Battelle Tech to Improve Safety of American Ports

COLUMBUS, OH--(BUSINESS WIRE) -- Battelle and its partners are working to make American ports safe from terrorists and international drug cartels by creating an underwater sensor array that scans all ships as they enter United States harbors.

Battelle is teamed with the Naval Undersea Warfare Center (NUWC) and EdgeTech Marine in a mutually funded and in-kind cooperative research and development program called Harbor Shield. The Harbor Shield system uses powerful imaging technology to map the underwater hulls of ships as they enter harbors, scanning their bellies to detect weapons of mass destruction, mines, bundles of illegal drugs, and any other irregularities. It can detect the exact location on the hull of any abnormality as small as a square foot.

Simultaneously, topside sensors will determine the ship's exact location in relation to the underwater sensors. The combined data will be used to create a "hullprint" that will be stored in a global network. After being scanned once and entered into the hullprint database, ships will be cross-referenced and their hullprints updated each time they sail into another American port. Eventually, Harbor Shield will contain a database of all ships that have entered American ports.

"Harbor Shield is a high-end solution for maritime investigative deficiencies," said Lynn Faulkner, Program Manager for Battelle's Equipment Development Group. "It also is a fine example of dovetailed cooperation between government and private industry to solve a critical national security problem."

The concept of the Harbor Shield technology was proven this year in Narragansett Bay, Rhode Island. A full-scale, baseline demonstration of the technology is planned for mid 2009 in the same estuary. As Harbor Shield matures, enhancements will be incorporated, such as improved and automated imaging (so humans won't have to stare at a screen of every rendering of every hull) and a larger database. Eventually, Harbor Shield should be capable of scanning entire harbors for every boat and swimmer. It also could benchmark ship hull maintenance; enhance hull inspections for marine growth, damage, corrosion, and paint thickness; and even determine what liquids are stored within the hull.

Currently there is no system to inspect the estimated 50,000 worldwide freighter ships as they enter American ports. Without Harbor Shield, ships' underwater hulls can only be inspected by divers. If a ship is deemed to require investigation, it must anchor and shut down all its engines and intakes to prevent diver injury. Divers must then hand search the hull by feeling their way along in murky water, often missing large sections of the surface. The practice is time consuming, costly, and largely ineffective. Harbor Shield represents a quantum leap forward and could save time, money, and lives. It will also enable U.S. authorities to scan every ship that enters port instead of a very small percentage of them.

About Batelle
Battelle is the world's largest non-profit independent research and development organization, providing innovative solutions to the world's most pressing needs through its four global businesses: Laboratory Management, National Security, Energy Technology, and Health and Life Sciences. It advances scientific discovery and application by conducting $4 billion in global R&D annually through contract research, laboratory management and technology commercialization. Headquartered in Columbus, Ohio, Battelle oversees 20,400 employees in more than 120 locations worldwide, including seven national laboratories which Battelle manages or co-manages for the U.S. Department of Energy and the U.S. Department of Homeland Security.

Battelle also is one of the nation's leading charitable trusts focusing on societal and economic impact and actively supporting and promoting science and math education.

Battelle's Global National Security business applies science and technology to solve complex technical challenges for the military services and federal agencies. Including the operations of national laboratories, Battelle annually performs nearly $1.6 billion in national security-related work contributing to advances in chemical and biological defense, homeland security, armor, technology refreshment, and undersea technology.