Coming Soon – SUT Forum

We’ve just registered the domain sutforum.org and will soon be launching it as a place to chat, discuss and share your underwater technology interests and news – watch this space for updates.

Also don’t forget to tune into our weekly podcasts, now with over 1000 downloads at https://sut.buzzsprout.com or your favourite podcast provider. Latest one is Pod8, interviewing Mark Burnett, CEO of Seiche Water Technology group discussing the Autonaut autonomous vehicle and marine acoustics – Thank You!

Podcast 6, & Climate Change Seminar

Episode 6 of the SUT Underwater Technology Podcast will be released on 20th May – see https://SUT.buzzsprout.com and the recording of 18th May’s online seminar by SUT President Professor Ralph Rayner on ‘Climate Change and the Ocean’ can be viewed on YouTube at https://youtu.be/WKGmxTV40_A

Note that we had our first instance of people trying to hijack one of our live seminars yesterday during Ralph’s broadcast, so in future sadly we’ll need to pre-register viewers or switch to a different means of broadcasting. Apologies for anyone who wasn’t able to view the presentation live after we had to close it down and relaunch invitation-only.

New online training courses

In another new initiative to provide value & new knowledge to members unable to attend events & training in the usual way during COVID-19 lock-down, we’re starting a series of free-to-members training seminars, with the 1st to take place Tuesday 12th May, 1300hrs on the subject of “Technology Readiness Levels – not just a tool for oil & gas” presented by SUT Chair David Saul – for more information and to register please go to https://sut.org/event/sut-uk-online-training-seminars-no1-technology-readiness-levels-12th-may-2020-1300bst/

CEO Update for 1st May 2020

Dear members & friends of SUT – what an extraordinary period the last few weeks have been for all of us. All over the world, the outbreak of a virus that can only be fought by our own immune systems, with no cure, vaccine or specialist therapies yet available has powerfully reminded humankind that nature does not recognise political borders, and that to fight such a challenge requires joined-up international cooperation. We’ve seen free-market governments make policy decisions that only a few months ago would have been regarded as unthinkable in order to protect populations and jobs, and we’ve moved wholesale to the adoption of home working and teleconferencing with surprising smoothness and effectiveness. 

SUT has been part of this journey, with our Branches, committees and special interest groups moving to online meetings using Teams, Webex, Zoom, Starleaf, Skype and other platforms. In the UK, the government’s staff retention payments scheme is being applied, so that Cheryl, Emily, Jacqui and Lisa are on furlough, with Jane & I keeping the head office functions, website & activities running until something like normal business resumes. Perth Branch have reduced staff hours for Jennifer & her team, & in the USA Patsy and Araceli are keeping things running smoothly. 

I’d like to thank all of our members for their support and patience while the global situation progresses – I’m delighted to see that even now, in the midst of closures and lay-offs, we are still seeing new people join. 

Alongside COVID-19 the world has also seen record low oil prices, as demand for hydrocarbons has fallen to very low levels thanks to the slow-down of economic activity, lack of air travel, & heating demands falling as we move into Northern Hemisphere spring. Technology moves on, and it’s been striking that in the sunny weather experienced in the UK in recent weeks we’ve regularly seen photovoltaic solar energy provide almost 30% of baseload electricity production, wind energy at a similar level, no coal burn at all, and gas & nuclear making up the balance. Energy-producing companies, recognising the economic, environmental & statutory drivers towards a low-carbon future, are taking energy transition very seriously and I expect by the end of this decade in addition to the now well-established offshore wind industry, we’ll see floating solar and offshore hydrogen production playing a significant part in the energy mix, as well as advances in how we store intermittent energy for release to the grid at peak times. 

A return to ‘business as usual’ may not be what we see after COVID-19, essential national infrastructure could well be seen not as new motorways, runways and railway lines, but as multi-gigabyte internet speeds and the ability to source goods & services locally – even distributed micro-generation & energy storage from a range of sources.

For some of our members this is a tremendous opportunity for innovation and growth, for others it’s a threat and they’ll be worried about how they survive turbulent times. As your Learned Society, SUT is here to help you get through this period in good shape by sharing knowledge, networking in new ways, staying in touch with new developments and exploring the ocean together as a source of wealth, creativity & resources for the future. 

Please keep in touch by following our social media feeds such as @SUT_news on Twitter, the various Branch feeds, our website & LinkedIn messages. Every week I’m releasing a new episode of our Underwater Technology Podcast at https://sut.buzzsprout.com/ & every two weeks there’s a Zoom online seminar early Monday afternoon – see https://sut.org/news/ or the events pages to keep track of what’s happening, or email me directly at [email protected]

Stay safe, stay well. 

Episode 3 – Underwater Technology Podcast 1st May

In Pod3 Steve Hall interviews Jim Hanlon, CEO of the Centre of Ocean Ventures & Entrepreneurship (aka COVE Ocean https://coveocean.com) in Halifax, Nova Scotia, Canada. In the interview Jim talks about the innovative ocean technology sector in Canada, the growth of the Atlantic Canada cluster of researchers, industry, university and defence sector, and how SUT member companies & individuals will find a kindred community looking forward to future engagement. Podcast 3 is released 1st May on https://sut.buzzsprout.com/ & also on Apple Podcasts, Spotify, Stitcher & more – search for ‘Ocean Technology Podcast’ to subscribe on those platforms.

Zoom Seminar

On Monday 4th May, 1330 hrs BST Steve Hall will present an online talk “Mysteries of the Deep – Using technology to investigate wrecks of ships, submarines and aircraft deep on the ocean floor”

Topic: Mysteries of the Deep
Time: May 4, 2020 01:30 PM London

Join Zoom Meeting
https://us02web.zoom.us/j/86492949159?pwd=dkFjbTRYUEsybThBTEYwcnNUaXBJZz09

Meeting ID: 864 9294 9159
Password: 573309

To view afterwards goto https://youtu.be/8PZgHn8vdMg

SUT HQ Staff

Dear members & friends of SUT – while the coronavirus lockdown is still in place in the UK, we’ve placed most of our HQ staff on furlough under the HM government job retention scheme, so please be patient if we take longer than usual to respond to inquiries or answer calls. Normal service will be resumed as soon as possible. Should you need to call the London office, you can dial +44 (0)7947 911992, or email [email protected].

SUT Virtual Technology Presentations Opportunities

The Society for Underwater Technology (SUT) is exploring a number of developments to continue to offer our members a range of benefits and services that work in line with the advice of governments and health agencies. From that perspective, we feel it will be quite some time before we can return to our ‘normal way of life’ and hold regular Evening Meetings, or Lunch & Learn events, and therefore we are looking to ‘adapt to deliver’.

One of our most well-received Evening Meeting formats is the successful series of Gadgets and Widgets. This is where we deliver nine presentations in 90 minutes. We believe that this ethos could work in the current circumstances where we adapt the concept to a digital media delivery. This could be in the format of a short video presentation on your latest technology, or a rolling PowerPoint-style presentation with a voiceover.

The SUT will offer you a platform to promote your development or technology. If you have a short (10-12-minute presentation) in a viable digital format, then please get in touch. The plan thereafter is to promote the availability of these presentations through our normal advertising media, as we would do for a typical Evening Meeting.

If you are making a short video style presentation, please keep your introduction on yourself and the Company to a minimum; include your name and contact details for further information in the end credits, but concentrate the bulk of the presentation time on the technology that you wish to promote. Similarly; if you are planning a voiceover to a rolling PowerPoint, then please incorporate a front slide with your name and a photo included. The final slide should be contact information for any follow-up approaches that the audience may have for you.

If you have any questions then please feel free to contact the SUT office via [email protected] or direct to [email protected] and we’ll work together to prepare your presentations for online broadcast.

Steve Hall, CEO