WELCOME
AGENDA 15.00 15.15 Arrival at HQ FRS Centrum 15.15 15.20 Welcome col. Wim Van Zele 15.20 15.40 Presentation MIRG EU st. comm. David Brown 15.40 15.50 MIRG EU Film maj. Tom Van Esbroeck 15.50 16.05 Coffee break 16.05 16.35 Case MIRG EU Alert process All partners 16.35 16.50 Lessons learned To Be Jeroen Zonnevijlle & Arya Honarmand 16.50 17.25 Demo & Static show MIRG-team 17.25 17.30 End of visit
FIRE SERVICE BELGIUM Fire Service in Belgium before 2015 589 Towns 251 Fire Brigades Gas incident Gellingen 2004 January 1th, 2015 Fire Brigade Ghent became Fire and Rescue Services Centrum 34 FRS Zones in Belgium
FRS CENTRUM
TOTAL SURFACE 815 KM 2 FRS CENTRUM TOTAL RESIDENTS 505.238 inhabitants Personnel FRS CENTRUM: Professional firefighters 474 Volunteer firefighters 429 Professional paramedics 42 Volunteer paramedics 90 Civilian personnel 82
MISSION: FRS CENTRUM Be a guiding and binding force in prevention, firefighting, the delivery of assistance, crisis management and disaster relief in cooperation with the other disciplines. VISION: FRS Centrum is recognized by the other emergency providers at home and abroad as a leading, innovative and continuously learning organization.
MIRG EU Two Seas project area Duration MIRG EU project: November 2011 November 2014
MIRG EU PARTNER Lead partner Safety Region Zeeland Jeroen Zonnevijlle Hoofdbrandmeester Eric Lems
MIRG EU PARTNER col. Thierry Van Goethem capt. Tom Van Damme col. Wim Van Zele maj. Tom Van Esbroeck dir. Didier De Wulf
MIRG EU PARTNER Station manager David Brown
MIRG EU PARTNER SDIS62 Pas-De-Calais col. Pascal Miaux com. Nicolas Leclet lt. Christophe Cousin
MIRG EU PARTNER Province Zeeland Ron de Meyer
MIRG EU PARTNER Ministry of internal affairs (BE)
MIRG-BE PROTOCOL
OTHER SPEAKERS Maritime Rescue Coordination Centre Ostend (MRCC Ostend) capt. Réjane Gyssens Emergency Response Coordination Centre (ERCC) Arya Honarmand
MIRG EU Intro: David Brown 25 years in Offshore Operations 3 notable incidents Schofu 1995; Ever decent 1999; DFDS 2014 FRMR Lead officer for KFRS - POC National Lead for ship incidents along side UK FRMR National Coordinator MIRG EU Responsible for all ETE. David Brown - Kent Fire & Rescue Service
MIRG EU Who: NL lead project/initiative; Monitoring Committee; Invited EU funded qualified partners UK; FR; NL; BEL; Small ETE team. David Brown - Kent Fire & Rescue Service
MIRG EU When: Project commenced late 2011 with equipment presentations and demonstrations held in the UK; Policy work began in mid 2012 (OPM) Training began March 2013 (TM) LSE June 2014 Final Conference September 2014 David Brown - Kent Fire & Rescue Service
MIRG EU What: Training up a dedicated teams to respond off shore Cargo RoRo RoPax Ferry Cruise ships David Brown - Kent Fire & Rescue Service
MIRG EU Where: SDIS 62 Marck-en-Calais David Brown - Kent Fire & Rescue Service
MIRG EU Why: Marine traffic and shipping movements Cargo RoRo RoPax Ferry Cruise ships Economic consequences extend beyond Europe Environmental impact Increasing market trend David Brown - Kent Fire & Rescue Service
MIRG EU CAPABILITY GAP David Brown - Kent Fire & Rescue Service
MIRG EU Summary: Develop a standard set of operating procedures for cross border integrations; Develop a robust Training Manual for all the required elements to become a MIRG team member International Large Scale Exercise demonstrated cooperation between all teams Develop partnership working at international level. David Brown - Kent Fire & Rescue Service
MIRG EU Next steps: Continue to communicate and to share knowledge, skills and education to aid response to or prevent a disaster or mass evacuation at sea; Demonstrate continual development of these special skills within other MIRG projects; Support our partners and colleagues through workshops, training events and seminars to strive for maintenance of this response. David Brown - Kent Fire & Rescue Service
MIRG EU FILM
MIRG EU THANK YOU ANY QUESTIONS PLEASE? David Brown - Kent Fire & Rescue Service
BREAK
CASE MIRG EU
MRCC Ostend Capt. Réjane Gyssens
MRCC Ostend Juni 2006
General Contingency plan Northsea Disaster
When to insert a MIRG team On request of the captain Only safety incidents Not when SSAS is activated Not when incident is activated on purpose to harm cargo or ship Not when threatened by terroristic attack such as, CBRN attack.
Flowchart MIRG teams Inhoud Workflow bij opdracht Vessel request assistance of MIRG team via MRCC (SMC) Nautical Director evaluates situation and informs CCprov to receive a go for support of the Mirgteam(policy decision) Use of MIRG team activates automaticly the emergency contingency plan Northsea MIRG Be s being contacted by MRCC Ostend MRCC delivers intake Checklist Fire and Dangerous Goods Checlist to MIRG-Be. MIRG-Be decides if they will participate for the incident responce.
Warning Call-back procedure Intake Estimated arrival time Situation 15, first & second departure 38
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Preparation Preparing transport Preparing personal bags / clothing Transport To holding area Registration of departure time, names, etc 40
SOP S Tasking to incident Fire liaison officer Deployment and transportation Nominal role Communications Incident command Hand-over procedure
MIRG-EX
Berisuas and MIRG-EX Berisuas Cluster Project MIRGEX project: Partnership Budget Objectives Planning Scenario Tasks Issues Closing Remarks Questions?
Berisuas Cluster Project MIRGEX project: Partnership Budget Objectives Planning Scenario Tasks Issues Closing Remarks Questions?
MIRG-EU Project
Berisuas BEtter Response and Improved Safety through Unmanned Aircraft Systems
Relevance MIRG capability Ferry Sorrento 150 evacuated at sea 28 April 2015 Mallorca Norman Atlantic Ferry 11 lives lost 19 missing 28 December 2014, Italy
And of course
Partnership MIRGEX Federale Dienst Openbare Hulpverlening, West-Vlaanderen Mobiliteit en openbare werken Vlaanderen (coast guard) Havendienst Zeebrugge Brandweerzone Waasland Brandweerzonezone Antwerpen 1 Brandweerzone Centrum SDIS de Pas-de-Calais Kent Fire & Rescue Service Veiligheidsregio Zeeland EU commission (civil protection)
Objectives MIRGEX Develop the multidisciplinary approach to maritime accidents by integrating the land based structures into the exercise. Improving their own capabilities by including a CBRN and an entrapment element within the exercise scenario Test the abilities of the MIRG teams within the European Commission civil protection mechanism
Budget Total budget 1,219,357
Planning MIRGEX Start project January 2015 Set up project structure: Jan-June 2015 Table top exercises February 2016 Command post exercise May 2016 Full scale exercise 11 & 12 October 2016 Final conference 23 November 2016 End of project December 2016
Knowledge exchange within the EU Italy London Fire Brigade Nordic MIRG Baltic MIRG
Closing Remarks
ESSENTIAL FOR PUBLIC SAFETY Questions?
TO-BE SITUATION
Union Civil Protection Mechanism (UCPM) and MIRG DG ECHO B.1 Emergency Response
ERCC Main Operations Room
ERCC: Three Main Functions 1. Coordination of disaster response within the framework of the new Union civil protection legislation - UCPM 2. Coordination platform for humanitarian aid and civil protection operations UCPM-HA 3. Enhanced coordination hub for the whole Commission: entry point for Argus and POC for IPCR/"Solidarity Clause" activations IPCR/SC
16 15 13 8 9 16 12 Entrance Rue Joseph II-79 (for visitors) 15 3 14 4 1 10 7 2 6 11 11 11 11 5 1 Main Operations (OPS 1) : ; 2 Operations 2 (OPS 2) : 00/MED 2; 3 Operations 3 (OPS 3) : 00/MED 1; 4 Analysis and Planning : 00/PAY 1; 5 Transport and Logistics: 00/PAY 2; 6 Briefing / Hand Over 1: 00/A 151; 7 Briefing / Hand Over 2: 00/A 137; 8 Auditorium : 00/ MED 3; Entrance Rue de la Loi 86 (for EC staff only) 9 Reception Area; 10 Crisis Committee : 00/ 009; 11 Liaison offices; 12 Meeting : 00/037 + 00/033 B; 13 Seminar : 00/033 A; 14 Inner Garden (patio); 15 Kitchens; 16 Sanitary Facilities.
149 CP modules and 10 TAST registered by the PS 24 HCP (High capacity pumping), 5 WP (Water purification), 3 FFFP (Aerial forest fire fighting module using planes), 10 AMP (Advanced medical post), 4 AMPS (Advanced medical post with surgery), 4 MEVAC (Medical aerial evacuation of disaster victims), 30 MUSAR (Medium urban search and rescue 1 equipped and trained for cold conditions), 12 HUSAR (Heavy urban search and rescue), 16 CBRNDET (CBRN detection and sampling), 5 CBRNUSAR (USAR in CBRN conditions), 2 FHOS (Field hospital), 1 ETS (Emergency Temporary Shelter), 7 GFFF (Ground forest fire fighting), 20 GFFF-V (Ground forest fire fighting using vehicles), 2 FC (Flood containment), 4 FRB (Flood rescue using boats), 10 TAST (Technical assistance and support team)
Voluntary pool The voluntary pool is a system whereby Member States can pre-commit response capacities for EU missions. The quality of the assistance is ensured through the establishment of quality criteria and a certification process. In return for this commitment, Member States benefit from financial support for developing and transporting these capacities.
Monitoring tools GDACS: Global Disaster Alert And Coordination System Weather monitoring EFAS - European Flood Awareness System: Floods forecasting and Flood alerts EFFIS European Forest Fire Information System: Fires forecasting
Information CECIS: Common Emergency Communication and Information System Website: www.europa.eu/echo ECHO/ERCC Portal ECHO Daily Flash ECHO Crisis Reports
Disaster stricken country Request for assistance Acceptance / rejection of assistance offered Information update ERCC Offer of assistance Deployment of UCP Teams Coordination of Transport Activation of the Mechanism
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QUESTIONS?
DEMO STATIC SHOW