EGU21-14802
https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu21-14802
EGU General Assembly 2021
© Author(s) 2021. This work is distributed under
the Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 License.

BEWATS: BEACH WASTE TRACKING SYSTEM USING SATELLITE, UAV’s and MARINE DYNAMICS MODELS. 

Omjyoti Dutta1, Beatriz Revilla-Romero2, Adrian Sanz-Díaz2, Fernando Martin-Rodriguez3, Orentino Mojon-Ojea3, Ana Mancho4, Guillermo García-Sánchez4, and Gerard Margarit Martín1
Omjyoti Dutta et al.
  • 1GMV, Remote Sensing and Geospatial Analytics Division, Hospitalet de LLobregat, Barcelona, Spain
  • 2GMV, Remote Sensing and Geospatial Analytics Division, Tres Cantos, Madrid, Spain
  • 3atlanTTic research center for Telecommunication Technologies, University of Vigo, Marcosende, Vigo, Spain
  • 4Institute of Mathematical Sciences (ICMAT), Spanish National Research Council (CSIC), Madrid, Spain

Marine litter is a growing problem that advances parallel to economic and industrial development and seriously affects ecosystems. One of the most abundant pollutants are plastics. The BEWATS project focuses on innovative tools for remote marine litter control and management through satellite and UAV’s. The areas of study are currently at the Vigo coast in Galicia (North-West of Spain). In this area, there are many high natural value beaches including Nature Reserve and part of a National Park. These beaches are receiving an increasing amount of marine litter, mainly plastic, helped by strong currents in the area. Every few months, these beaches are clean and the collected litter information tracked. In this context, the BEWATS project concentrates on tracking the possible path through which marine litter reaches the area of interest. In this presentation, we will discuss how this is achieved by data fusion from UAV imagery, marine dynamics model simulations and Earth-observation satellite data (Sentinel-2). To detect possible marine litter, we have developed a novel synthetic data-based approach to marine litter detection using Sentinel-2 images and machine learning techniques. Within this approach, one can classify and quantify according to pixel-level litter fraction present. We have validated our approach with existing open-sourced available datasets.  

The BEWATS project is led by Vigo University, which provides UAV’s imagery, and the Spanish Research Council (CSIC) provides marine dynamics models for tracking waste routes and delineation of waste concentration zones. In this context, GMV provides Earth observation based solution of detecting marine litter. BEWATS is founded by the Biodiversity Foundation of the Spanish Ministry for the Ecological Transition and the Demographic Challenge.

How to cite: Dutta, O., Revilla-Romero, B., Sanz-Díaz, A., Martin-Rodriguez, F., Mojon-Ojea, O., Mancho, A., García-Sánchez, G., and Margarit Martín, G.: BEWATS: BEACH WASTE TRACKING SYSTEM USING SATELLITE, UAV’s and MARINE DYNAMICS MODELS. , EGU General Assembly 2021, online, 19–30 Apr 2021, EGU21-14802, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu21-14802, 2021.