Berliner Boersenzeitung - Startups show off ocean-preserving tech at Paris trade fair

EUR -
AED 4.330251
AFN 77.223105
ALL 96.61697
AMD 449.836805
ANG 2.110835
AOA 1081.117382
ARS 1710.106625
AUD 1.759634
AWG 2.122445
AZN 1.99508
BAM 1.954146
BBD 2.373781
BDT 144.016905
BGN 1.955558
BHD 0.44455
BIF 3489.758004
BMD 1.178972
BND 1.514418
BOB 8.173153
BRL 6.514064
BSD 1.178598
BTN 105.712438
BWP 15.512872
BYN 3.419506
BYR 23107.857053
BZD 2.370414
CAD 1.614449
CDF 2593.739142
CHF 0.928965
CLF 0.027283
CLP 1070.294804
CNY 8.2864
CNH 8.275425
COP 4425.567266
CRC 582.81668
CUC 1.178972
CUP 31.242766
CVE 110.882713
CZK 24.297458
DJF 209.527282
DKK 7.469146
DOP 73.833109
DZD 152.746418
EGP 55.983383
ERN 17.684584
ETB 183.095462
FJD 2.675325
FKP 0.876131
GBP 0.873224
GEL 3.165535
GGP 0.876131
GHS 13.540499
GIP 0.876131
GMD 87.833596
GNF 10302.447494
GTQ 9.029359
GYD 246.573429
HKD 9.169209
HNL 31.077581
HRK 7.534224
HTG 154.450607
HUF 390.627733
IDR 19733.225694
ILS 3.756418
IMP 0.876131
INR 105.482003
IQD 1544.453711
IRR 49664.208395
ISK 147.996918
JEP 0.876131
JMD 188.470507
JOD 0.835875
JPY 184.275137
KES 151.967554
KGS 103.101415
KHR 4727.678962
KMF 492.810438
KPW 1061.029099
KRW 1746.111018
KWD 0.362062
KYD 0.982169
KZT 600.377025
LAK 25501.170685
LBP 105285.563443
LKR 364.839708
LRD 209.501051
LSL 19.676911
LTL 3.481199
LVL 0.713149
LYD 6.395905
MAD 10.762543
MDL 19.835215
MGA 5376.113654
MKD 61.572354
MMK 2475.65941
MNT 4189.371634
MOP 9.44209
MRU 46.899604
MUR 54.409642
MVR 18.215338
MWK 2047.875146
MXN 21.109794
MYR 4.791304
MZN 75.348188
NAD 19.676502
NGN 1721.582016
NIO 43.091694
NOK 11.828446
NPR 169.1403
NZD 2.018943
OMR 0.453319
PAB 1.178613
PEN 3.966654
PGK 5.013582
PHP 69.247525
PKR 330.288746
PLN 4.221015
PYG 8030.204466
QAR 4.292581
RON 5.090219
RSD 117.41269
RUB 91.959429
RWF 1711.867778
SAR 4.422152
SBD 9.612623
SCR 16.519376
SDG 709.153522
SEK 10.810015
SGD 1.514873
SHP 0.884535
SLE 28.383727
SLL 24722.463936
SOS 673.781632
SRD 45.178017
STD 24402.346246
STN 25.053161
SVC 10.312273
SYP 13035.773421
SZL 19.677158
THB 36.696686
TJS 10.843016
TMT 4.138193
TND 3.401921
TOP 2.838683
TRY 50.48798
TTD 8.017283
TWD 37.076351
TZS 2914.094104
UAH 49.628002
UGX 4258.414391
USD 1.178972
UYU 46.031046
UZS 14206.61584
VES 339.648756
VND 31043.519595
VUV 143.293996
WST 3.28224
XAF 655.402368
XAG 0.0165
XAU 0.000263
XCD 3.186232
XCG 2.12412
XDR 0.816785
XOF 656.093139
XPF 119.331742
YER 281.126016
ZAR 19.669155
ZMK 10612.158195
ZMW 26.635686
ZWL 379.628599
  • RBGPF

    0.0000

    80.22

    0%

  • SCS

    0.0200

    16.14

    +0.12%

  • JRI

    0.0400

    13.41

    +0.3%

  • CMSD

    -0.1800

    23.02

    -0.78%

  • CMSC

    -0.1100

    23.01

    -0.48%

  • BCC

    -1.0000

    73.23

    -1.37%

  • RYCEF

    0.0300

    15.53

    +0.19%

  • BCE

    0.0000

    22.73

    0%

  • NGG

    0.8300

    77.24

    +1.07%

  • RIO

    0.8700

    80.97

    +1.07%

  • RELX

    0.1500

    41.13

    +0.36%

  • GSK

    0.2600

    48.85

    +0.53%

  • AZN

    0.5900

    92.14

    +0.64%

  • BTI

    0.2700

    57.04

    +0.47%

  • BP

    0.4400

    34.58

    +1.27%

  • VOD

    0.1800

    13.06

    +1.38%

Startups show off ocean-preserving tech at Paris trade fair
Startups show off ocean-preserving tech at Paris trade fair / Photo: Philip FONG - AFP/File

Startups show off ocean-preserving tech at Paris trade fair

Harnessing ocean currents to boost fuel efficiency of vessels, or tracking whales using sensor data and AI -- startups at Paris trade fair Vivatech have been showing off the latest innovations aimed at protecting the environment.

Text size:

Recently developed AI programs capable of learning from vast datasets have boosted projects trying to understand and predict real-world phenomena, several company founders told AFP.

"We have to use AI because in the natural world there are too many variables" to deal with manually, said Emily Charry Tissier, a biologist and founder of Canadian startup Whale Seeker, which is developing technology to track sea mammals.

Powered by "neural network" systems that ape the functioning of the human brain, the learning systems behind today's AI models "can calculate a weather forecast 1,000 times faster than a standard digital model running on a supercomputer", agreed oceanographer Alexandre Stegner.

He flagged an AI model developed by his firm, Amphitrite, that he said could predict ocean currents by crunching "several layers of satellite data corresponding to different physical variables".

It can forecast currents up to 10 days in advance, he said, offering sea captains "a simple way to save fuel" by slightly changing course and using currents to gain a speed boost of up to four knots.

That could save operators money on fuel, reduce the carbon emissions from shipping, and avoid the classic solution of telling sea captains to reduce their speed.

- Global protection push -

Technologies like these were being shown off in the halls of Vivatech as the UN Ocean Conference (UNOC) drew to a close hundreds of kilometres to the south in French Mediterranean city Nice.

The conference has pushed a treaty to protect 60 percent of the world's oceans closer to becoming law, with 55 signatures -- just five shy of the number required for its enactment.

New technologies could be "a very good thing" for the oceans, said Andre Abreu, International Affairs Director at the Paris-based Tara Ocean Foundation.

But he warned that innovation should not be harnessed to allow more fish to be caught.

"That would mean shooting ourselves in the foot" on goals like preserving marine biodiversity, he said.

That ambiguity can be seen in technology from OceanEyes, a Japanese startup using AI analysis of satellite data to predict sea conditions.

The company hopes to cut the time fishing boats spend tracking down a catch.

"A big problem in Japan is the efficiency of the fishery operations. Many fishers spend a lot of time searching for fish in the water," said boss Yusuke Tanaka.

With less fuel burnt, operators will save money and greenhouse emissions can be slashed.

Anticipating concerns about overfishing, OceanEyes said it also aimed to help vessels comply with recently updated Japanese regulations that oblige fishers to "ensure sustainable use of marine resources".

- 'Can' vs 'should' -

Whale Seeker's Tissier said technology could be used in a considered way to find sustainable solutions.

"I'd like the market to recognise its own limits -- not the limits of what we can do, but what we should do," she told AFP.

That attitude pushed her to refuse to work with a company that wanted to use whale detection to identify nearby fish to catch.

But startups cannot grow without funding and, in the context of oceans, investments are likely to come from big firms keen to make a saving -- from fishing and ship management companies to haulage and logistics giants.

This could well limit their ability to stand on principle.

Stegner called for "regulations that would push the maritime sector to reduce carbon emissions".

But Charry Tissier said the initiative could come from business.

"Technology is developing so much faster than regulation... what I'd like is for big companies to decide for themselves to be responsible," she said.

(K.Lüdke--BBZ)