The U.S. Coast Guard Research and 
Development Center (RDC) plans to test and evaluate oil spill detection 
and recovery technologies in the Arctic Ocean as part of Operation 
Arctic Shield 2013. A multi-agency team of engineers and scientists led 
by RDC researchers will conduct a series of demonstrations in September 
aboard Coast Guard Cutter Healy to test and evaluate capabilities of 
various unmanned aerial systems (UAS), an unmanned underwater vehicle 
(UUV) and a remotely operated vehicle (ROV) to search for simulated oil 
spills. 
“This analysis builds on several years of 
oil in ice work, unmanned systems evaluations and underwater research 
conducted by the RDC, including a series of winter tests previously 
conducted in the Great Lakes,” stated Rich Hansen, the Arctic 
coordinator at the RDC and chief scientist for this mission. “It is 
quite an accomplishment to bring together this multi-agency team with 
such a wide array of experience and expertise.” 
Capt. Alan Arsenault, the RDC’s commanding 
officer, added, “These organizations have been great to work with, and 
the RDC anticipates future Arctic technology collaboration like this one
 that will include involvement by both public and private sector 
partners.”
To support planned UAS testing, the RDC has
 assembled a team to include National Oceanographic and Atmospheric 
Administration (NOAA) personnel operating a Puma UAS; University of 
Alaska, Fairbanks researchers operating Puma systems funded by The 
Center for Island, Maritime, and Extreme Environment Security; 
representatives from the Department of Homeland Security Science and 
Technology Center of Excellence and personnel from the U.S. Air Force 
Special Operations Command.  The team will also assess the capabilities 
of the UAS to support other Coast Guard operational missions while 
onboard the Healy.
Tests will also include operation of a 
SeaBED UUV by Woods Hole Oceanographic Institute (WHOI) researchers. The
 UUV involvement is part of a research effort funded by the Bureau of 
Safety and Environmental Enforcement (BSEE). Members from BSEE have been
 working with WHOI researchers to establish methods to detect, measure, 
and map oil under, or encapsulated within, Arctic sea ice. Tests will 
build on work that has been performed by BSEE to evaluate several 
candidate sensors to establish a sensor suite capable of detecting and 
quantifying the thickness of oil from below the ice. The emphasis during
 this evaluation will be on system deployment and recovery, two-way 
communication, ice-bottom mapping and search pattern development.
NOAA personnel will also employ the 
Environmental Response Management Application online mapping tool that 
integrates both static and real-time data for use during the exercise. 
The Coast Guard is providing one of its brushed skimmer systems to 
simulate recovery operations at the ice edge and a Video Ray PRO 4 ROV 
to provide a vantage point from below to observe and document skimming 
operations. 
Coast Guard Cutter Healy, commissioned in 
2000, is the nation’s newest and largest polar icebreaker.  The cutter 
is 420 feet long and has extensive scientific capabilities.  Homeported 
in Seattle, the cutter’s primary mission is scientific support, and as a
 Coast Guard Cutter, it is capable of performing critical Coast Guard 
missions, including search and rescue, ship escort, marine environmental
 protection, and the enforcement of laws and treaties in polar regions.
Arctic Shield 2013 is an operational 
exercise being conducted by the Coast Guard’s 17th District, which 
highlights the Coast Guard’s plans to protect the maritime community in 
the Arctic and to strengthen partnerships with federal, state, local, 
tribal and community members. This operation gives the Coast Guard an 
opportunity to exercise its capabilities to ensure the organization has 
the right resources to conduct Arctic operations.
Post to be found at:
http://www.maritime-executive.com/article/US-Coast-Guard-to-Test-Oil-Spill-Technologies-in-Arctic-2013-08-13/
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