Integrated oil spill response actions and environmental effects

Acronym

GRACE

Description of the granted funding

Objectives: 1) to improve the observation and predictions of oil spreading in the sea using novel on-line sensors on-board vessels, fixed structures or gliders, and smart data transfer into operational awareness systems; 2) to examine the true environmental impacts and benefits of a suite of marine oil spill response methods (mechanical collection in water and below ice, in situ burning, use of chemical dispersants, bioremediation, electro-kinetics, and combinations of these) in cold climate and ice-infested areas; 3) to assess the impacts on biota of naturally and chemically dispersed oil, in situ burning residues and non-collected oil using biomarker methods and to develop specific methods for the rapid detection of the effects of oil pollution; 4) to develop a strategic Net Environmental Benefit Analysis tool (sNEBA) for oil spill response strategy decision making. A true trans-disciplinary consortium will carry out the project. Oil sensors will be applied to novel platforms such as ferry-boxes, smart buoys, and gliders. The environmental impacts of the oil spill response methods will be assessed by performing pilot tests and field experiments in the coastal waters of Greenland, as well as laboratory tests in Svalbard and the Baltic Sea with the main focus on dispersed oil, in situ burning residues and non-collected oil. The sNEBA tool will be developed to include and overarch the biological and technical knowledge obtained in the project, as well as integrate with operational assessments being based on expertise on coastal protection and shoreline response. This can be used in establishing cross-border and trans-boundary cooperation and agreements. The proposal addresses novel observation technology and integrated response methods at extreme cold temperatures and in ice. It also addresses the environmental impacts and includes a partner from Canada. The results are vital for the off-shore industry and will enhance the business of oil spill response services.
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Starting year

2016

End year

2019

Granted funding

946 768 €
Coordinator
LAMOR CORPORATION AB
548 250 €
Participant
MERITAITO OY
300 000 €
Participant
GREENLAND OIL SPILL RESPONSE AS (GL)
229 952 €
Participant
AARHUS UNIVERSITET (DK)
743 791 €
Participant
Northern Research Institute Narvik AS (NO)
300 000 €
Participant
SINTEF NARVIK AS (NO)
300 000 €
Participant
SSPA SWEDEN AB. (SE)
330 000 €
Participant
UNIVERSITY OF MANITOBA (CA)
Participant
TALLINNA TEHNIKAULIKOOL (EE)
447 093 €
Participant
UNIVERSIDAD DEL PAIS VASCO/ EUSKAL HERRIKO UNIBERTSITATEA (ES)
325 000 €
Participant
TARTU ULIKOOL (EE)
396 837 €
Participant
NORGES TEKNISK-NATURVITENSKAPELIGE UNIVERSITET NTNU (NO)
299 863 €
Participant
RHEINISCH-WESTFAELISCHE TECHNISCHE HOCHSCHULE AACHEN (DE)
410 000 €
Participant

Amount granted

5 277 554 €

Funder

European Union

Funding instrument

Research and Innovation action

Framework programme

Horizon 2020 Framework Programme

Call

Programme part
SOCIETAL CHALLENGES - Food security, sustainable agriculture and forestry, marine, maritime and inland water research, and the bioeconomy (5326)
Topic
Response capacities to oil spills and marine pollutions (BG-07-2015)
Call ID
H2020-BG-2015-2

Other information

Funding decision number

679266

Identified topics

chemicals, toxicity