The Philippine Star

MAPPING THE UNDERWATER WORLD

A YOUNG FILIPINO’S FONDNESS FOR THE MARINE ENVIRONMEN­T and passion to serve the people led to the establishm­ent of an underwater mapping and surveying company which aims to protect the world’s coral reefs.

- By Helen M. Flores

Environmen­t engineer Aaron Hilomen, one of the people behind Philippine-based startup Antipara Exploratio­n, said the company’s mission is to provide reliable visual informatio­n for people to better understand and manage coastal regions.

“I’ve always loved the marine environmen­t. Both my parents are marine scientists so we grew up in the ocean seeing all the things the people are doing there. I wanted to create a system that makes underwater operations easier and the result is Antipara Exploratio­n,” Hilomen, the comSDQ\·V FKLHI H[HFXWLYH R΀FHU DQG IRXQGHU tells STARweek.

Antipara won this year’s Pitch Haifa, a competitio­n organized by the Embassy of Israel in partnershi­p with the Israel Chamber of Commerce of the Philippine­s, the Department of Trade and Industry and the Department of Science and Technology.

7KH FRPSDQ\ RͿHUV XQGHUZDWHU FRDVWDO mapping, assessment and 3D visualizat­ion services. It built an algorithm to help monitor the Coral Triangle, which is home WR WKH KLJKHVW GLYHUVLW\ RI FRUDO UHHI ÀVKHV in the world.

Apart from Hilomen, the other brains behind Antipara are Cherry Murillon, Francis James Corpuz, and Laurice Janette Dagum.

Dagum, who specialize­s in underwater image and video processing, was the one who developed the company’s 3D processing.

Corpuz, a research engineer, is currently ZRUNLQJ RQ VFLHQWLÀF DQG QXPHULFDO PRG eling for ocean renewable energy.

Murillon, who has a Bachelor’s degree in Chemistry and Masters in Developmen­t Communicat­ion, is in charge of the developmen­t of the company.

Unlike traditiona­l methods, which involve divers taking photograph­s and making notes on what they see, Antipara applies a more VFLHQWLÀF ZD\ RI PDSSLQJ FRUDO UHHIV

The company uses cameras and sonar, towed behind a boat, to scan the bottom of the sea. The scans are converted into 3D XQGHUZDWHU PDSV ,W XVHV DQ DUWLÀFLDO LQ telligence (AI) system which is capable of identifyin­g objects underwater. The system can provide detailed assessment and measuremen­ts accurate up to one millimeter.

Compared to the traditiona­l manual method, which usually takes two to three months of tedious data gathering, Antipara can cover 25 kilometers of coastline in a day, according to Hilomen.

“I worked in an Australian company and I saw the need for this kind of technology,” he says.

Antipara’s mapping system is currently being used by the Department of Environmen­t and Natural Resources to map out protected marine areas and all the vulnerable coral reefs.

Hilomen considers the company’s exploratio­n in Marinduque last August as its biggest project so far.

Antipara Exploratio­n was commission­ed by DENR-Provincial EnvironPHQ­W DQG 1DWXUDO 5HVRXUFHV 2΀FHU Marinduque to map the 430 hectares of coral reefs and 30 hectares of seagrass in the municipali­ty of Sta. Cruz.

Antipara Exploratio­n was able to VFDQ DQG ÀQLVK WKH GDWD JDWKHULQJ and ground truthing of the area in just three days.

“I’m happy to discover that there are so many places in the Philippine­s that are really so untouched,” Hilomen says.

In the coming years, Hilomen said Antipara would focus on its system to be able to expand their operations overseas.

“When we scale up we want to focus more on the system because if you’re the one doing the survey it’s hard to scale up,” he says. deputy chief of mission of Israel in Manila, says Pitch Haifa aims to encourage young people in the Philippine­s and other parts of the world to invest in startups and be creative.

“We want to encourage young Filipino entreprene­urs to really get involved in this area, in this direction,” Spivakov tells STARweek.

Haifa is located in north Israel, which has a big concentrat­ion of Isreli startups.

“The concept is that we in the Israeli foreign ministry will conduct FRPSHWLWLR­QV LQ GLͿHUHQW FRXQWULHV for startups. It’s already our third

Mapping...

year in the Philippine­s, this year we focused on health issues,” she says.

As the winner of the competitio­n, which was held last Oct. 24 at the QBO Innovation Center in Makati City, Antipara will travel to Haifa for a one-week seminar next month.

“They are going to visit technology park, headquarte­rs of internatio­nal companies that have incubators that encourage the creation of startups,” Spivakov says.

“That’s very important because we see the potential here in the Philippine­s and we would like to share Israel experience because Israel is considered to be a startup nation,” she adds.

Israel, she adds, has one of the highest ratios of startup per capita in the world.

“In Israel we invest a lot of our budget in R&D (research and developmen­t) and our government is very much involved and it encourages progress in this area,” she explains.

Apart from Antipara, three other startups – Valea Health, Tudlo and USHER – competed for this year’s Pitch Haifa.

Valea Health is a company that offers an artificial intelligen­ce-enabled text and chat-based platform that enables users to manage their health by talking with a health coach or fitness specialist.

Tudlo Innovation Solutions is the company that created a mobile and web applicatio­n for disaster awareness and management dubbed as Batingaw.

The applicatio­n is used to monitor government agencies during natural disasters.

USHER, which stands for universal structural health evaluation and recording system, was developed by a team of young engineers from Mapua. It is a wireless sensory network system that monitors the structural health of buildings and other structures such as bridges in preparatio­n for the “Big One” or the magnitude 7.8 earthquake that could hit Metro Manila.

Expansion

Hilomen said winning Pitch Haifa gives them the opportunit­y to expand their operations in other parts of the world.

“I feel galvanized, because I really want to go there and learn as much as I can because it gives us an advantage to create networks, especially that our startup is really homegrown here in the Philippine­s. I feel that if we can make it big outside that would be really icing on the cake,” he says.

His advice to young entreprene­urs who want to succeed in their business: “Sometimes what you’re doing right now doesn’t really answer a need but you have to be able to listen so that you can tweak what you’re doing and be successful. Because for the longest time we stagnated with something that wasn’t really selling until we made that pivot.”

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 ??  ?? Antipara Exploratio­n documents vibrant marine life all over the Philippine­s: (from top) Tingloy, Batangas; Southern Leyte; Hilutungan Island Marine Sanctuary; (right) La Luz Resort; Marinduque (middle right) and Siquijor (far right).
Antipara Exploratio­n documents vibrant marine life all over the Philippine­s: (from top) Tingloy, Batangas; Southern Leyte; Hilutungan Island Marine Sanctuary; (right) La Luz Resort; Marinduque (middle right) and Siquijor (far right).
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 ??  ?? Yulia RachinskiS­pivakov, Pitch Haifa Aaron Hilomen (second from right) with his team in Marinduque.
Yulia RachinskiS­pivakov, Pitch Haifa Aaron Hilomen (second from right) with his team in Marinduque.
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 ??  ?? At the Pitch Haifa awarding ceremony (below), Antipara founder Aaron Hilomen (fourth from left) poses with (from left) Katrina Chan, director of QBO; Itamar Gero, president of ICCP; Senen Perlada, director of DTI-EMB; Yulia Rachinsky-Spivakov, Israel embassy’s deputy chief of mission; Leah Buendia, assistant secretary for Internatio­nal Cooperatio­n of DOST; David Elefant director of ICCP; Agnes Legaspi, assistant director of DTI-EMB. Underwater scenes from Puerto Galera (above) and Leyte (right).
At the Pitch Haifa awarding ceremony (below), Antipara founder Aaron Hilomen (fourth from left) poses with (from left) Katrina Chan, director of QBO; Itamar Gero, president of ICCP; Senen Perlada, director of DTI-EMB; Yulia Rachinsky-Spivakov, Israel embassy’s deputy chief of mission; Leah Buendia, assistant secretary for Internatio­nal Cooperatio­n of DOST; David Elefant director of ICCP; Agnes Legaspi, assistant director of DTI-EMB. Underwater scenes from Puerto Galera (above) and Leyte (right).
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