
A North Tyneside tech firm which is tackling the global issue of lost fishing nets is expanding into the oil and gas sector.
Succorfish ‘s main piece of kit is MyGearTag, an acoustic location device that uses modem technology to help fishing boats find lost nets, pots and traps over a range of up to three kilometres. Now the firm is moving into the global oil and gas sector after working with sealing provider Eastern Seals in Ashington, to adapt the device so it can be used hundreds of metres under water.
MyGearTag’s casing, which is crafted from recycled fishing nets and weighs 500g, can now withstand the pressure levels found in the waters around the bases of oil and gas rigs, after being tested at Cramlington’s UKAS-accredited oil and gas testing facility IKM.
Succorfish, which has a 20-strong in-house design, software engineering, development and customer service team, is now in discussions with a number of service providers in the oil and gas sector about the practical applications for the technology, which could include identifying where storage spaces on the seabed are based, monitoring for moving rig anchor lines and marking the location of lost equipment.
Chad Hooper, founder and CEO at Succorfish, said: “While the commercial fishing industry was our primary consideration, we recognised that MyGearTag also has a wide range of potential uses in the oil and gas sector, and we’re now moving to see how we can take advantage of these opportunities. Monitoring equipment is obviously in use in deep offshore waters, but it is large, heavy and expensive, and there is nothing available that compares to MyGearTag in terms of its size, cost, low power use and effectiveness.
“Making the most of the manufacturing and testing expertise available on our doorstep was an essential part of this adapted product’s development, with the input provided by Eastern Seals and IKM being essential to the process.”
MyGearTag was developed in partnership with Newcastle University’s Faculty of Electrical and Electronic Engineering and the pan-European NETTAG+ project, with grant funding provided by UK Research & Innovation and the European Union.
It is manufactured in the UK and assembled at Succorfish’s North Tyneside base, and was originally designed to help address the significant costs and environmental harm caused by lost ‘ghost’ fishing nets, which are estimated to cost fisheries businesses around the world around $2.6bn every year.
MyGearTag recently went into full manufacturing production, with distribution and reseller agreements being finalised with a number of potential partners around the world.