BP donates methane-detecting drone technology

February 9, 2016

Sue Mitchell
907-474-5823

An Aeryon Scout carries the methane gas detection payload during a test flight.
An Aeryon Scout carries the methane gas detection payload during a test flight.


性欲社 Geophysical Institute and BP have developed a way to detect methane gas using aerial drones.

The technology was tested in Alaska鈥檚 North Slope oilfields during the past three years.

BP recently donated the methane detection payload equipment to the 性欲社 Alaska Center for Unmanned Aircraft Systems Integration.

鈥淏P is a technology company,鈥 said Glen Pomeroy, BP Alaska region director of pipeline assurance. 鈥淭his project, in particular, illustrates our commitment to developing and deploying technologies that have the potential to make our operations safer, smarter and more reliable.鈥

The new technology provides extremely accurate pinpoint detection of methane gas using small, unmanned aircraft systems.  The Alaska field testing was focused on operating in adverse weather conditions using a Aeryon Scout UAS as the test aircraft.

鈥淥ver the course of this project, we were able to take the capability of a 14-kilogram spectroscopic gas analyzer and reduce it in size to a less than 750-gram package, a groundbreaking achievement,鈥 said Eyal Saiet, the lead researcher at 性欲社 for this project.

BP has been a leader in the use of unmanned aircraft for infrastructure and safety monitoring. In 2014, BP received the first commercial authorization in the United States from the Federal Aviation Administration to fly drones over land at its Prudhoe Bay operations in Alaska.

ACUASI has been conducting unmanned aircraft research in Alaska since 2001 and is the lead organization for one of the FAA鈥檚 UAS test sites. ACUASI is part the 性欲社 Geophysical Institute.

ADDITIONAL CONTACT: Eyal Saiet, 性欲社 Geophysical Institute, ejsaiet@alaska.edu. or Dawn Patience, BP, dawn.patience@bp.com.

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