New Mexico and U.S. Environmental Protection Agency collaborate with Sceye on air quality monitoring initiative

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New Mexico and U.S. Environmental Protection Agency (EPA) announced an innovative initiative proving once again that in New Mexico, the sky is no longer the limit.   

The Environment Department (NMED), Economic Development Department (EDD) and U.S. EPA signed a first-of-its kind memorandum of understanding that allows for collaboration related to air quality research.  

“Under this partnership, we will study pollution sources and their impacts on climate and air quality from 65,000 feet above New Mexico,” said NMED Cabinet Secretary James Kenney. “As a result, we will increase our scientific understanding of climate change and air pollution to inform our ambitious policymaking.”   

The MOU facilitates collaborative air- and energy-related research on emission sources within New Mexico as well as neighboring states and countries, such as Texas and Mexico.  

Once the MOU is in place, the U.S. EPA and Sceye, a material science company based in Moriarty, New Mexico, will enter into a public-private Cooperative Research and Development Agreement, which will specify how the monitoring data will be shared. Sceye builds and operates High Altitude Platform Stations (HAPS) that provide environmental monitoring as well as internet access. 

“EPA’s partnership with states is the cornerstone of achieving our mission to protect public health and the environment,” said David Gray, EPA Region 6 Acting Regional Administrator. “EPA is committed to helping our state and local partners overcome environmental challenges, especially complex ones like air quality issues that cross multiple national, state, and local borders.”  

“This memorandum of understanding to collaborate on air quality research will help us better understandthe natureand sourceof air pollutants,” said Wayne Cascio, Acting Principal Deputy Assistant Administrator for Science in EPA’s Office of Research and Development. “This effort will build upon previous collaborations with NASA to help EPA advance our knowledge on the use of high-altitude measurements for monitoring air pollutant emissions and concentrations on the ground.”  

“The state Economic Development Department is supporting this collaboration to help boost this innovative company based in New Mexico so it can grow faster and have an opportunity to use its technology on a broader scale,” said EDD Cabinet Secretary Alicia J. Keyes. “New Mexico is one of the cradles for this technology. It is being manufactured here in New Mexico and is creating highly paid, skilled jobs in the state that will help diversify the economy.”  

Future data gathered by the HAPS will:   

·        Allow the Environment Department to increase monitoring of air quality, especially in rural areas    

·        Provide quantitative information on emissions from air pollutant sources to help ensure industry compliance with air quality rules and permits     

·        Provide information to help the state determine how much air pollution stems from Mexico and neighboring states like Texas which contribute to our state’s air quality issues     

·        Inform public health and environmental coordination efforts between the U.S. and Mexico      

·        Help the EPA evaluate and enhance the use of high-altitude monitoring and are quality models on a broader, nationwide level  

By placing instrumentation on the airships, which rise over 65,000 feet above the earth’s surface, scientists and regulators from the EPA and NMED will have an unprecedented view of concentrations of greenhouse gases, particulate matter, ground-level ozone and other harmful air pollutants, as well as the industrial sources which emit these pollutants. With over 60,000 oil and gas sources across New Mexico, it is critical to work smarter, utilizing state-of-the-art technology to gain a comprehensive view of industry emissions.   

“We see our HAPS as instant infrastructure,” said Sceye Founder and CEO Mikkel Vestergaard Frandsen. “We can use our position in the stratosphere to not only expand broadband access to all, but also to transform how we monitor and care for our environment. Tracking emissions with precision and real time data is the key to realizing New Mexico’s ambitions for improving air quality. The state can set a national standard.”  

The five-year joint study between the state and EPA is expected to begin next year.  

Source: press release