UNH Developers Share Honors for Oil Spill Response Tool
UNH Developers Share Honors for Oil Spill Response Tool
A Web-based oil spill response tool developed by the University of New Hampshire’s Research Computing & Instrumentation Center (RCI) has been honored as a finalist for the prestigious Samuel J. Heyman Service to America Medal. The tool – Environmental Response Management Application, or ERMA® – was developed in partnership with the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration (NOAA) and the UNH/NOAA Coastal Response Research Center and was essential in coordinating the response to the 2010 Deepwater Horizon oil spill.
The ERMA® team, which is led by Amy Merten, spatial data branch chief for NOAA’s Office of Response and Restoration, was among 34 finalists for the Service to American Medal announced on Capitol Hill last week. The Samuel J. Heyman Service to America Medal, from the Partnership for Public Service, honors outstanding federal workers who are making high-impact contributions critical to the health, safety and well-being of Americans. The medals are considered the most prestigious awards for American civil servants; finalists are contenders for one of eight Sammie awards to be presented Sept. 15, 2011.
ERMA® is a finalist for the Homeland Security Medal.
“The Coastal Response Research Center, a NOAA/UNH partnership, is proud to have launched ERMA® and to see it become a major asset to spill response so rapidly,” says Nancy Kinner, professor of civil and environmental engineering at UNH and co-director of the Coastal Response Research Center.
“This is truly a great honor and I credit my entire staff, who have worked so effectively together in the success of this effort. Now a full year after the spill the two lead developers are working on making ERMA® even better in preparation for any future events,” says Patrick Messer, director of UNH’s Research Computing & Instrumentation.
ERMA® was started more than three years ago as a pilot for New Hampshire’s Great Bay by several UNH developers, including Rob Braswell of the Complex Systems Research Center and Kurt Schwehr of the Center for Coastal and Ocean Mapping. It has since evolved into a Web-based GIS platform that incorporates data from the various agencies that work together to tackle response to oil spills. Round-the-clock work by UNH’s RCI, in particular technical lead Robert St. Lawrence and information technologist Philip Collins, redeployed the Gulf of Mexico version of ERMA® in several hours, within days after the Deepwater Horizon spill began. ERMA® integrated the latest data on the oil spill’s trajectory, fishery closure areas, wildlife and place-based Gulf Coast resources into one customizable interactive map, providing officials with continuous information on the worst oil spill in the nation's history and helping shape critical decisions on how they responded to the environmental disaster.
“It allowed us to have a complete picture of what we were doing and what was occurring in the Gulf. The technology has been there, but it's never been applied in a disaster that was this large scale,” said Ret. Coast Guard Adm. Thad Allen, the national incident commander for the spill. Allen also praised Merten as instrumental in setting up the situational awareness system, and with her team, keeping the voluminous data flowing every day of the lengthy crisis. “She combines the technical expertise and knowledge of information technology and data systems with a sense of mission,” he said.
In June, after securing additional hardware capacity, NOAA launched a public version of ERMA® created by UNH –www.geoplatform.gov -- to facilitate communication and coordination among a variety of users, from federal, state and local responders to local community leaders and the public. Beyond NOAA data, it includes data from Homeland Security, the Coast Guard, the Fish and Wildlife Service, EPA, NASA, U.S. Geological Survey and the Gulf states. It is designed to be fast, user-friendly and constantly updated. Geoplatform.gov had 3.4 million hits in the first day of its release.
In fall of 2010, ERMA® was recognized as one of the top 10 government websites by Government Computer News. In addition, ERMA’s®NOAA collaborators received the 2010 NOAA Administrator’s and Technology Transfer Award. The ERMA® team has begun building another system for the Arctic and the U.S. Pacific Islands, and is updating the other ERMA programs developed for use in New England and the Caribbean.
For more information about the development of ERMA®, see: http://www.crrc.unh.edu/erma/index.html



Nancy
Kinner is available at nancy.kinner@unh.edu or 603-862-1422.
Patrick Messer is
available at Patrick.messer@unh.edu or 603-862-2889.
Media contact: Beth Potier, UNH Media Relations 603-862-1566 or beth.potier@unh.edu
Posted in:
Choose a Research Blog Category
Subscribe to RSS Feed for any of the blog categories
Research Office News
Updates about the OSVPR
and its service units
Research Spotlight
![]()
Featured faculty, projects and case studies across the eight UNH research areas.
News for UNH Researchers
Timely info and updates in the topic areas of:
Ways to Get Involved
Partner with the UNH Research community on tomorrow's breakthroughs.
- About the Research Office
- Mission & Activities
- Organization Structure
- Committees
- Art Safety Committee
- Chemical Safety Committee
- Disclosure Review Committee
- Institutional Animal Care & Use Committee (IACUC)
- Institutional Biosafety Committee
- Institutional Review Board for the Protection of Human Subjects in Research (IRB)
- Occupational Safety Committee
- Radiation Safety Committee
- Research Council
- Responsible Conduct of Research & Scholarly Activity Committee
- UNH Manchester Safety Committee
- University Environmental Health & Safety Committee
- EPSCoR and IDeA at UNH
- Grants and Awards
- Newsletters and Reports
- Research Blog
- Staff Directory
- Contact Us
- UNH Research Areas
- Connections for Business
- Engage with UNH Research
- Find Research Area Experts
- Work with Office for Research Partnerships and Commercialization (ORPC)
- License Technology
- Innovation Catalyst Seminar Series
- Research Commercialization Introductory Online Course
- SBIR/STTR Info & Training
- University Instrumentation Center
- Staff Directory
- Tools for UNH Researchers
- Getting Started with Grantseeking
- Workshops, Education & Training
- Research Blog
- Finding Funding
- Essentials for Project Directors / PIs
- Proposals & Submissions
- Managing Awards
- Equipment, Resources & Services
- InfoEd Proposal Development
- University Instrumentation Center
- Resources for Grad Students & Post-Docs
- Forms & Policies
- Staff Directory
- Compliance and Safety
- Animal Care & Use
- Animal Care & Use FAQs
- Animal Resources Office
- Approval of Facilities Housing Vertebrate Animals
- IACUC Application Resources
- IACUC Application Review Process
- IACUC Meeting Schedule
- IACUC Membership
- Institutional Animal Care and Use Committee (IACUC)
- Occupational Health Program for Animal Handlers
- Reporting Animal Care and/or Use Concerns
- Training for Animal Care and Use Personnel
- Conflicts of Interest & Commitment
- Controlled Substances
- Data Management
- Effort Reporting and Certification
- Environmental Health & Safety
- Air Quality
- Art Safety
- Biological Safety
- Chemical Safety
- Emergency Procedures
- Hazardous Materials Management
- Industrial Hygiene
- Occupational Safety
- Confined Space Entry
- Contractor Safety
- Emergency Action and Fire Prevention
- Fall Protection
- Hazard Communication (Globally Harmonized System)
- Hazard Communication - Pictograms
- Hazard Communication
- Hazard Communication – Labeling
- Hazard Communication – Safety Data Sheets
- Hot Work
- Lockout/Tagout - Control of Hazardous Energy
- Occupational Safety Forms
- Occupational Safety Pamphlets
- Occupational Safety Programs
- Occupational Safety Resources
- Personal Protective Equipment
- Respiratory Protection
- Radiation Safety
- UNHCEMS
- EHS Training
- Export Controls
- Financial Management
- Human Subjects
- Misconduct in Scholarly Activity
- Responsible Conduct of Research & Scholarly Activity
- Forms & Policies
- Staff Directory
- Animal Care & Use
- Intellectual Property
- Invention Process
- Technology Transfer
- Material Transfer Agreements
- Copyright Protection
- Frequently Asked Questions
- Innovation Catalyst Seminar Series
- Research Commercialization Introductory Online Course
- SBIR/STTR Info & Training
- Office for Research Partnerships and Commercialization (ORPC)
- Directions to ORPC
- Forms & Policies
- Staff Directory