Marine Oil Pollution in an Area of High Economic Use: Statistical Analyses of SAR Data from the Western Java Sea

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Abstract

In this paper, we analyze more than 2000 Synthetic Aperture Radar (SAR) images of the Western Java Sea acquired by Sentinel-1 SAR-C and ENVISAT ASAR, with the aim to generate oil pollution statistics for a sea region of high economic use. The spatial distributions show that most oil pollution occurs along the major shipping routes and at oil production sites in that area. The majority of the spills have sizes of less than 1 km2 and an axial ratio smaller than 10. For two sets of SAR images, we compared the results obtained by different operators, who analyzed the same images. While more than 50% of the spills were not found by both operators, the overall spatial patterns derived from their results are the same. Our results indicate that the observed differences are mainly due to lookalikes, which can easily be confused with oil spills, but also due to small oil spills that were overseen by one of the operators. These assumptions are supported by the fact that the percentage of spills jointly found by both operators increased when only oil spills were considered that were found on SAR images acquired at higher mean wind speeds.

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APA

Mohr, V., & Gade, M. (2022). Marine Oil Pollution in an Area of High Economic Use: Statistical Analyses of SAR Data from the Western Java Sea. Remote Sensing, 14(4). https://doi.org/10.3390/rs14040880

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