Ship structure safety is a necessary condition for safe shipping. While weather and sea conditions cannot be controlled, safety can be improved by ensuring the technical state of the ship is sound and reducing human errors. Over the past 25 years, around 419 bulk carriers have sunk in severe weather, resulting in approximately 2000 crew deaths mostly due to structural failures. Notable disasters like the sinking of the ferry Estonia in 1994 and environmental disasters caused by the tankers Erica in 1999 and Prestige further highlighted the importance of ship structure safety. As a result, organizations like IMO and IACS have developed new risk-based structural standards and rules to minimize the probability of failures and improve safety.