Otago Daily Times

$850K grant to help with Covid19 response

ALEXANDRA

- JARED MORGAN jared.morgan@odt.co.nz

AN Alexandrab­ased company has been awarded $850,000 to support the Covid19 response and protect maritime borders across New Zealand and the South Pacific.

Xerra Earth Observatio­n Institute principal scientist Dr Dave Kelbe said Xerra was given the grant through the Ministry of Business, Innovation and Employment’s (MBIE’s) Covid19 innovation accelerati­on fund (CIAF) to support the pandemic response.

It would be used for the delivery of two maritime border protection tools in Xerra’s ‘‘Starboard Maritime Intelligen­ce platform’’, he said.

Starboard was developed with support from the Ministry of Primary Industries, MBIE’s CIAF and Regional Research Institute Initiative, and the French Embassy in New Zealand’s Pacific Fund.

Dr Kelbe said the funding sped up research and developmen­t for Starboard, enabling the team to meet the needs of the Government, with the next step being to add crew exchange informatio­n to the model.

‘‘We are honoured to be working alongside leading epidemiolo­gists and building relationsh­ips with key officials at the Ministry of Health and Customs New Zealand, with hopes that our work will support their extraordin­ary efforts to secure our maritime borders from cases of Covid19.

‘‘We look forward to learning more about how the model and the functional­ity in Starboard can benefit these agencies at an operationa­l level.’’

The first tool was based on an epidemiolo­gical model which looked at ports a ship had visited and the local Covid19 infection rates for the day it was in port.

‘‘Using these inputs, the mathematic­al model predicts possible contagion scenarios, such as the risk of a vessel having infected crew on board.’’

Dr Kelbe works in collaborat­ion with epidemiolo­gists Prof Nick Wilson and Prof Michael Baker from the University of Otago, who have worked estimating the risk of outbreaks of Covid19 associated with shore leave by merchant ship crews.

Prof Wilson said all arriving ships, and crew, were treated as high risk, regardless of travel history, time at sea and origin of the crew, in order to mitigate the risk of Covid19 entering through the maritime border.

‘‘In the future, a traffic light approach would allow for a more nuanced approach, where the relative Covid19 risk of each vessel and its crew is assessed upon arrival, so we can adjust our control measures to suit.’’

To move to that state, realtime, automated risk analysis was needed to inform decisionma­king at New Zealand’s ports, he said.

Xerra will also use the funding to conduct new research and developmen­t into detecting the unannounce­d arrival of nonreporti­ng small vessels, or pleasure craft, travelling between the Pacific Islands and New Zealand because traditiona­lly it had been difficult to know how many ships were arriving, when they were expected to arrive, and what their first port of call would be.

Xerra was developing algorithms and using various types of satellite data to predict and detect the location of the ships and their likely arrival time and location so border officials could take appropriat­e measures.

The Covid19 automated risk assessment capability is available through Xerra’s Starboard platform, which is at present in beta trials with users from various government agencies and nongovernm­ental organisati­ons from New Zealand and the wider Pacific region.

 ?? PHOTO: SUPPLIED ?? Supporting the response . . . Xerra Earth Observatio­n Institute principal scientist Dr Dave Kelbe is at the forefront of protecting New Zealand and the Pacific from Covid19.
PHOTO: SUPPLIED Supporting the response . . . Xerra Earth Observatio­n Institute principal scientist Dr Dave Kelbe is at the forefront of protecting New Zealand and the Pacific from Covid19.

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