Asian Surveying & Mapping
Breaking News
Ecolab and ITE partners to harness water management knowledge for Singapore data center engineers
SINGAPORE, 29 APRIL 2024 – Nalco Water, an Ecolab...
NASA releases satellite photos of Dubai and Abu Dhabi before and after record flooding
NASA released photos of parts of Dubai and Abu...
Singapore releases 10-year Geospatial Master Plan
Singapore has launched its new Geospatial Master Plan (2024–33),...
Japan announces plans to launch upgraded observation satellites on new flagship rocket’s 3rd flight
TOKYO (AP) — Japan’s space agency announced Friday a...
Tesla China partners with Baidu for maps to clear FSD hurdle
Amidst Elon Musk’s unannounced trip to Beijing, China this...
ESA opens ideas factory to boost space innovation in Austria
A centre to innovate the design and manufacture of...
Japan’s space agency sets June 30 as third launch date for H3 rocket
The Japan Aerospace Exploration Agency (JAXA) announced Friday that...
S. Korea launches nanosatellite for Earth observation
SEOUL- A South Korean nanosatellite was launched into orbit...
Australian Space Agency funds development of aerospace-grade GNSS receiver
The Australian Space Agency has funded the development of...
Continuity risks for Australian EO data access
A new report details the widespread use of Earth...

In a hi-tech version of throwing out messages in bottles, prototype trackable buoys were deployed in the waters off Indonesia, whose myriad islands result in some of the most complex, unpredictable currents on Earth.

Made from wood for maximum sustainability, the buoys were developed by French organization Collecte Localization Satellites (CLS). A subsidiary of French space agency CNES, CLS is best known for overseeing the satellite-based tracking of tagged marine animals, buoys and fishing fleets using its long-running Argos geopositioning system, which performs satellite navigation fixes and returns them to CLS via satellite link.

CLS made use of previous experience of marine plastic litter in Indonesia for the buoy deployments. It has previously teamed up with the Indonesian Ministry of Marine Affairs and Fisheries to help guide waste collection efforts—the country’s national marine pollution plan pledges to reduce plastic waste by 70 percent by the end of 2025.

Together with the tracking buoys, the MARLISAT project also involves harnessing Earth observation imagery to detect plastic sources and forecast marine plastic litter’s motion and areas of accumulation using an existing CLS ocean drift model called MOBIDRIFT.

Image Credit: CLS