lada Maleš, 2026.
"Intelligent Agents for Sustainable Maritime Logistics: Architectures, Applications, and the Path to Robust Autonomy,"
Sustainability, MDPI, vol. 18(7), pages 1-17, March.
Handle:
RePEc:gam:jsusta:v:18:y:2026:i:7:p:3231-:d:1903493
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