Spain’s Coastal
Authority uses SPOT
Trace for search and
rescue training
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.
“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.