Home News Geoscience Australia wins prestigious global tech award for MH370 search

Geoscience Australia wins prestigious global tech award for MH370 search

3 Minutes Read

US: Geoscience Australia has been selected from over 100,000 organizations worldwide to receive a global award for its ground-breaking work in mapping the world’s deep-seabed in the search for missing Malaysian Airlines flight MH370. The Esri Special Achievement in GIS (SAG) Award, recognized Geoscience Australiaโ€™s innovative use of Geographic Information System (GIS) technology to advance mapping of the deep oceans.

The search for MH370 led to discoveries including underwater volcanoes, mountains and trenches, and improved the accuracy of ocean depths for up to 2,000m rescues. These insights are expected to support benefits to science, industry, and government cooperation for future marine searches.

In San Diego to accept the award on behalf of Geoscience Australia, Chief Scientist Dr Adam Lewis said this team of experts used the worldโ€™s most advanced location-based analytics software โ€“ Esri GIS technology โ€“ to derive meaningful insights from the largest marine survey ever conducted.

โ€œA key requirement from the outset of the search was to create a detailed and accurate picture of the ocean floor, so that we could begin to determine what may have happened to the debris.

โ€œTo do this, we used GIS technology to map and analyze an unprecedented volume of data, including over 278,000 square kilometers of shipboard bathymetry data, and another 432,000 square kilometers of data collected on the journey to and from the search zone.

โ€œThe visual language of maps is a very effective way to communicate, so we used dynamic real-time maps to share updates about the search and our findings with other government agencies in Australia, Malaysia and China; members of the public; and โ€“ most importantly โ€“ the families of those on board the flight.

โ€œThe search also demonstrated the great value of open data. Some of the key data and insights we generated in the search has been made available to anyone in the world in high-resolution format.

โ€œThis is a global first in government open data. While we captured the data as part of the search for flight MH370, it is through making the data open that the scientific, industry and other benefits come to passโ€

Esri Australia and Esri South Asia Group Managing Director Brett Bundock said the implications of Geoscience Australiaโ€™s discoveries would enable more sustainable and efficient operations across many industries, from petroleum to telecommunications.

โ€œThe maps created by Geoscience Australia provide more precise insight into tides, seafloor depth, ocean temperatures and seabed terrain than has ever been available before,โ€ said Mr Bundock. โ€œUsing GIS technology to create an accurate and detailed picture of the seafloor is critical for understanding factors such as: environmental change; tsunami forecasting; mineral extraction; oil and gas exploration; infrastructure construction; and cable and pipeline routing โ€“ to name just a few areas.

โ€œFor example, petroleum companies can use the technology to more effectively plan and manage their ocean pipeline network, to ensure their real-time operations are optimized and the risk of oil spills is mitigated.

โ€œCommercial fisheries can use these insights to pinpoint the locations of fish and dramatically decrease the time taken to catch their allowance โ€“ which in-turn generates cost-savings and environmental benefits from reducing fuel consumption and time spent on the ocean.

โ€œTelecommunications organizations, which are increasingly investing in submarine cables for inter-country connectivity, will have a clear picture of the most efficient and safe location for their seabed cable network.

โ€œWe congratulate Geoscience Australia for their meaningful achievements in this field which will make a significant difference not only to Australians but to communities around the world.โ€

Beyond the SAG Award, Geoscience Australia was also recognized for establishing a new multi-organizational cooperative group โ€“ AusSeabed โ€“ to coordinate seabed mapping activities in Australia.

This initiative will contribute to the international mapping objectives of The Nippon Foundation- GEBCOโ€™s Seabed2030 project. Launched at the United Nations (UN) Ocean Conference in 2017, this project looks to bring together scientific agencies from around the world to map the entire ocean floor in high resolution by 2030.

Satinder Bindra, Director of The Nippon Foundation-GEBCO Seabed2030 Project, said Geoscience Australiaโ€™s significant progress in seafloor mapping provided a strong foundation for producing a definitive map of the world ocean floor.

โ€œThe Seabed2030 project brings together scientific agencies from around the world to map the entirety of the worldโ€™s ocean floor in high resolution by 2030,โ€ said Mr Bindra.
โ€œAchieving this goal will rely on a multitude of organizations, in both the public and private sectors, coming together to donate bathymetric data for the cause of science.

โ€œA large portion of the worldโ€™s ocean floor remains unmapped โ€“ and we congratulate Geoscience Australia for their contribution in helping us โ€˜map the gapsโ€™ and for winning the prestigious Esri SAG Award.โ€