The announcement was made today at the Clean Gulf Conference at the Tampa Convention Center in Tampa, Fla., where both MSRC and Ocean Imaging technology are present.
"It takes a complete systems approach to effectively respond to oil spills," said Steve Benz MSRC president & CEO. "While much of the regulatory compliance focus to date has been on skimmer throughput capacity, the reality is that the skimmer is just one component – and not necessarily the most important component in combating oil spills. It is imperative to determine the location of oil that is most recoverable – whether day or night – and stay in that oil as time moves on. Getting it wrong can mean that response resources have largely been wasted."
Benz added, "Our new arrangement with Ocean Imaging, available exclusively through MSRC, will significantly enhance our overall effectiveness during a response."
MSRC has developed a multi-tiered approach to remote sensing in order to complement and expand on traditional human aerial spotting. This approach is based on the concept that "height of eye" and "vertical viewing angle" are key to any surveillance. The technology provided by Ocean Imaging Corporation enables MSRC to significantly enhance its day and night aerial remote sensing through infrared/multi-spectral technology.
"We are pleased to partner with MSRC as the leading U.S. Oil Spill Removal Organization (OSRO)," Dr. Jan Svejkovsky, president of Ocean Imaging, said. "Ocean Imaging has a decades-long history in unique, innovative remote sensing technology development and its transfer to operational use, including ocean condition maps for fishing fleets to monitoring changes in coastal ecosystems to tracking spilled oil at sea."
"Our technology was used nearly every day for over three months on the Deepwater Horizon spill," Svejkovsky added, "and we have capitalized on that experience with further enhancements going forward."
Ocean Imaging systems were designed to be portable in nature. As such, they will be mounted in MSRC contracted planes on all three coasts for rapid deployment. The oil characterization capability of these systems will be used for real time tactical use in spills, providing a second set of eyes for determining actionable oil versus sheens, filtering out false targets that are always a challenge to the human eye, and providing information at night to expand the operating window.
Proprietary Ocean Imaging technology also makes available wide-area oil mapping that can be a critical feed to the Common Operating Picture (COP) at the strategic response level.
"Having a lifetime of experience working on transferring science research results to operational use, this collaboration with MSRC is by far one of the most needed and immediate," Svejkovsky commented.
Founded in 1984, Ocean Imaging is a full service remote sensing/GIS company providing aerial and satellite data acquisition, processing and analysis services, GIS data base development and field data sampling. As our name implies, much of our work centers on the ocean environment, wetlands and coastal areas. However, our activities have expanded to include terrestrial regions for agriculture, forestry and land-use applications.
MSRC is the largest OSRO operating in the United States. It is funded by the Marine Preservation Association (MPA), whose members include oil and transportation companies operating in the U.S. MSRC's comprehensive capabilities, including systems-based mechanical recovery, controlled burning, and dispersant spraying, are available to MPA members. MSRC was the largest OSRO on the Deepwater Horizon event and has extensive experience with oil spills from tanker, barge, cargo and container vessels, pipeline spills, and natural disasters such as hurricanes and flooding.
For more information on MSRC please visit www.msrc.org.
SOURCE The Marine Spill Response Corporation (MSRC)
Contact: |
The Marine Spill Response Corporation (MSRC)
Judith Roos, (703) 326-5617 Email Contact Web: http://www.msrc.org |