| ARGOMARINE: 24-hr Detector Passes First Test |
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As part of the project's Mid-Term Steering Committee meeting, scientists from the nine project partners (which include NURC, the Tuscan Archipelago National Park and CNR), have conducted a joint experiment of the instruments developed date. The instruments tested include: hearing sensors and autonomous vehicles, acting in synergy with satellites, radar stations and sophisticated computers. As part of the test the unauthorised access of a craft with the potential to cause an oil spill was simulated. In the next phase of the project, the system will be enriched with new sensors, "electronic noses" able to "sniff" and catalogue the emissions coming from oil spill. These sensors will be installed on floats and autonomous underwater vehicles (AUVs). "NURC and the Tuscan Archipelago National Park have been cooperating for many years now to activities of environmental interest" said Edoardo Bovio, NURC Business Development Manager. "NURC is proud of the achievements obtained by the ARGOMARINE consortium which will transfer in the civilian field technologies deleloped for military purposes". The ARGOMARINE project, which was chosen in 2009 from 350 proposals is funded through the European Union's 7th Framework Programme for Research and Technological Development. With 3.3 million euros in funding, the partners will work together to minimise pollution risks in the overcrowded Mediterranean basin, where every year 60 significant accidents occur, fifteen of them characterised by hydrocarbon spills at sea (PNAT data). More info please visit http://www.argomarine.eu/
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Automatic Oil spill Recognition and Geopositioning integrated in a Marine Monitoring Network.
















