Science To Impact Area
Autonomy, technology and digitisation
Advances in marine technology can deliver economic benefits and improve the management, sustainability and governance of marine and coastal environments. Our scientists, modellers and technologists operate at the forefront of marine technology development.
With an increasing global population and a drive towards green growth the exploitation of marine resources in key areas such as food production and renewable energy are inevitable. Key to the sustainable exploitation of the marine environment is our ability to develop smarter monitoring, provide expert interpretation of data and deliver policy relevant science.
PML is advancing the capability of marine observing systems to provide cost-effective and timely measurements of key environmental variables that are crucial for understanding and responding to environmental change.
Critical to the ocean economy is the sustainability and productivity of the oceans which will require smarter monitoring, modelling and data-driven management. Through development and adoption of new technologies, automation and citizen science we are lowering the cost of environmental observation. This means we can record past and future change at an unprecedented scale and by making this information widely available we can improve global resilience to environmental change.
The United Nations Decade of Ocean Science for Sustainable Development details the requirement for scientists to work with industry to develop new technologies aligned with sustainable development priorities. These priorities will require novel technologies to deliver cost effective marine data capture that is critical to delivering a complete ocean observing system. As a frontrunner in developing new marine technologies PML exercises its responsibility towards global capacity building, improving data literacy and filling data gaps.
We have strong relationships with an extensive range of commercial partners, which are considered crucial for the advancement of technology development within PML. PML chairs the Future Autonomous at Sea technologies (FAST) cluster, which is the largest marine autonomy cluster in the UK and has membership spanning the south west. This triple-helix cluster is largely comprised of industry partners complimented by leading academic organisations and government departments. The cluster exists to deliver advanced marine autonomy across numerous sectors including, offshore renewable energy, science, aquaculture and defence. The FAST cluster is also actively engaged with regulators such as the Maritime and Coastguard Agency (MCA) to work develop suitable regulations for the operation of autonomous vessels.
The Western Channel Observatory (WCO) exemplifies PML’s combined strengths in advanced in situ smart monitoring; world leading remote sensing and ecosystem modelling. The WCO also forms the backbone of Smart Sound Plymouth, which is the UK’s platform for advanced technology development, led by PML.
PML Project pages
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Act on Offshore Monitoring (ACTOM)
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ACTOM Decision Support Tool
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Addressing Challenges of Coastal Communities through Ocean Research for Developing Economies (ACCORD)
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AgZero+
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An Alternative Framework to Assess Marine Ecosystem Functioning in Shelf Seas (AlterEco)
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APICS
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Biodiversity of the Coastal Ocean: Monitoring with Earth Observation (BiCOME)
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Combining Autonomous observations and Models for Predicting and Understanding Shelf seas
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Copernicus Evolution: Research for harmonised and Transitional water Observation (CERTO)
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FutureMARES: Climate Change and Future Marine Ecosystem Services and Biodiversity
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GCRF Blue Communities
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MOET - Managing the Environmental Sustainability of the Offshore Energy Transition
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Monitoring Integrated Digital Support Tool - for CO2 and hypersaline brine monitoring applied to UK
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Multiscale Observation Networks for Optical monitoring of Coastal waters, Lakes and Estuaries (MONOCLE)
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MyCOAST
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NERC Airborne Research Facility (NERC-ARF)
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NERC Earth Observation and Data Acquisition and Analysis Service (NEODAAS)
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Ocean ICU: Improving Carbon Understanding
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Pressure control and conformance management for safe and efficient CO2 storage - accelerating CCS technologies
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Removing marine microplastics with mussel power
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S-3 EUROHAB - Sentinel products for detecting EUtROphication and Harmful Algal Bloom events
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SCIPPER: Shipping Contributions to Inland Pollution Push for the Enforcement of Regulations
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Smart AUVs for detection and quantification of greenhouse gas seepage in the oceans
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SOLSTICE-WIO: Sustainable Oceans, Livelihoods and food Security Through Increased Capacity in Ecosystem research in the Western Indian Ocean
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Strategies for Environmental Monitoring of Marine Carbon Capture and Storage (STEMM-CCS)
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Western Channel Observatory (WCO)
Other projects
Smart Sound Plymouth websiteResources and Links
PML leads Smart Sound Plymouth
Smart Sound Plymouth is Britain's platform for innovative marine technology development and is led by Dr James Fishwick from PML. It is Britain’s premier proving area for designing, testing and developing cutting edge products and services for the marine sector, and is ideally suited for building and supporting the next generation of advanced marine technologies.
PML is a founding board member of Ocean Futures
Ocean Futures is a global centre of excellence for the testing, development and manufacture of autonomy, digital and clean ocean technologies for the rapidly growing global ocean economy, as a key pillar of the country’s ambition to be a science and innovation superpower, with activity focussed on:
- Autonomy – leading the demonstration and integration of marine autonomous systems for applications in defence, offshore renewable energy, aquaculture and emerging ocean economy application, estimated to be a £103bn market by 2030.
- Digital Oceans – transforming our understanding of the ocean environment and safeguarding future maritime operations with integrated digital marine communications.
- Maritime Net Zero – leading the transition to safe and secure maritime operations that will embrace a variety of alternative energy sources bespoke to vessel type and operation.
People who work in this area of research
Deep S. Banerjee
Modelling Scientist
dba
@pml.ac.uk
Professor Nicola Beaumont
Head of Science - Sea and Society
nijb
@pml.ac.uk
Professor Tom Bell
Ocean-atmosphere biogeochemist
tbe
@pml.ac.uk
Professor Jerry Blackford
Head of Science: Marine Systems Modelling
jcb
@pml.ac.uk
Ian Brown
Marine Chemist
iaian2
@pml.ac.uk
Dr James Clark
Marine Ecosystem Modeller
jcl
@pml.ac.uk
Dr Dan Clewley
Senior Research Software Engineer
dac
@pml.ac.uk
Dr Matthew Cole
Senior Marine Ecologist and Ecotoxicologist
mcol
@pml.ac.uk
Dr Marius Dewar
Modeller
made
@pml.ac.uk
Professor James Fishwick
Head of Smart Sound Plymouth and Head of Operations and Technology, Western Channel Observatory
jrfi
@pml.ac.uk
Professor Kevin Flynn
Plankton ecophysiology modeller
kjf
@pml.ac.uk
Professor Steve Groom
Head of Science - Earth Observation
sbg
@pml.ac.uk
James Harding
AI/Machine Learning Data Scientist
jha
@pml.ac.uk
Dr Vassilis Kitidis
Marine biogeochemist
vak
@pml.ac.uk
Dr Andrey Kurekin
Marine Earth Observation Scientist
anku
@pml.ac.uk
Dr Angus Laurenson
Scientific Python Guru
anla
@pml.ac.uk
Dr Gennadi Lessin
Marine System Modeller
gle
@pml.ac.uk
Professor Pennie Lindeque
Head of Science: Marine Ecology and Biodiversity
pkw
@pml.ac.uk
Dr Océane Marcone
Social Science Researcher
ocm
@pml.ac.uk
Dr Victor Martinez-Vicente
Bio-optical oceanographer
vmv
@pml.ac.uk
Aser Mata
Earth Observation Scientist
asm
@pml.ac.uk
Dr David Moffat
Artificial Intelligence and Machine Learning Data Scientist
dmof
@pml.ac.uk
Professor Matthew Palmer
Head of Science - Digital Innovation & Marine Autonomy
mpa
@pml.ac.uk
Silvia Pardo
Earth Observation Scientist
spa
@pml.ac.uk
Dr Dale Partridge
Modeller
dapa
@pml.ac.uk
Jani Pewter
Instrument and Data Technician
Professor Ana M Queirós
Marine and climate change ecologist
anqu
@pml.ac.uk
Dr Andy Rees
Marine biogeochemist
apre
@pml.ac.uk
Dr Saskia Rühl
Digital Marine Biologist
sru
@pml.ac.uk
Professor Stefan Simis
Earth Observation Scientist (inland/coastal waters)
stsi
@pml.ac.uk
Dr Jozef Skakala
Ecosystem modeller
jos
@pml.ac.uk
Professor Tim Smyth
Head of Science - Marine Biogeochemistry and Observations
tjsm
@pml.ac.uk
Emma Sullivan
Earth Observation Scientist
emsu
@pml.ac.uk
Dr Karen Tait
Microbial Ecologist
ktait
@pml.ac.uk
Dr Liz Talbot
Marine Ecologist
sat
@pml.ac.uk
Dr Gavin H Tilstone
Bio-optical oceanographer
ghti
@pml.ac.uk
Dr Ricardo Torres
Systems Modeller Data Assimilation
rito
@pml.ac.uk
Dr Tom Vance
Chief Operating Officer - PML Applications Ltd
thva
@pml.ac.uk
Peter Walker
Remote Sensing scientist
petwa
@pml.ac.uk
Dr Mark Warren
Remote sensing scientist
mark1
@pml.ac.uk
Dr Ming-Xi Yang
Chemical Oceanographer
miya
@pml.ac.uk