Friday, November 7, 2014

GPS back-up: World War Two technology employed

Many critical instruments on ships rely on GPS

From BBC by Rebecca Morelle


Technology developed during World War Two is to be used as a back-up for GPS.

The General Lighthouse Authorities (GLA) have announced that they have installed a system called eLoran in seven ports across Britain.
The GLA say many critical instruments on ships use Global Navigation Satellite Systems, and if they fail the consequences could be disastrous.
The new system, which is ground rather than satellite-based, is designed to be used in the event of a GPS failure.
"All vessels that sail today are massively dependent on GPS, " Martin Bransby, research and radio navigation manager for the General Lighthouse Authorities of the UK and Ireland, told the BBC's technology programme.
"It is their primary means of navigation - and a massive number of instruments rely on it too.

"If you don't have it, you are dead in the water."

eLoran has been tested in Harwich and Felixstowe - the UK's busiest container port

Testing for eLoran has taken place in Felixstowe, the busiest container port in the UK.
Each year, three million containers are brought in on some of the biggest ships in the world.
Safely manoeuvring these vessels in this packed waterway is vital, and currently the only way to do this is with the help of GPS.
Onboard the Galatea, a ship that is 80m (260ft) long, the GLA have been finding out what happens if the satellite system goes wrong.
Martin Bransby demonstrates a GPS failure by pulling the plug on the ship's receiver.
Within a few seconds, alarms start to sound on the bridge as one by one the instruments stop working.
"This is the gyrocompass - it steers the ship - you can see it starting to fail," says Mr Bransby.
"If we walk over here, this is the radar, and that's not working either. This is the dynamic positioning: it holds the ship's position, that's not working.
"The electronic chart display becomes unusable. Even the ship's clock stops working."
In a series of tests, the GLA have found that almost every bit of kit on the boat uses GPS - even the onboard satellite entertainment system.
Mr Bransby says: "You can imagine standing watch on this ship, it's the middle of the night, it's dark, it's foggy, you are in the English Channel, and then this happens.
"What do you do? You're in a right mess, basically."

On Galatea, a dual eLoran-GPS receiver is now in place

Losing GPS is not a just theoretical problem.
The system works using a fleet of satellites orbiting high above the Earth, but the signal they transmit is weak and can be easily interfered with.
Other sat-nav systems - such as Galileo in Europe and Glonass in Russia - have the same vulnerabilities, says Prof David Last from the Royal Institute of Navigation.
"A little bit of power from a jammer on the frequency used by GPS close to your receiver can deafen it, and it won't be able to hear the GPS signals," he says.
"For example, jamming is a real issue in Korea. There have now been three occasions when the North Koreans have transmitted high-powered jamming in South Korea."
The Sun too can knock satellite systems offline, he adds.
"It starts to transmit radio noise during solar storms, so intense that it either makes GPS positions wobble about or causes GPS to be lost across the entire sunlit side of the Earth."

Particles hurled out by the Sun can knock satellites offline

Until now, there has been no "Plan B" if GPS goes wrong, but the GLA says eLoran will be an important tool.
The technology was developed during World War Two.
The Long Range Navigation system (Loran) was the brainchild of US scientists and was used to guide US Navy warships as battles raged in the Pacific.
After the war ended, it was updated and renamed Loran-C, and adopted by mariners around the world - until GPS took over.
Now though, rebranded as eLoran, its infrastructure has been upgraded to make it more accurate and it is making a comeback.

While GPS transmitters are based in space, eLoran's are based on the ground.
Radio stations transmit long-range radio waves.
They use the same method as GPS to pinpoint position, but there are crucial differences.
Professor Last says: "The neat thing is this: the radio frequencies which eLoran transmits are completely different from those of GPS.
"The power levels, instead of being very weak, are very strong; the propagation of the radio signals is very different."
He adds: "Everything that matters is very different (from GPS) so there is no common mode of failure. The result you get is a plug-and-play replacement for GPS."

A differential-Loran System

[source: International Loran Association. eLoran Definition Document. v1.0, 2007]

The General Lighthouse Authorities have finished installing eLoran in seven ports along the east coast of Britain, completing the first phase of their roll out. It is now in place in Dover, Sheerness, Harwich and Felixstowe, Middleborough, Leith, Humber and Aberdeen.
Onboard the Galatea, Martin Bransby demonstrates how a dual e-Loran and GPS receiver works.
He says: "What happens inside this box is when we see some interference or jamming or a satellite failure, there is an algorithm that decides to swap over to eLoran. And it does that seamlessly."

For now, eLoran is being tested for shipping, but it could also play a role on land for the vast array of systems that use GPS.
Prof Last says a back-up is long overdue.
"Most people think of GPS as the system that runs their car sat-nav and tells their smartphone where it is," he tells the BBC's Click.
"But there is probably no area of industry, of commerce, or telecoms, that isn't now dependent on GPS. And if we lose GPS we lose them all."

This is a shortened version of the 1947 "LORAN for Ocean Navigation"
filmstrip produced by the Coast Guard as a sales pitch to commercial shipping lines to adopt LORAN (as a both a navigational aid and to assist in distress situations).
Updated with a new narration track in place of the distorted period track, the film provides a brief overview of the operational theory behind LORAN.

But the system may never go global.
The US Coast Guard is busy decommissioning the existing eLoran infrastructure.
And in Europe, the governments of Norway and France have said they will cease operations next year.
Commercial companies may take up the reins, but without support from some of the biggest shipping nations, the eLoran safety net may not be around to rescue everyone.

Links :

Thursday, November 6, 2014

Maritime Cloud


The Maritime Cloud is defined as: a communication framework enabling efficient, secure, reliable and seamless electronic information exchange between all authorized maritime stakeholders across available communication systems.

Links :
  • IHO : an overview of the Maritime Cloud
  • NHO : Sharing of information, the Maritime Cloud

Canada CHS update in the Marine GeoGarage

As our public viewer is not yet available
(currently under construction, upgrading to Google Maps API v3 as v2 is officially no more supported),
this info is primarily intended to our B2B customers which use our nautical charts layers
in their own webmapping applications through our GeoGarage API

CHS raster charts coverage

56 charts have been updated (October 31, 2014)
    • 1230 PLANS PÉNINSULE DE LA GASPÉSIE
    • 1310 PORT DE MONTRÉAL
    • 1315 QUÉBEC À/TO DONNACONA
    • 1316 PORT DE QUÉBEC
    • 1430 LAC SAINT-LOUIS
    • 1438 GRINDSTONE ISLAND TO/À CARLETON ISLAND
    • 1509A RIVIÈRES DES PRAIRIES
    • 1509B RIVIÈRES DES PRAIRIES
    • 1510A LAC DES DEUX MONTAGNES
    • 1510B LAC DES DEUX MONTAGNES
    • 2055 FRENCHMAN'S BAY
    • 2110 LONG POINT BAY
    • 2120 NIAGARA RIVER TO/À LONG POINT
    • 2250 BRUCE MINES TO/À SUGAR ISLAND
    • 2260 SARNIA TO/À BAYFIELD
    • 2283A OWEN SOUND TO/À GIANTS TOMB ISLAND
    • 2283B OWEN SOUND TO/À GIANTS TOMB ISLAND
    • 2291 POINT CLARK TO/À SOUTHAMPTON
    • 2312 NIPIGON BAY AND APPROACHES / ET LES APPROCHES
    • 3002 QUEEN CHARLOTTE SOUND TO / À DIXON ENTRANCE
    • 3440 RACE ROCKS TO/À D'ARCY ISLAND
    • 3461 JUAN DE FUCA STRAIT EASTERN PORTION/PARTIE EST
    • 3462 JUAN DE FUCA STRAIT TO/À STRAIT OF GEORGIA
    • 3724 CAAMANO SOUND AND APPROACHES / ET LES APPROCHES
    • 3726 LAREDO SOUND AND APPROACHES
    • 3737 LAREDO CHANNEL - INCLUDING / Y COMPRIS LAREDO INLET AND / ET SURF INLET
    • 3744 QUEEN CHARLOTTE SOUND
    • 3800 DIXON ENTRANCE
    • 3902 HECATE STRAIT
    • 3938 QUEENS SOUND TO/À SEAFORTH CHANNEL
    • 3939 FISHER CHANNEL TO/À SEAFORTH CHANNEL AND/ET DEAN CHANNEL
    • 3941 CHANNELS/CHENAUX VICINITY OF / PROXIMITÉ DE MILBANK SOUND
    • 3986 BROWNING ENTRANCE
    • 4003 CAPE BRETON TO / À CAPE COD
    • 4011 APPROACHES TO/APPROCHES À BAY OF FUNDY/BAIE DE FUNDY
    • 4012 YARMOUTH TO/À HALIFAX
    • 4023 NORTHUMBERLAND STRAIT / DÉTROIT DE NORTHUMBERLAND
    • 4124 LETETE PASSAGE LETANG HARBOUR AND/ET BLACKS HARBOUR
    • 4230 LITTLE HOPE ISLAND TO/À CAPE ST MARYS
    • 4233 CAPE CANSO TO / À COUNTRY ISLAND
    • 4243 TUSKET ISLANDS TO\À CAPE ST MARYS
    • 4278 GREAT BRAS D'OR AND / ET ST PATRICKS CHANNEL
    • 4340 GRAND MANAN
    • 4406 TRYON SHOALS TO/À CAPE EGMONT
    • 4420 MURRAY HARBOUR
    • 4447 POMQUET AND TRACADIE HARBOURS / HAVRES DE POMQUET ET TRACADIE
    • 4449 CHÉTICAMP HARBOUR
    • 4498 PUGWASH HARBOUR AND APPROACHES / ET LES APPROACHES
    • 4514 ST. ANTHONY BIGHT
    • 4641 PORT AUX BASQUES AND APPROACHES / ET LES APPROCHES
    • 4663 COW HEAD TO\À POINTE RICHE
    • 4679 HAWKES BAY \ PORT SAUNDERS\ BACK ARM
    • 4905 CAPE TORMENTINE À/TO WEST POINT
    • 4909 BUCTOUCHE HARBOUR
    • 4920 PLANS BAIE DES CHALEURS/ CHALEUR BAY CÔTE SUD/ SOUTH SHORE
    • 4956 CAP-AUX-MEULES
    • 5135 APPROACHES TO APPROCHES À HAMILTON INLET
    • 5140 SOUTH GREEN ISLAND TO / À TICORALAK ISLAND
    • 7750 APPROACHES TO/APPROCHES À CAMBRIDGE BAY
      So 693 charts (1677 including sub-charts) are available in the Canada CHS layer. (see coverage)

      Note : don't forget to visit 'Notices to Mariners' published monthly and available from the Canadian Coast Guard both online or through a free hardcopy subscription service.
      This essential publication provides the latest information on changes to the aids to navigation system, as well as updates from CHS regarding CHS charts and publications.
      See also written Notices to Shipping and Navarea warnings : NOTSHIP

      Russia and China blamed for blocking Antarctic marine reserve


      From Mongabay

      Another year, another failed attempt to protect a significant chunk of the Ross Sea, which sits off the coast of Antarctica.
      According to observers, efforts to create the world's biggest marine protected area to date were shot down by Russia and China during a meeting in Hobart, Tasmania of the Commission for the Conservation of Antarctic Marine Living Resources (CCAMLR).
      The protected area can only be established by a unanimous vote of the CCAMLR's 24 members and the EU.




      "Since 1959, Antarctica has been recognized as a special place for peace and science.
      It is regrettable that CCAMLR, faced with objections from China and Russia, cannot live up to that promise," said Andrea Kavanagh with Pew Charitable Trusts.
      "Another year of inaction means another year that these near-pristine waters and their remarkable biodiversity are open to the threat of industrial fishing."

      NGA nautical charts for Antarctica with the Marine GeoGarage

      Some observers theorized that geopolitical tensions over Ukraine were to blame for the proposal's failure this year and not the merits of the project itself.
      The Ross Sea has been dubbed the "last ocean" due to its relatively untouched conditions.
      Its waters are home to penguins, whales, seals, and marine birds, including about half of the world's killer whales.
      However, fishing has been ongoing in the sea for Antarctic toothfish (Dissostichus mawsoni) since the 1990s.
      These fisheries have proven controversial with many scientists and conservationists, given that almost nothing is known about the species except that it's a slow-growing top predator—capable of reaching 300 pounds—and is often described as the shark of Antarctica.

      The fish is often sold as Chilean sea bass and is one of the world's most expensive, making it largely available only to wealthier customers.
      At the same time, fishermen are exposed to hugely dangerous conditions and often paid little.



      In total the Ross Sea covers 3.6 million square kilometers (1.9 square miles).
      The current proposal would protect 1.34 million square kilometers (517,000 square miles)—about 37 percent of the total.
      The proposal would ban fishing from most of the protected waters, but allow scientific fishing in certain areas.
      It would also have a fifty year ban on fossil fuels and a forty year ban on mining.
      The Ross Sea protected proposal stems from the U.S. and New Zealand, the latter is already fishing in the remote waters.

      Coulman Island in the Ross Sea.
      Photo by: Michael Van Woert/NOAA.

      This is the fourth time the proposal has failed, even as countries have significantly shrunk the size of the protected area and loosened regulations.
      The Ross Sea wasn't the only loser at the meeting.
      A second proposal for a series four marine protected areas along the East Antarctic coast was also killed.
      These marine reserves would have covered nearly a million square kilometers (386,000 square miles).
      The region is also home to an Antarctic krill fishery.
      Although krill are the base of the marine food chain, these tiny crustaceans are fished for Omega-3 supplements and fish food.
      The one bright spot in the meeting, according to Kavanagh, was further restriction put on the krill industry to better protect penguins.

      "We are pleased that CCAMLR took positive steps to keep some krill fishing away from nesting habitats of penguins, but disappointed that politics trumped the advice from the Scientific Committee to increase observer coverage on all fishing vessels," said Kavanagh.

      Currently, observers—who independently monitor fisheries' catches and practices—are only found on half of the vessels used by krill fisheries.

      Links :

      Wednesday, November 5, 2014

      The 17 areas of Britain where whales, dolphins and sharks need help



      From The Telegraph by Sarah Knapton

      Whales, dolphins and sharks need protection from boats and over-fishing at 17 areas off the British coast, a new report suggests.

      For the first time, the strips of water where large marine life, known as ‘megafauna’, gather to feed, breed and raise their young, have been identified by wildlife experts.
      The sites range from the north east coast of England to Anglesey in Wales and the Irish Sea.
      The Wildlife Trusts is calling for the areas to be awarded special protection because they are "acutely vulnerable" to pollution, commercial fishing and other human activities.

      Joan Edwards, the Wildlife Trusts' head of living seas, said: "There's an urgent need to create protected areas at sea for our ocean giants and ensure a network of sites to safeguard these species for generations to come.
      "The UK has made huge advances in marine conservation in recent years but there is still a significant job to do. Our marine megafauna - whales, dolphins, porpoises and basking sharks - are still under threat.
      "Many are suffering from the impacts, whether direct or indirect, increased boat traffic, marine developments and the more persistent effects of pollution."

       Basking Sharks - Hebrides: Islands on the Edge

      The UK's waters are home to 29 species of whale, dolphin, porpoise and the world's second largest shark, the basking shark.
      Along with harbour porpoises and common and bottlenose dolphins, species including humpback whales, killer whales and sperm whales are seen in the UK's waters.

      The Government is creating "marine protected areas" to secure the future of habitats and wildlife on the seabed, but the trusts are concerned that there are no protected areas for dolphins, whales and sharks in England and only one in Wales.
      They are calling for the series of "hotspots" - highly productive areas which produce plenty of food - to be protected especially for whales, basking sharks and dolphins, to secure the "missing link" in marine conservation in English and Welsh waters.

      The trusts propose creating new marine protected areas, extending the boundaries of ones that are already proposed, adding protection of dolphin, whale and shark species and undertaking more research to establish the importance of sites.
      They suggest “designating areas of the sea which are known hotspots, we can provide safe havens for these species and some impacts can be limited or removed altogether".
      The proposals include creating a new marine protected area in the south west part of Lyme Bay, which is an important foraging area for white-beaked dolphins as well as hosting important numbers of harbour porpoises.

      They also include creating a protected area for common dolphins in the North of Celtic Deep, off the Welsh coast. The food-rich area is a critical habitat for the common dolphin, which gathers in large numbers in the summer to feed and calve, the trusts said.
      Areas in Cardigan Bay, off the Northumberland coast and off the southern tip of the Cornish coast are all among the hotspots that the Wildlife Trusts want to see protected for dolphins, whales and basking sharks.

      The Wildlife Trusts is made up of the 47 individual Wildlife Trusts covering the whole of the UK and the Isle of Man and Alderney.

      Links :