Media Center - Press Releases
FOR
IMMEDIATE RELEASE Media Contact:
Averill Elan Conley
Communications Manager
conley@seakeepers.org
+1 (786) 877-0757 cellular
+1 (954) 766-7100, ext. 123 office
SEAKEEPERS SOCIETY LICENSES
ITS PROPRIETARY TECHNOLOGY PRO BONO
Ft. Lauderdale, FL (May 2006) – In an effort to further
its goal of reducing the cost and increasing the effectiveness
of ocean monitoring, the International SeaKeepers Society
Board of Directors has decided to allow other organizations
and institutions to use its proprietary ocean monitoring system,
FSIS™ or Ferrybox Sensor Interface Standard, without
a licensing fee.
The patented FSIS modular concept allows various oceanographic
sensors to be easily combined and interchanged within a standardized
flow-through monitoring system. This system is a major advancement
with several significant benefits for users, as well as manufacturers.
The SeaKeepers Society, a not-for-profit organization, developed
this highly flexible, cost-effective system for ocean and
atmospheric monitoring. The SeaKeeper 1000™ system is
a fully automated unit that samples, measures, records and
then transmits its data via satellite or other means of communication.
The system provides a unifying platform for a wide variety
of sensors, some already in development phase, adapted to
the FSIS standard interface. The SeaKeeper 1000 is extremely
cost-effective and has been proven to be highly robust with
a number of installations passing five years of operation.
“This decision to license this monitoring system pro
bono is very much in keeping with our expanded vision of the
next phase of SeaKeepers’ development,” said Don
Tomlin, board chairman. “The cost of researching and
developing the SeaKeepers 1000 was a gift from our members
to the world. With its decision the board is simply making
sure this gift is used as widely and efficiently as humanly
possible.” Six years and several millions of dollars
in donations were spent on research, development and testing.
“We are very proud of the system we have developed,”
said John Englander, SeaKeepers’ CEO. “Our board
of directors recently decided that the best way to promote
the application of our system to advance our ultimate goal
of healthier and more diverse oceans was to make our technology
available to the widest possible number of users.”
The FSIS sensor interface is a stainless steel template onto
which a sensor is mounted. Common specifications exist for
mounting holes, tubing for water sampling, electrical and
data connectors. The system allows for interchangeable modules
sharing a common architecture, analogous to the universal
cards that are employed in IBM-compatible personal computers.
Having a standardized architecture, as in the PC universe,
will encourage the development of many more sensors and peripheral
devices to plug into the system. The result, SeaKeepers hopes,
will be a broader ocean monitoring network generating significantly
more scientific data on the health of the seas.
This development is particularly relevant, Englander said,
as the world comes to agreement on the need for a more sophisticated,
integrated Global Earth Observing System (GEOS). “The
world clearly needs standardized and less expensive monitoring
systems. We hope very much our organization’s gift to
the world will make a significant difference in what we know
about what’s happening to the sea and how quickly we
can reverse the steep decline in the ocean’s health.”
The benefit of this development to sensor manufacturers is
that any devices they build using the FSIS ferrybox interface
can be deployed on any of the 50 systems already installed
by the SeaKeepers Society. This increases the market potential
for their R&D efforts. Originally tested on large yachts,
whose owners provided the funds necessary to develop the SeaKeeper
1000 system, the totally automated system is now deployed
on cruise ships, NOAA sea buoys, freighters, research piers,
a Mediterranean car ferry and a U.S. Coast Guard icebreaker,
among others.
The term “ferrybox” has become a generic description
for multiple-sensor water quality monitoring systems and is
derived from diverse efforts around the world to assemble
an automated, relatively inexpensive suite of sensors to complement
far more expensively generated data gathered aboard dedicated
research vessels.
Manufacturers offering FSIS compatible sensors in production
or under development include Idronaut, Envirotech, General
Oceanics, Satlantic, SeaBird, Seapoint Sensors, and Turner
Designs. The sensors measure such parameters as temperature;
conductivity; salinity; pH (acidity); dissolved oxygen, oxygen
reduction potential; nitrates; nutrients; dissolved CO2; chlorophyll
a; Colored Organic Matter (CDOM); Harmful Algal Blooms (“red
tides”); and trace metals. More are under development.
In addition to the flow-through seawater sensors, the SeaKeeper
1000 system often is installed with a meteorological suite
to capture climatological and weather information simultaneously
with the ocean data.
The SeaKeeper 1000 system and the FSIS sensor interface were
developed by The International SeaKeepers Society, a non-profit
organization founded in Monaco in 1998, now having offices
in Fort Lauderdale, FL. In just eight years the Society has
earned a considerable reputation and influence. Its Founders
represent a network of international leaders in 13 countries
concerned about the long term health and sustainability of
the world’s oceans. The Society aims to be a catalyst
on select projects that will contribute toward long-term ocean
conservation; the development of the SeaKeeper 1000 was the
first of such projects.
The release of the FSIS interface standard was made at Oceanology
International 2006, a global tradeshow recently held in London.
The announcement was made by CEO John Englander, joined by
Technical Director Geoffrey Morrison. SeaKeepers welcomes
inquiries from commercial firms, governmental agencies, and
scientific organizations regarding the FSIS sensor interface,
as well as the overall SeaKeeper 1000 monitoring system. For
more information and/or a CD of images please contact Averill
Elan Conley, Communications Manager, at 1 (954) 766-7100 or
at conley@seakeepers.org, or visit or website at www.seakeepers.org.
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