Port securityBuoy system helps protect U.S. ports
With
America’s ports, waterways, and vessels handling more than $700 billion
in goods annually, a terrorist attack on the system would have a
crippling effect on the U.S. economy; to help
mitigate these threats, Intellicheck Mobilisa has developed Aegeus, a
series of buoys which have the capability of creating a surveillance
perimeter that detects incoming vessels, biological substances, and even
nuclear bombs
A deployed IDN buoy // Source: IDN
With
America’s ports, waterways, and vessels handling more than $700 billion
in goods annually, a terrorist attack on the system would have a
crippling effect on the U.S. economy. DHS
officials have long sought to bolster port security, but have struggled
to implement effective strategies that keep America’s waterways safe.
Last year a Government Accountability Office (GAO) report found that despite positive strides made in improving security, the U.S.
Coast Guard’s radars and tracking systems “generally cannot track small
vessels and resource constraints limit the Coast Guard’s ability to
meet security activity goals.”
In light of the attack on the USS Cole in
2000 when a small vessel laden with explosives rammed into the Navy
Destroyer killing seventeen and injuring thirty-nine, this is a
serious concern.
To help mitigate these threats, Intellicheck Mobilisa has developed
Aegeus, a series of buoys which have the capability of creating a
surveillance perimeter that detects incoming vessels, biological
substances, and even nuclear bombs.
“It’s designed to detect anything in the air, on the surface of the
water, or below the surface from the water and it can detect things like
radiation, any kind of toxins, or bio-chemical releases,” explained
Steve Williams, the CEO of Intellicheck Mobilisa.
Each buoy comes with a customizable suite of sensors that include
radiation detectors, chemical and biological sensors that test the air
and the water, acoustic monitoring, and radars. Once the buoys detect an
anomaly, it will send an alert to an operations center where personnel
can use the buoy’s daytime, infrared, or low-light cameras to view the
situation in real-time.
“It effectively pushes out your security perimeter and ultimately gives you more time to respond to an incident,” Williams said.
As an example, Williams pointed to their potential deployment with
the Navy. “If a carrier strike group were to drop a few buoys, they
would be able to detect some unusual movement or when ships are
approaching earlier so they can respond accordingly,” he said.
The buoys are also equally at home resting in waters closer to
America’s coastline. One of the company’s buoys is currently deployed in
the Potomac River several miles outside of the U.S. capital giving the Coast Guard an advance warning of any potential incoming threats.
Williams said that the buoy has a range that covers “shore to shore,”
so the Coast Guard can see “any and every boat coming up and down
the river.”
The company initially began developing Aegeus in 2009 as part of a
$20 million Navy research and development program. Since then the
company has expanded the system to include homeland security uses as
well as environmental monitoring capabilities.
The buoys can be outfitted with several different arrangements of
sensors depending on their use. For instance seven buoys are currently
deployed in Puget Sound off the coast of Washington and help the
National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration (NOAA) monitor wind shear.
Using the data from the buoys NOAA can now
identify microbursts and wind shear ahead of and after a storm and
report them to pilots in the air. In addition, the buoy deployed in the
Potomac is located near a bridge, so NOAA now
has the ability to advise local authorities on when it should close the
bridge if the winds before or after a storm are too dangerous. The
devices also measure water temperature, pH balance, and can even detect
oil spills.
Each buoy generates its own power with the help of solar panels and relies on the company’s Wireless Over Water (WOW)
technology to transmit data. With this system in place, the buoys can
act as a wireless communications network for ships instead of
satellite relays.
The buoys start at roughly $100,000 and can cost as much as $500,000, depending on the sensors it is equipped with.
Moving forward the company is competing for another Navy contract and
Williams says that the buoys have piqued the interest of
port operators.
“We’re seeing significant interest from port operators who want the
ability to see ships coming into their ports before they get in and tie
them up,” he said.
The company recently completed its research and development phase and is now entering its deployment and operation phase.
http://www.homelandsecuritynewswire.com/buoy-system-helps-protect-us-ports
Penulis : drs.Simon Arnold Julian Jacob
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