University of Strathclyde: Robotic boat completes first uncrewed survey of fish populations around offshore oil platforms
A robotic boat has been used for the first time to survey fish populations around oil platforms in the North Sea.
The survey was part of a project, involving the University of Strathclyde, which looked at the effects of decommissioning oil and gas structures on marine ecosystems.
The robotic boat, known as an Uncrewed Surface Vessel (USV), owned and operated by ocean data company XOCEAN, used sonar to collect data on fish numbers around several oil platforms off Scotland’s north-east coast.
XOCEAN’s USVs operate ‘over the horizon’ transiting unaccompanied hundreds of kilometres from shore, without the need for a mothership. Fitted with high end commercial fisheries sensors, the USVs perform the same task as a crewed vessel but without the need to send a single person offshore. Instead, XOCEAN’s innovative platform brings the surveyor online in real time to collect and validate the data from anywhere in the world.
XOCEAN’s XO-450 USVs are around the size of an average car – 4.5 metres – allowing it to get within 10m of a platform, which is significantly closer than a conventional ship. The project, part of the UKRI-funded INSITE (Influence of Man-made Structures in the Ecosystem) programme, aims to better understand the influences offshore structures have on commercial fish populations in the North Sea.
The survey was led at the University of Aberdeen. The next stage of the project will see Dr Dougie Speirs and Professor Michael Heath, of Strathclyde’s Department of Mathematics and Statistics, use the survey data to model the expected effects of a range of decommissioning strategies on the surveyed fish populations.
Dr Speirs said: “The data coming out of this survey is providing us with an exceptional high-resolution picture of what is happening to fish distributions around marine installations.
“It was fascinating to see real-time online images from the USV, and the resulting data will be invaluable as we construct our fish population models.”
Paul Shearer, Environment Team Lead from Ithaca Energy, said: “We are delighted to have supported this important project to understand why fish congregate around structures in the North Sea. It is important that quality data and science is available to enable more informed decisions to be taken in how the offshore energy industry interacts with the marine ecosystem. We look forward to supporting the project in future work.”
The project, and the INSITE programme, will run until 2023, and the team will be running similar surveys of more oil platforms using the USV next summer.