This press release announces that Spain's coastal authority, Salvamento Maritimo, uses SPOT Trace satellite tracking devices to help train search and rescue teams. SPOT Trace units are attached to human-like dummies and buoys to track their movement in ocean waters and provide data on drifting patterns. This data helps Salvamento Maritimo understand how people and debris move in the ocean due to currents and winds. SPOT Trace is also used to track buoys during oil spill disaster recovery training to better understand how oil spreads. The tracking data has improved Salvamento Maritimo's rescue and disaster response procedures and effectiveness.
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Spains Coastal Authority uses SPOT Trace for search and rescue training
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PRESS RELEASE
Date: 15th
June 2017
Title: Spain’s Coastal Authority uses SPOT Trace for search and rescue training
Salvamento Maritimo also uses SPOT to analyse ocean currents to help in oil spill disaster recovery
Dublin, Ireland (June 15, 2017) – Globalstar Europe Satellite Services Ltd., a wholly owned subsidiary
of Globalstar Inc. (NYSE MKT: GSAT) and the leader in satellite messaging and emergency notification
technologies, announced today that Spain’s coastal authority, Salvamento Maritimo, has chosen SPOT
Trace™ as an essential tool to help train its search and rescue teams as well as oil spill disaster
recovery crews.
Salvamento Maritimo attaches small SPOT Trace units to human-like dummies that are placed in the
ocean to simulate emergency search and rescue situations. By capturing and analysing the tracking data
from SPOT Trace as the dummy moves in the water, Salvamento Marítimo can determine how far a
person in water might drift due to ocean waves, currents and winds using the Search & Rescue Model
and Response System (SARMAP) application. By accurately predicting the movement of victims in the
ocean, Salvamento Maritimo can refine and enhance its rescue procedures and life-saving operations.
SPOT Trace is also used during the training of Spain’s oil spill disaster recovery crews. SPOT Trace
devices are attached to buoys and the tracking data gives researchers and crews in training a better
understanding of how an oil spill spreads.
The suggestion to use a satellite tracking device came from academic and research institutions, including
Puertos del Estado, which is the Spanish agency responsible for maintenance of physical oceanographic
parameters in Spanish waters and is one of several Salvamento Marítimo academic partners.
Salvamento Marítimo acquired several SPOT Trace units to assess how effective they would be in
providing accurate tracking data to understand how different objects drift in the ocean. The devices were
initially tested in waters off Spain’s northern Asturias region.
The initial tests were successful. Further tests and training exercises were soon carried out in other parts
of the country and now SPOT is helping in training operations throughout Spain’s coastal safety
organisations.
The data which SPOT transmits via satellite is pivotal to assessing the validity of theoretical ocean
current modelling programmes. When assumptions and predictions of wave patterns and drift are ratified
by SPOT data, rescuers can be more confident that their operations and processes are informed and that
personnel are well trained and prepared to respond in an emergency.
“The ability to understand how wind and currents behave plays an important role in search and rescue
training and can help us improve the effectiveness of our recovery processes,” said Christian de Lera
Fernández, Head of e-learning and research, development and integration projects at Salvamento
Marítimo’s training centre.
2. “Also, thanks to the oil spill training exercises we have undertaken with SPOT, we have a better
understanding of how quickly oil can spread and we can more accurately assess how and where to
deploy our disaster recovery resources,” he added.
Salvamento Marítimo is not the only organisation that has recognised the benefits of using SPOT for
oceanographic research. In April 2017, Globalstar announced that University of Miami Rosenstiel School
of Marine and Atmospheric Science (UM) is deploying 550 SPOT Trace satellite trackers in its ongoing oil
spill research. Studies undertaken with the Consortium for Advanced Research on Transport of
Hydrocarbon in the Environment (CARTHE) forecast the spread of oil dispersed into the
environment in order to help inform and guide response teams. This research follows UM’s earlier project
launched in 2012 which monitored oil behaviour in the BP Gulf of Mexico spill.
Gary King, SPOT Regional Sales Manager, EMEA commented: “With its ubiquitous satellite coverage
and reliability, SPOT is playing an important role in helping international disaster recovery organisations
and research institutions to better understand ocean behaviour. Globalstar technology is enabling
researchers and rescuers to collect valuable oil spill data in regions where alternative networks can’t
reach and is contributing to life-saving training operations.”
About SPOT
SPOT LLC, a subsidiary of Globalstar, Inc., provides affordable satellite communication and tracking
devices. SPOT messaging devices use both the GPS satellite network and the Globalstar network to
transmit text messages and GPS coordinates. Since 2007, SPOT has provided peace of mind by
allowing users to remain in contact completely independent of the mobile phone network and has initiated
over 5,000 rescues worldwide. For more information, visit FindMeSPOT.eu.
Note that all SPOT products described in this press release are the products of SPOT LLC, which is not
affiliated in any manner with Spot Image of Toulouse, France or Spot Image Corporation of Chantilly,
Virginia.
For media information, please contact:
Gavan Murphy
Globalstar Europe Satellite Services Ltd.
gavan.murphy@globalstar.com
Cynthia Ritchie
White Tiger Communications
cynthia@whitetigercommunications.net
+44 (0)20 3514 2525
This press release was distributed by the International Trade Council.
International Trade Council Member news does not necessarily represent the views of the Trade Council
nor the Council's employees. For more information on the International Trade council please visit
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