Fugro announced a partnership with the Shell Ocean Discovery XPRIZE to support the oil major's global, three-year ocean mapping competition.
The competition is looking for rapid, unmanned and high resolution ocean mapping technologies. The partnership with Fugro is to support the competition's first round of testing.
Fugro’s role is to provide high resolution deepwater baseline bathymetry data over a 500sq km competition area. The company has recently collected more than 1 million sq km of high resolution bathymetry data per year globally, predominantly in water depths greater than 750m.
Fugro will acquire the seafloor data using state-of-the-art techniques and equipment, including a deepwater autonomous underwater vehicle (AUV) equipped with sonar-based survey systems.
This information will be used to "ground-truth" the work of 21 semi-finalist teams advancing to Round 1 of the competition. The challenge for the competing teams is to deploy their inventions to operate at 2000m ocean depth, mapping 20% of the project site at 5m resolution, and identifying at least five archaeological, biological or geological features, all within a 16-hour timeframe.
“Fugro’s global subsea experience ensures that we will have baseline maps of the highest standards, against which the judging panel can compare the data collected by competing teams,” Jyotika Virmani, PhD, prize lead and senior director of XPRIZE’s Energy and Environment Group said.
Given that 85% of the world’s oceans is yet to be mapped using modern survey techniques, there is a lot of seabed yet to cover.
“Fugro is working on a number of fronts to help close this data gap,” said David Millar, Fugro’s director of hydrographic services for the Americas. “Our partnership with the Shell Ocean Discovery XPRIZE is especially exciting, as the competition could result in game-changing technology that will be for the benefit of industry and our understanding of the world’s oceans.”
In addition to increasing the speeds and methods by which baseline bathymetry could be acquired, the competition offers a special US$1 million incentive sponsored by the US National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration for systems that can also detect and track biological and chemical signals. Such advancements would improve emergency response and foster the discovery and monitoring of new marine life and underwater communities.
First round testing for semi-finalist teams is scheduled to commence in September 2017. Fugro will acquire, process and deliver the high resolution baseline datasets in advance.