The system is being developed in collaboration with the
Environmental Protection Agency (EPA), Enterprise Ireland,
the third-level sector and other agencies.
SmartBay will be a test-bed for the development of new
environmental technologies and services and will involve
a growing series of partnerships with Irish and overseas
industries. In the first phase, computer giant IBM
will collaborate with the Marine Institute in developing
new ways to collect, process and deliver environmental information
(Click
Here).
Each SmartBay buoy supports an array of advanced ocean
sensors to collect and transmit real-time information on
ocean conditions that will benefit scientists, commercial
fishermen, fish farmers, environmental monitoring agencies
and the general public. This information, which previously
could only be collected by going to sea, will be beamed
by radio to the Marine Institute’s headquarters at Oranmore.
There, it will be analysed and used to guide coastal zone
management plans, advice for commercial fishermen, fish
farmers and water users of all kinds.
“The beauty of SmartBay is that, for the first time in
history, we can monitor a wide range of ocean conditions
on a twenty-four hour basis from the screen of a laptop
computer” - said James Ryan, who supervised the placement
of the SmartBay system last week for the Marine Institute.
“This opens up a wide range of possibilities for early
warning systems for pollution, the study of fish and shellfish
stocks, the prediction of harmful algal blooms, dangerously
high waves and even the long-term shifts in ocean conditions
that may be induced by global climate change. It really
is a revolution in ocean science and we’re extremely proud
that Galway Bay, which is the home of the Marine Institute,
has been selected as the pioneer site for this revolutionary
technology."
SmartBay is also the test bed for a much more ambitious
project to extend these systems out over Ireland’s continental
shelf and down into the sunless depths of the abyssal ocean
plain - some three and a half kilometres below the surface.
Plans between the Marine Institute and IBM also include
a scheme to incorporate the information collected by SmartBay
into web-based lesson plans for schools in the Galway area,
offering them a unique window into the underwater world.