NOAA Seeks Applicants for Hydrographic Panel

July 2, 2015

NOAA is soliciting applications for membership on the Hydrographic Services Review Panel, a federal advisory committee that advises the NOAA administrator on the agency’s hydrographic programs, products, and technology. Applications must be received by August 10.


“Quality data is essential to NOAA maritime programs, whether it is developing innovative products for precision navigation, creating richer data streams for ocean observations, or tapping into new possibilities of crowdsourcing and other modes of data collection,” said Russell Callender, Ph.D, acting assistant NOAA administrator for the National Ocean Service. “As we determine future priorities, we depend on advice from actual users of our products, and this panel is a vital part of that information gathering process.”


The panel advises NOAA on operations and research issues related to hydrographic surveying, nautical charts, tides and currents, geodetic and geospatial measurements, and coastal resilience. Applicants should have expertise in marine navigation; port administration; marine shipping or other intermodal transportation industries; cartography and geographic information systems; geodesy; physical oceanography; coastal resource management, including coastal resilience and emergency response; or other science-related fields.

Logistics News

DNV Publishes Recommended Practice for Onboard Carbon Capture, Storage

DNV Publishes Recommended Practice for Onboard Carbon Capture, Storage

Don Davis Appointed as New Managing Director at OCIMF

Don Davis Appointed as New Managing Director at OCIMF

Misaligned Charter Terms Amounts to $110,000 Shipbroker Settlement

Misaligned Charter Terms Amounts to $110,000 Shipbroker Settlement

ABS Fortifies Digital, Remote Support for Offshore Energy

ABS Fortifies Digital, Remote Support for Offshore Energy

Subscribe for Maritime Logistics Professional E‑News

Qatar brings LNG tankers into Hormuz despite shipping slowdown
Experts say China's efforts to use green energy in AI projects face hurdles.
How is the UK PM Starmer chosen as his successor?