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Will Robots Aid Maritime Search and Rescue? (Marine Technology News)
New ICARUS system ready for use from 2016
The ICARUS European project aims to develop robotic tools to assist
crisis intervention teams. Playing a role in developing the maritime
component of this project was NATO Center for Maritime Research and
Experimentation (CMRE), whose assistance including enhanced autonomy and
integration between Unmanned Surface Vehicles and Unmanned Aerial
Vehicles.
On July 9-10, 2015, at the Portuguese Navy Base of Alfeite (Almada) in
Lisbon, 24 Project Partners from nine countries demonstrated the ICARUS
(Integrated Components for Assisted Rescue and Unmanned Search
Operations) system, as final step of the ICARUS European project funded
by the European Commission under the Seventh Framework Program for
Research and Innovation (FP7). Started in 2012, ICARUS has been devoted
to develop advanced robotic platforms, which can support crisis
intervention teams in detecting, locating and rescuing humans in danger,
in maritime and land disaster scenarios. Unmanned Search and Rescue
(SAR) devices offer tools for saving human lives and for speeding up the
SAR process. This is particularly crucial for maritime incidents, in
which survival times are short and during which even SAR teams take
considerable risks.
During the ICARUS final event in Lisbon, the Project Partners coming
from Portugal (CINAV, INESC, ESRI), Spain (EURECAT and INTEGRASYS),
Switzerland (ETHZ), Italy (CMRE, Calzoni), Poland (IMM) and Belgium
(SpaceApplicationServices) demonstrated the effectiveness of the system
in case of maritime accident. “Let’s say that a passenger ship strands
or drowns in high sea, but the atmospherical and maritime conditions do
not allow the search and rescue teams to perform the victims’ rescue
operations in safety,” said Aníbal Matos, researcher from INESC TEC
(INESC Technology and Science) and lecturer at the Faculty of
Engineering of the University of Porto (FEUP), one of the responsible
people for ICARUS Sea Trials in Lisbon 2015. “One solution would be to
use autonomous robots that can help these teams in catastrophic
situations.”
The demonstration included Unmanned Surface Vehicles (USVs) and Unmanned
Aerial Vehicles (UAVs), linked together in a shared robotic network
that enhances interoperability and full collaboration. CMRE intelligent
autonomy tools have been fully integrated into an existing robotic asset
(USV) developed by an Italian company, L3 Calzoni. “Thanks to CMRE
cutting-edge innovative technologies, the system, assisted by an
unmanned salvage boat developed by INESC-TEC, is now capable of full
autonomous SAR operations at sea with minimal human supervision. All the
robots are integrated by means of standard protocols into the ICARUS
robotic network,” explained Stefano Fioravanti, Scientist in Charge for
ICARUS at CMRE.
The system will be ready for use from 2016 when the ICARUS project
officially ends. The Project’s Consortium includes end-users, such as
the Portuguese Navy and the Belgian First Aid and Support Team (B-FAST),
which already showed interest in further exploitation of the
technology, as complementary support tool for SAR teams.