EMR to keep 200 lighthouses around Scotland and Isle of Man lit.
Dunboyne business EMR Integrated Solutions has inked a €500,000 deal with the Northern Lighthouse Board (NLB) to upgrade its telemetry network and deploy a new monitoring system.
The system will manage the status of its navigation aids such as safety buoys, beacons and over 200 lighthouses in the waters around Scotland and the Isle of Man.
“This data analysis helps with better operational decision-making and assists us greatly in proactively carrying out maintenance work before breakdown occurs”
The EMR system provides reliable, real-time reporting on the operational status of these navigation aids across NLB’s coastal estate, boosting the efficiency of marine safety for all vessels.
Light up, light up
As part of the project, the EMR team is currently in the process of upgrading over 150 remote telemetry units (RTU), devices which communicate with the central SCADA* system. These next generation devices provide always-on communications and ensure real-time visibility of the assets, facilitating a more immediate response to any alarm conditions.
“The new system is operationally more effective and delivers better reporting,” explained Alan Cran, the Northern Lighthouse Board’s Principal Electrical Engineer.
“Trend data allows us to analyse patterns of failures or individual events. This data analysis helps with better operational decision-making and assists us greatly in proactively carrying out maintenance work before breakdown occurs.”
System obsolescence was the driver for the current project. A phased rollout of new hardware meant that any replacement monitoring system would have to be capable of processing telemetry data from legacy analogue outstations as well as new ones and this presented the EMR team with their primary project challenge.
“We chose ‘Ignition’ as it connects securely and seamlessly with a vast array of legacy and current industrial device protocols,” said Mark Quinn, managing director with EMR Integrated Solutions.
“It’s also an open, standards-based and scalable SCADA* platform which is vendor agnostic, addressing concerns that NLB had in relation to the use of proprietary technologies and potential obsolescence in the future. Full system failover and redundancy ensures high availability and accessibility for what is a mission-critical service,” he said.
EMR has extensive experience in utility communication networks and critical national infrastructure. Its business has grown steadily at home and in the UK and includes utility providers such as Irish Water, Severn Trent Water, Affinity Water, Northern Powergrid, Western Power Distribution and Greencoat UK Wind and Greencoat Solar.
Pictured: Mark Quinn from EMR with Subu Manippadi from the Northern Lighthouse Board.