Airborne Sound Power Levels and Spectra of Noise Sources in Port Areas

Int J Environ Res Public Health. 2022 Sep 2;19(17):10996. doi: 10.3390/ijerph191710996.

Abstract

Airborne port noise has historically suffered from a lack of regulatory assessment compared to other transport infrastructures. This has led to several complaints from citizens living in the urban areas surrounding ports, which is a very common situation, especially in countries facing the Mediterranean sea. Only in relatively recent years has an effort been made to improve this situation, which has resulted in a call for and financing of numerous international cooperation research projects, within the framework of programs such as EU FP7, H2020, ENPI-CBC MED, LIFE, and INTERREG. These projects dealt with issues and aspects of port noise, which is an intrinsically tangled problem, since several authorities and companies operate within the borders of ports, and several different noise sources are present at the same time. In addition, ship classification societies have recently recognized the problem and nowadays are developing procedures and voluntary notations to assess the airborne noise emission from marine vessels. The present work summarizes the recent results of research regarding port noise sources in order to provide a comprehensive database of sources that can be easily used, for example, as an input to the noise mapping phase, and can subsequently prevent citizens' exposure to noise.

Keywords: noise exposure prevention; noise mapping; noise measurements; noise mitigations; noise modeling; noise sources; port noise; research projects; ship noise; sustainable management.

Publication types

  • Review
  • Research Support, Non-U.S. Gov't

MeSH terms

  • Mediterranean Sea
  • Noise*
  • Ships
  • Sound*

Grants and funding

This research was funded by the EU ANCHOR LIFE project—LIFE17 GIE/IT/000562.