Australian Marine Oil Spill Centre

The Australian Marine Oil Spill Centre (AMOSC) is an organisation set up by the petroleum industry to enable a quick and effective response to oil spills around the Australian coastline. The organisation is owned by the Australian Institute of Petroleum and is financed by nine participating oil companies and other industry-related companies.[1]

Australian Marine Oil Spill Centre
Formation1991
TypeNGO
PurposeAccident response
HeadquartersGeelong, Victoria
Region served
Australian territorial water and parts of Indonesian and Papua New Guinean waters
Parent organisation
Australian Institute of Petroleum
Websitewww.amosc.com.au

It was established in 1991[2] and the following year moved its base to Geelong, Victoria. Its establishment was a direct result of a review conducted by the Australian oil industry following the Exxon Valdez oil spill.

Accident response

The Centre has an equipment stockpile on 24-hour stand-by. The AMOSplan is voluntary mutual aid arrangement where oil company equipment may be shared to best respond to a spill.[2] AMOSplan replaced the former Marine Oil Spills Action Plan (MOSAP).[3] The MOSAP was activated when an oil spill became too large for an individual company to adequately deal with.

Integration with government responses to spills is framed within the National Plan to Combat Pollution of the Sea by Oil, which is managed by the Australian Maritime Safety Authority.[4]

Major incidents

In 2009, AMOSC responded to the Montara oil spill in the Timor Sea by mobilising aircraft and dispersant for aerial spraying.[5]

gollark: I think so. I'll look into it.
gollark: It's less efficient than having a large bunch of machines and splitting the outputs up so they go the right way, but easier.
gollark: So for automatic phytogenic insolator processes (these need phyto-gro) we would make a dedicated induction smelter for it.
gollark: <@!441604126514741258> What I like to do is have dedicated sets of machines for each production process.
gollark: Strange.

See also

References

  1. "About Amosc". Australian Institute of Petroleum. Archived from the original on 3 April 2012. Retrieved 8 February 2012.
  2. "About AMOSC". Australian Marine Oil Spill Centre. Retrieved 8 February 2012.
  3. "AMOSC Plan". Australian Marine Oil Spill Centre. Retrieved 8 February 2012.
  4. "National Plan". Australian Maritime Safety Authority. Archived from the original on 24 February 2012. Retrieved 8 February 2012.
  5. Jano Gibson (21 August 2009). "Oil spill emergency off WA coast". ABC News. Australian Broadcasting Corporation. Retrieved 8 February 2012.
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