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Remote Detection and Maritime Pollution. Chemical Spill Studies. Edition No. 1

  • Book

  • 208 Pages
  • February 2021
  • John Wiley and Sons Ltd
  • ID: 5840776

The detection of marine pollution requires a scientific and operational response to identify contaminants, chemicals and hydrocarbons, and to support contrasting observations. Remote Detection and Maritime Pollution originates from the proceedings of CEDRE Information Day, held on October 13, 2016 in Brest, France. Containing four parts encompassing 13 chapters, this book explores remote detection channels for the multiform marine pollutions of today and of the future. With a focus on transatlantic cooperation, it covers remote detection sensors, the state of the art of maritime surveillance with regard to the interests of national and international authorities, the benefits of response strategy, and geophysical exploration. Future vectors (airplanes, drones, satellites, among others) and sensors (radar, optical, hyperspectral and so on) are also studied. This book is a valuable resource for practical solutions for marine authorities, industries (chemical, energy, aerospace, petroleum, shipping), lawyers and scientists.

Table of Contents

Forewords xi

Part 1. Remote Sensing Means 1

Chapter 1. POLLUPROOF Project 3
Sophie CHATAING, Sébastien ANGELLIAUME, Pierre-Yves FOUCHER, Eldon PUCKRIN and Stéphane LE FLOCH

1.1. Introduction 3

1.2. POLLUPROOF project 4

1.2.1. Objectives 4

1.2.2. Hazardous and noxious substances 5

1.3. Experimental approach 7

1.3.1. Calibration of optical sensors 7

1.3.2. Evaluation of radar, optical and hyperspectral sensors at sea 9

1.4. Conclusion 14

1.5. References 14

Chapter 2. Multifrequency Radar Imagery and Characterization of Hazardous and Noxious Substances at Sea 17
Sébastien ANGELLIAUME, Brent MINCHEW, Sophie CHATAING, Philippe MARTINEAU and Véronique MIEGEBIELLE

2.1. Introduction 17

2.2. Experimentation at sea 19

2.2.1. Radar imagery 19

2.2.2. Chemical products 20

2.2.3. Planning of measurements 22

2.3. Methodology 24

2.3.1. Scattering from ocean surface 24

2.3.2. Detection and relative quantification 26

2.3.3. Oil/water mixing index 27

2.4. Results and discussion 29

2.4.1. Observation of hazardous and noxious substances at sea 29

2.4.2. Detection and quantification of impact on the ocean surface 31

2.4.3. Characterization 34

2.5. Conclusion 36

2.6. Acknowledgments 37

2.7. References 37

Chapter 3. Remote Sensing of HNS using Longwave Infrared Hyperspectral Imaging 41
Eldon PUCKRIN, Dennis DURO, Guillaume GAGNE, Anne-Pier BERNIER, Louis ARMSTRONG and Sophie CHATAING

3.1. Introduction 41

3.2. LWIR hyperspectral remote sensing capability 42

3.2.1. Basin measurements at CEDRE 43

3.2.2. Sea measurements 44

3.3. Detection and identification of HNS using LWIR hyperspectral sensing 46

3.3.1. Detection phenomenology 46

3.3.2. Detection algorithm 48

3.3.3. Basin measurements at CEDRE 48

3.3.4. Sea measurements 51

3.4. Conclusion 53

3.5. References 53

Part 2. Remote Sensing to Support Marine Surveillance Services 55

Chapter 4. Customs Expertise in Remote Sensing 57
Laurent BUIGNET

4.1. Introduction 57

4.2. The aircraft 57

4.3. The equipment 59

4.4. Airborne remote sensing processing 60

4.5. Side-looking airborne radar (SLAR) processing 60

4.6. Infrared and ultraviolet line scanner 61

4.7. Standard detection and investigation 61

4.8. The future, a new multi-mission aircraft 62

Chapter 5. Remote Sensing as Evidence in Court 63
Yann RABUTEAU

5.1. Introduction 63

5.2. Legal framework of the offence and the evidence 65

5.2.1. What the texts say 65

5.2.2. What legal precedents have been set? 67

5.3. Remote sensing: questions and advances 68

5.3.1. Does the verdict of the Traquair case exclude recourse to remote sensing? 68

5.3.2. What answers and advances have been observed? 68

5.4. Conclusion 69

5.5. References 70

Chapter 6. Long-Term Surveillance and Monitoring of Natural Events in Coastal Waters 71
Francis GOHIN

6.1. Introduction 71

6.2. Satellite products for long-term surveillance 72

6.3. Some specific events of natural origin in coastal waters 74

6.4. Conclusion 76

6.5. References 76

Part 3. Remote Sensing to Support the Response Strategy 77

Chapter 7. VIGISAT Ground Receiving Station and EMSA CleanSeaNet Services 79
Guillaume HAJDUCH

7.1. Introduction 79

7.2. VIGISAT ground receiving station and detection of pollution in near-real time 80

7.3. Polluter identification with AIS data flows and drift modeling 83

7.4. References 86

Chapter 8. System-to-system Interface Between the EMSA CleanSeaNet Service and OSERIT 87
Sébastien LEGRAND and Ronny SCHALLIER

8.1. Introduction 87

8.2. The EMSA CleanSeaNet service 91

8.3. OSERIT 94

8.3.1. The OSERIT Oil Spill Model 94

8.3.2. OSERIT visualization tool 96

8.3.3. OSERIT domain 98

8.3.4. OSERIT met-ocean forcing 98

8.3.5. OSERIT oil database 99

8.4. A system-to-system interface between CleanSeaNet and OSERIT 101

8.4.1. Scenario 1: automatically triggered forecast 102

8.4.2. Scenario 2: automatically triggered backtrack 103

8.4.3. Scenario 3: manually triggered forecast 103

8.4.4. Scenario 4: manually triggered backtrack 104

8.5. The Flinterstar incident 105

8.5.1. The incident 105

8.5.2. Monitoring and surveillance of the oil and its fate/behavior 107

8.6. Conclusion 112

8.7. Acknowledgments 112

8.8. References 113

Chapter 9. Optimizing the Use of Aerial Surveillance Assets in Oil Spill Response Operations 115
Charles Henri THOUAILLE

9.1. Introduction 115

9.2. Assumptions and working hypotheses 117

9.3. Experimental protocol: testing the primary hypothesis 118

9.3.1. Technical specifications 118

9.3.2. Operational requirements 119

9.3.3. Choice of SUAS 120

9.3.4. Systematic testing of assumptions 121

9.4. Experimental protocol: underlying assumptions and testing of secondary hypothesis 125

9.5. The case for using SUAS as a force multiplier in spill response coordination 128

9.6. Appendix 1 130

9.7. Appendix 2 131

9.8. References 132

Part 4. Remote Sensing for Exploration 133

Chapter 10. Potential of Imaging UAVs for Coastal Monitoring 135
Marion JAUD, Christophe DELACOURT, Nicolas LE DANTEC, Jérôme AMMANN, Philippe GRANDJEAN, Pascal ALLEMAND and Lucie COCQUEMPOT

10.1. Introduction 135

10.2. Constraints on the survey 136

10.3. Examples of UAV platforms 137

10.4. Survey protocol 138

10.5. Data processing 139

10.6. Examples of applications 140

10.7. Conclusion 142

10.8. References 142

Chapter 11. Use of Remote Sensing Techniques to Survey, Detect and Interpret Hydrocarbon Seeps and Spills for Exploration and Environment 143
Véronique MIEGEBIELLE

11.1. Introduction 143

11.2. Methodology 144

11.3. Offshore facilities monitoring/mining field 145

11.4. Emergency 146

11.5. Perspectives 148

11.6. Conclusion 148

11.7. References 149

Chapter 12. Natural Escapes of Oil in Sedimentary Basins: Space-borne Recognition and Pairing with Seafloor and Sub-seafloor Features 151
Romain JATIAULT

12.1. Introduction 151

12.2. Datasets and methods 153

12.2.1. Data 153

12.2.2. Methods 155

12.3. Results 158

12.3.1. Oil slick mapping 158

12.3.2. Oil migration pathways and horizontal deflection 159

12.4. Conclusion 162

12.5. References 162

Conclusion 167
Stéphane LE FLOCH and Frédéric MUTTIN

List of Authors 177

Index 181

Authors

Stephane Le Floch CEDRE Research Department, Brest, France. Frederic Muttin EIGSI, La Rochelle, France.