McMurdo Group’s
Techno-Sciences, Inc.
Chosen for Australia/New
Zealand MEOSAR
Infrastructure
Deployment
September 2, 2014
Techno-Sciences, Inc. (TSi),
a recently-acquired
company of McMurdo
Group, the end-to-end
search and rescue (SAR)
and maritime domain
awareness division of
Orolia (NYSE Alternext
Paris – FR0010501015 –
ALORO), today announced
that it has been chosen
by the Australia
Maritime Safety
Authority (AMSA) and
Maritime New Zealand
(MNZ) to deploy their
next-generation
satellite-aided search
and rescue systems. The
MEOSAR (Medium-altitude
Earth Orbit Search and
Rescue) installations
will be the first such
systems in Asia Pacific
and will significantly
reduce the time between
a distress beacon
activation and the
resulting emergency
alert notification from
hours to minutes,
greatly accelerating the
rescue coordination
effort by SAR personnel.
As a result, survivors
will be found faster and
more lives will be
saved.
“Australia and New
Zealand have two of the
largest SAR regions in
the world, and we are
pleased to help them
create a more responsive
system for those needing
assistance in an
emergency," said
Jean-Yves Courtois, CEO
of Orolia and McMurdo
Group. "This key win and
TSi’s recent deployment
of the only two MEOSAR
systems in another major
SAR region – the United
States – firmly
establish McMurdo Group
as the premier MEOSAR
infrastructure provider
globally."
The deal, which exceeds
€13 million
(approximately $17
million USD), includes a
six-antenna MEOSAR
satellite ground station
system (MEOLUT) in each
country, a common
Mission Control Center
(MCC) in Canberra and
associated support and
maintenance.
Installation is
scheduled to start in
September 2014 and is
expected to take 15
months. The installation
phase will be followed
by a 10-year maintenance
period.
“We are committed to
working with AMSA and
MNZ to implement a
comprehensive search and
rescue solution based on
state-of-the-art
technology and supported
by best-in-class
customer services
including training,
consultation and
maintenance,” added
Jean-Luc Abaziou, CEO of
TSi and head of McMurdo
Group’s SAR
Infrastructure Business
Unit. “This focus on
support will optimize
uptime and ensure the
safety of individuals
whether in maritime,
aviation or outdoor
recreation.”
In a typical
satellite-based search
and rescue scenario,
ships, aircraft or
individuals transmit
distress signals from an
emergency location
beacon via satellite to
a fixed ground receiving
station, or local user
terminal (LUT). The
ground receiving station
calculates the location
of the emergency and
generates an alert for
the appropriate rescue
authorities. Today, the
beacon-to-alert process
depends on a limited
number of Low-altitude
Earth Orbit (LEO)
satellites and may take
several hours before a
position is confirmed.
The development and
implementation of MEOSAR
will reduce this time to
minutes.
“Australia has the
second largest number of
registered distress
beacons in the world,”
said AMSA’s Chief
Executive Officer Mick
Kinley. “AMSA is
continually looking to
take advantage of new
technology in its search
and rescue system, and
the MEOSAR system will
allow us to detect and
respond to beacon
activations in a more
timely manner. The
awarding of the contract
to TSi has been the
result of a rigorous
tender process, and AMSA
is confident its
engagement of TSi will
enable AMSA to stay at
the forefront of
life-saving technology.”
“The Rescue Coordination
Centre New Zealand
(RCCNZ) has a very
challenging task
operating over a vast
search and rescue area,”
said Director of
Maritime New Zealand
Keith Manch. “MEOSAR
will provide even
greater confidence for
those operating in the
region – whether on
land, sea or in the air
– that the staff of
RCCNZ are supported by
the latest in SAR
technological
innovation. We are
confident in TSi’s
abilities to design,
develop and install a
MEOSAR system that will
be at the center of our
search and rescue
operations in years to
come.”
TSi, which was acquired
by McMurdo Group in May
2014, has been
instrumental in the
development of the
COSPAS-SARSAT
international
satellite-based SAR
program, which has
helped to save nearly
37,000 lives worldwide
since 1982. The company
is also actively
involved in MEOSAR, the
next-generation
COSPAS-SARSAT system,
which will greatly
improve the existing SAR
process with
near-instantaneous
detection,
identification and
location of emergency
distress beacons. TSi
installed the world’s
first operationally
ready six-channel MEOLUT
in 2011 for the U.S.
National Oceanic and
Atmospheric
Administration (NOAA) in
Hawaii and earlier this
year completed a second
NOAA MEOLUT installation
in Miami, Florida.
MEOSAR, currently in its
Demonstration and
Evaluation phase, is
expected to have Initial
Operational Capability
in 2016 and Full
Operational Capability
by 2018. MEOSAR will use
SAR-enhanced Galileo
(Europe), GPS (US) and
GLONASS (Russia)
satellite constellations
for greater global
coverage and includes
innovative end-user
beacon functionality
such as a return-link
service on Galileo
satellites to
acknowledge distress
signal receipt and
provide ongoing rescue
effort status.
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