Thailand acquires Search
And Rescue solution based on Thales Alenia Space
advanced technology
January 17 2023
Thales Alenia Space has signed a
contract with prime contractor Appworks to provide
Thailand with a complete Search And Rescue (SAR)
operational system based on the COSPAS-SARSAT
MEOSAR1 Service.
The solution will make it possible
to detect and locate distress signals from COSPAS-SARSAT
beacons on land, in the air and at sea instantaneously,
over a radius of 2,500 km centered around
Bangkok, mainly using the Galileo satellite positioning
system. This solution also includes delivery of a
Mission Control Centre (MCC) dedicated to managing and
distributing alerts, and a Rescue Coordination Centre
(RCC) to manage all search-and-rescue activities for
armed forces, coastguards, sea rescue and other
services.
Thales Alenia Space’s innovative
MEOLUT Next product, which employs a phased array
antenna, will give Thailand unrivaled performance. Where
conventional MEOLUT systems rely on six large parabolic
antennas covering an area about the size of a football
field and are only capable of receiving signals from six
satellites (one per antenna), the MEOLUT Next solution,
with its compact
antennas taking up less than 6 square meters, tracks up
to 30 satellites, thus significantly enhancing distress
beacon detection and expanding coverage. MEOLUT Next is
capable of detecting distress signals from up to 5,000
km away.
The solution is already operated by
the main users of COSPAS-SARSAT (USA, Canada, France,
the European Union, and Togo) and is today helping to
save lives, as recently demonstrated in the Indian
Ocean. On November 18, 2022, a MEOLUT Next antenna
picked up a distress signal from
the Asteria, a yacht skippered by Tapio Lehtinen
competing in the Golden Globe race, 2,000 km southwest
of La Réunion, well outside the range of VHF radio and
other communications systems.
The Asteria was sinking fast, and
Tapio just had time to put on his survival suit and jump
into his
liferaft before activating his COSPAS-SARSAT distress
beacon. Within only four minutes, MEOLUT Next had
pinpointed the boat’s location to guide rescue crews to
the scene and save the skipper.
“This is the first contract to
deploy our MEOLUT Next solution in Asia, which is now
present on the four continents of the Americas, Europe,
Africa and Asia.” said Benoit Broudy, Vice President
Navigation at Thales Alenia Space in France. “Thales
Alenia Space sees space as a new horizon, helping
humankind to build a better, more sustainable life on
Earth. Saving lives is something that ties in with our
company’s aspirations, as demonstrated by our
contribution to COSPAS-SARSAT
Search and Rescue services.”
1 MEOSAR : Medium Orbit Search And
Rescue
COSPAS-SARSAT
COSPAS-SARSAT is an
intergovernmental organization founded by Canada, the
United States, Russia and France. Operational since 1988
and deployed in more than 40 countries around the world,
this satellite-based search-and-rescue distress alert
detection and information distribution system is best
known for detecting and locating emergency beacons
activated by aircraft, ships and hikers in distress.
Today, almost 1 million ships and 300,000 aircraft are
equipped with COSPAS-SARSAT distress beacons. To date,
the COSPAS-SARSAT service has saved more than 57,000
lives in more than 17,000 search-and-rescue events. In
the last few years, COSPAS-SARSAT has helped save an
average of seven lives every day.
13 & 14 June 2023
Fullerton Hotel
Sydney
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