Crew in orange and white PPE gathered at a muster station beside lifeboat gear for a SOLAS drill

crew safety

What Is SOLAS? Safety of Life at Sea Explained for Crew

Written for seafarers Reviewed for accuracy by crew who have stood the watch.

SOLAS means the International Convention for the Safety of Life at Sea. For crew, it is not an abstract regulation. It shows up at muster stations, lifeboat drills, fire doors, bridge equipment, radio checks, emergency lighting, and the way a ship prepares people to survive when something goes wrong.

On board, safety is not a slogan. A deck officer, engineer, rating, cruise crew member, cadet, steward, or port worker meets it through procedures, drills, signs, alarms, certificates, inspections, and the daily habit of keeping the vessel ready.

The short answer

SOLAS sets minimum international safety standards for the construction, equipment, and operation of ships. The International Maritime Organization describes SOLAS as one of the most important treaties for the safety of merchant ships, with the 1974 version entering into force on May 25, 1980.

That matters because ships move across flags, ports, terminals, weather systems, and jurisdictions. Crew need a common safety language when the ship is at sea, alongside, under inspection, or preparing for emergency response.

Where crew actually meet SOLAS

Most seafarers do not experience SOLAS as a document. They experience it as a muster list posted in the alleyway, a lifeboat drill before departure, a fire team assignment, a watertight door, a GMDSS radio check, a lifejacket inspection, or a familiar alarm pattern that cuts through ship noise.

That is the crew-facing truth: safety rules become real only when people know their station, know their role, and can move through the ship under pressure.

Why this connects to 7SHORT1LONG

Seven short blasts followed by one long blast are tied to the general emergency signal used on many ships. 7SHORT1LONG takes its name from that professional signal, not from decoration. The name points toward awareness, muster, discipline, and the shared language of people who work at sea.

That is why our SOLAS content must stay crew-first. The point is not to make safety look stylish. The point is to respect the culture behind the signal.

Read the deeper guide

This article is the short entry point. For a deeper crew-focused explanation, read SOLAS Explained: The Safety Regulations Every Seafarer Knows.

Source note

For the official convention overview, see the International Maritime Organization page on SOLAS, the Safety of Life at Sea Convention. This article is editorial context for crew culture, not legal advice or shipboard training.

FAQ

What does SOLAS stand for?

SOLAS stands for the International Convention for the Safety of Life at Sea.

Why does SOLAS matter to seafarers?

It shapes the safety standards behind drills, life-saving appliances, fire protection, radio communication, navigation safety, and emergency readiness on board.

Is 7SHORT1LONG a safety authority?

No. 7SHORT1LONG is a Crew Culture Brand. The name is inspired by a shipboard emergency signal, but official training, procedures, and regulations always come from the vessel, company, flag state, and relevant authorities.

YES, WE ARE CREW.

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