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New Project to Meet Surveillance Requirements in the Remote Pacific

New Project to Meet Surveillance Requirements in the Remote Pacific . Persistence Surveillance Objectives: Protect U.S. resources, including fisheries, habitats and protected species Monitor the state of ocean resources

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New Project to Meet Surveillance Requirements in the Remote Pacific

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  1. New Project to Meet Surveillance Requirements in the Remote Pacific Persistence Surveillance Objectives: • Protect U.S. resources, including fisheries, habitats and protected species • Monitor the state of ocean resources • Combine existing technologies in a novel, scalable, cost-effective configurations

  2. Persistence Surveillance Concept • Combines existing capabilities including: • Satellites • Vessel reporting systems (AIS and VMS) • Air and surface patrols • Over-the-horizon radars • Autonomous Underwater Vehicles • Merges two existing capabilities in a new way: • Autonomous surface platform (Wave Glider) • Passive acoustic Ultra-short Baseline (USBL)

  3. Persistence Surveillance - Interested Partners • Federal Agencies • United States Coast Guard/Dept. of Homeland Security • National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration • Non-governmental Organizations • Google, Marine Conservation Institute, Sylvia Earle, WildAid • Private Industry • Liquid Robotics, Teledyne Benthos • Academia • University of Hawaii – CIMEES Center for Island Maritime Extreme Environmental Security and Stevens Institute of Technology National Center for Secure and Resilient (CSR) Maritime Commerce

  4. Persistent Surveillance Design – Two Phases • Phase I: Proof-of-concept for integrated Wave Glider and USBL technologies • Engineering integration to produce WG/USBL units • Multiple, iterative deployments with three units in 2013 ranging in duration from hours to days • Acoustic algorithm development • Enhancement of USBL firmware based on acoustic data analysis • Field trials with USCG and vessels of opportunity • Integration of WG/USBL data with other relevant datasets (AIS, VMS, HF radar, satellite)

  5. Persistent Surveillance Design – • Phase II: Demonstration Project • 2014 earliest target deployment for 6-12 months • Objective – Demonstrate threat assessment capabilities of system • presence and behavioral characteristics of vessels • persistent monitoring • Additional units - up to 9 WG, USCG airborne assets • Considered Site: • Marianas Archipelago recommended at 2/2012 Workshop • Remote ocean area of international interest • Feasible staging from Guam - relatively close to bases/infrastructure • Other areas can be considered

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