The safety of ship navigation depends on how accurately the position of the vessel has been ascertained.
While transiting open seas or coastal waters, narrow canals, river passages, or port and harbour approaches, the basic foundation of navigation lies in position fixing.
Various methods are available for position fixing, including visual bearings, radar fixes, terrestrial and celestial observations and GPS fixes.
Each of these methods can be used in combination or alone to verify against each other and ascertain the ship’s position with the required levels of precision and accuracy depending upon the vessel’s location.
For example, in open seas where traffic density is scarce, a celestial observation or GPS fix is an acceptable method for position fixing; however, in coastal congested water, traffic separation schemes, or narrow channels, canals, and river passages, radar, visual, or terrestrial bearings are more reliable than GPS fixes.
While transiting a traffic lane, following a traffic separation lane, or passing a shoreline/rock, a close-by vessel must be kept on the planned track. Thus, the cross-track distance should be zero or kept to a minimum as the available sea room is less to avoid a hazard or danger.
Parallel indexing is a technique used as a measure to monitor the progress of a vessel on the track to minimise the cross-track distance, and to keep the vessel at a safe distance from the shoreline or rock.
The basic principle of this method is that to maintain and follow a particular course – a bearing line drawn parallel to the original course with a known and fixed perpendicular distance between both lines is used as a reference.
The increase or decrease of the perpendicular distance between the bearing lines drawn parallel to course-line and the ship’s position at any time will indicate cross-track deviation from the initial planned course and thus advise a mariner if he/she is falling out of a traffic lane, entering a traffic separation zone or closing into a navigational danger.

The reference point from which the bearing line parallel to the course line is drawn is taken as a fixed buoy, lighthouse, headland, jetty, fixed platform or fixed radar conspicuous object. Thus, the imaginary line drawn parallel to the course to steer from a fixed object is always at a fixed distance from it.
While a ship follows a course to steer, parallel indexing ensures it always remains at a fixed distance from a hazard. Thus, parallel indexing is a method to alert a mariner that he has come close to a navigational hazard.
Parallel indexing technique can be used as it is provided in the options menu of marine radar where distance between parallel lines can be fixed and it can also be set to maintain safe distance
The reference point from which the bearing line parallel to the course line is drawn is taken as a fixed buoy, lighthouse, headland, jetty, fixed platform or fixed radar conspicuous object. Thus, the imaginary line drawn parallel to the course to steer from a fixed object is always at a fixed distance from it.
While a ship follows a course to steer, parallel indexing ensures it always remains at a fixed distance from a hazard. Thus, parallel indexing is a method to alert a mariner that he has come close to a navigational hazard.
Parallel indexing technique can be used as it is provided in the options menu of marine radar where distance between parallel lines can be fixed and it can also be set to maintain safe distance from two fixed objects simultaneously on either side of a vessel.
Upon selecting Parallel Index lines in the options menu – a set of floating lines parallel to each other appears on the screen. The orientation of these lines can be set by using the EBL marker and the distance between these lines adjusted by the VRM marker.
Another method is to use a floating EBL, which is to be offset and positioned at the hazard or object and aligned parallel to the course to steer.
A floating VRM circle of a fixed radius can be placed on the object so that the course to steer is a tangent to this range circle. As the ship comes inside, the VRM circle gives indication to mariners to alter course to stay at a safe distance from the danger.
Parallel indexing from floating objects cannot be accepted unless they have been first checked for a position. A floating object will not give an accurate position. As an essential part of the passage plan, Parallel indexing is a recommended feature to be incorporated into various legs of the passage.
Solas Ch. V reg. 34, IMP Res. A 893 and OCIMF Guidelines require prudent selection of fixed objects before using them for parallel indexing.
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Source:https://www.marineinsight.com/marine-navigation/parallel-indexing-techniques-for-ship-navigation/
