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ALSEAMAR Sea Explorer High Performance Underwater Glider at UDT 2015.


| 2015
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UDT 2015 Online Show Daily - Alseamar Sea Explorer Glider
 
 
 
ALSEAMAR Sea Explorer High Performance Underwater Glider at UDT 2015
 
By Patrice Pla
The BRIDGES consortium has won 8 Millions Euros in the latest EU Horizon 2020 competitive funding in the areas of Blue Growth, under priority “Unlocking the potential of seas and oceans”. By funding this Research & Innovation Action, the European Commission clearly supports the emergence of a European champion in underwater glider technology and the miniaturized sensor industry.
     
Alseamar' Sea Explorer underwater glider at UDT 2015Alseamar' Sea Explorer underwater glider at UDT 2015
     
To address the European long-term strategy for sustainable growth in the ocean economy, the Horizon 2020 call ‘Delivering the subsea technologies for new services at sea’ supports the design and delivery of new underwater vehicles capable of increasing the competitiveness of the existing and new offshore economy, to enable sustainable and safe offshore operations by European industries in extreme conditions and to improve the scientific capacity to observe and understand the oceans, the deep sea environment and their resources.

BRIDGES will provide a solution for further understanding, improved monitoring and responsible exploitation of the marine environment while assuring its long-term preservation. This tool consisting of deep ocean gliders that are robust, cost-effective, re-locatable, versatile and easily-deployable, will support autonomous long-term in-situ exploration of the deep ocean over a wide range of spatial and temporal scales.
     
The SeaExplorer vehicle moves through the water by varying its buoyancy, resulting in very long endurance and stealthy actuation. It resurfaces regularly to transmit information back to the operator including its positioning, on the ongoing mission, etc… Pictures: AlseamarThe Sea Explorer vehicle moves through the water by varying its buoyancy, resulting in very long endurance and stealthy actuation. It resurfaces regularly to transmit information back to the operator including its positioning, on the ongoing mission, etc… Pictures: Alseamar
     
The two Deep Explorer gliders to be developed will be built on the European underwater glider Sea Explorer. The Sea Explorer was designed in the frame of a 6-years cooperative R&D programme labelled by the French Marine business and innovation Pôle Mer Méditerranée cluster. The Sea Explorer consortium was composed by the Alseamar company (ex-ACSA) as system architect and the ACRI company as well as public laboratories such as MIO (Mediterranean Institute of Oceanography), the IFREMER (Institut Français de Recherche pour l’Exploitation de la Mer) and the LOV (Laboratoire d’Océanographie de Villefranche-sur-mer). In line with the Sea Explorer programme, the French Pôle Mer Méditerranée cluster has strongly supported the BRIDGES project since the beginning and has officially labelled it BRIDGES.

During BRIDGES, it is planned that the sole European underwater glider Sea Explorer will be modularised and adapted to more diverse operations, able to dive deeper and to carry new sensors that will be developed, while the operational methodology will be modified in such a way that new horizons of services could be opened. The Sea Explorer glider, a rocket-shaped vehicle, typically navigates autonomously in the ocean for months at a low speed (~30km/day) to collect a variety of data and report back to the land station. New Explorer gliders will be improved by: 1) adapting for deep basins (up to 5,000m), 2) implementing a novel payload architecture to increase autonomy and to accommodate the range of sensing capabilities needed, and 3) integrating the associated control support system for single and networked operations (mission behaviour, data management, planning, communications).
     
Alseamar stand at UDT 2015Alseamar stand at UDT 2015
     
The scientific coordinators of BRIDGES are Dr Laurent Mortier from the Ecole Nationale Supérieure de Techniques Avancées (ENSTA-ParisTech) which is part of Armines and Dr Pierre Testor from UPMC. BRIDGES is managed by Armines, a contract research association and partner of the major French Engineering Schools that manages the Horizon 2020 project. The project started in April 2015 and will last 48 months. The consortium is composed of 19 public and private partners from 7 EU countries (SP, PT, UK, FR, NL, D, CY) and 2 associated countries (NO, IS) including: Université Pierre-et-Marie Curie (UPMC), Alseamar, Hydroptics, Natural Environment Research Council (NERC), University of Southampton, BMT Isis Limited, University of Cyprus, Cyprus Subsea Consulting and Services Limited (CSCS), OceanScan – Marine Systems & Technology Lda (MST), Universidade Do Porto, Albatros Marine Technologies S.L., ENITECH GmbH, 52°North Initiative for Geospatial Open Source Software GmbH, Christian Michelsen Research AS (CMR), International Research Institute of Stavanger AS (IRIS), the Hebrew University of Jerusalem (HUJI), Ecorys Nederland BV and the Society for Underwater Technology (SUT).

The Alseamar company has been granted 2M Euro and will play a leading role acting as the leader of the Work Package dedicated to developing a family of two vehicles: one deep glider capable of diving down to 2,400m at a low cost with high TRL levels, and one ultra-deep 5,000m glider version of higher cost and lower TRL levels.

The NERC is another major partner. NERC will lead the enhancement of the glider’s sensing capacities. The main planned sensing modules are for: 1) environmental monitoring for facilitating the effective implementation of an ecosystem-based management under the Marine Strategy Framework Directive, 2) the oil and gas industry, and 3) the deep sea mining industry.

At the end of the project, it is expected that Alseamar will offer the largest range of underwater gliders on the market with qualified sensors packages to fulfil coastal and deep waters users’ needs: Sea Explorer glider (rated 700m), Deep Explorer (2,400m) and Ultra-Deep Explorer (5,000m).

In order to achieve the scientific and technological objectives and meet service requirements, an open dialogue between stakeholders will be developed. In addition, the project will promote the creation of collaborations among miniaturised sensor and underwater platform manufacturers, oil and gas and mining companies, public research entities, and scientific and engineering experts.

Pierre Bahurel, general manager of the French ocean forecasting centre Mercator Ocean and also leader of the recently established Copernicus Marine Service, observed that ”the glider technology has proven to be one of most promising observing techniques to complement other classical in-situ observing systems, such as Argo profilers and moored arrays”. And added: ”A series of deep gliders has a strong role to play in operational oceanography and our knowledge of the oceans.”
     
 
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