Occupation baseline ยท Model 1.0
Is the Deep-sea Fishery Worker role AI-proof?
The Deep-sea Fishery Worker role is partly exposed to AI, but it is more likely to be reshaped than removed as a whole. Outcomes depend heavily on the person's task mix, seniority and work setting.
Direct answer
Exposure is not replacement probability
The Deep-sea Fishery Worker role is partly exposed to AI, but it is more likely to be reshaped than removed as a whole. Outcomes depend heavily on the person's task mix, seniority and work setting. The 68/100 figure is an occupation-level starting point. It does not mean that 68% of workers will lose their jobs or that 68% of the role will certainly disappear.
Role context
What Deep-sea Fishery Worker work involves
Deep-sea fishery workers engage in commercial fishing operations along the Irish coast, including operating fishing nets, handling catches, and maintaining vessels.
More exposed
Tasks AI can reach
- Routine digital administration
- Standard information processing
- First-pass drafting
Human advantage
Tasks that resist removal
- Contextual judgment
- Trust and accountability
- Physical or unusual situations
Augmentation
Where AI may help
- Faster research
- Decision preparation
- Workflow assistance
Why your result may differ
A title cannot describe the whole job
Two people called Deep-sea Fishery Worker may have different exposure. Routine digital inputs and repeatable rules raise automation pressure. Accountability, trust, unusual cases, physical presence and senior decision-making generally raise resilience. The personal assessment adjusts this baseline around those factors.
Baseline inputs come from the site's compiled occupation dataset. Scores are editorial planning indicators, not official labour-market forecasts. See the methodology, formulas and limitations.
Measure the work you actually do
Adjust this baseline using your task mix, career level and workplace context. No account is required and answers remain in your browser.
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