News Releases and Fact Sheet
» News Releases «

Public service announcements unveiled on drinking water right-to-know program

Protecting Our Water and Our Environment

House 302(b) Allocations Sacrificing Our Environment and Public Health

Rough Waters Ahead For Oil Spills, Pfisteria And Other Toxins/Pollutants
EPA, U.S. Park Service To Test Water Contaminant Detection/Tracking System


EPA, National Park Service plan field tests

GenAlert D-TECS Tracks Oil Spill Flows Into Detroit River

NEW RELEASE: 2002

GenAlert Systems and BentleyTel USA reach agreement


Baxter visits the White House Office of Homeland Security

Homeland Early Warning Defense System For Bio-Terrorism In The USA Now Available

EnviroWatch.com and GenAlert.com team up for Homeland monitoring for Bio

Bio-Terrorism Early Warning Alert By Phone And Email Now Possible Using New VoIP Technology

Satellite/Internet-Based Detection and Notification System Provides Real-Time Environmental Protection

 

Genesis Alert System Fact Sheet

Chief product
A new patented, global, real-time satellite and microwave radio remote water contaminant detection system. The Genesis Alert System is an in-the-water aquatic pollution and toxins monitoring/tracking device, mounted on docks, bulkheads and buoys, utilizing satellite, radio frequency (RF), or cellular-like communications for instant environmental pollution identification, and response assistance for containment and clean-up.

How it works
Water-borne Genesis Alert Tracking buoys contain remote testing mechanisms that monitor water in real time and transmit data via satellite or microwave radio to land-based dispatch centers. When a buoy detects contaminants, authorities are immediately alerted, and a smaller buoy can be released from the mother buoy to track the spill or other toxic plumes where applicable. Real-time transmissions may be made via Internet over the companion EnviroWatch.com internet-based, patent pending technology.

Why it is important
Genesis alert technology allows instant detection and continuous tracking of a variety of substances that could contaminate our water supply, from an oil spill to Pfisteria. This represents a giant leap forward in sensing/tracking technology. Water authorities will now be able to detect contaminants at their source, instead of waiting for the contaminants to overcome their water intake facilities.

Pilot projects
Pilot project field tests will begin this year in the Ohio River Basin and New York Harbor. Additional test projects are scheduled for Berlin, Germany, Taiwan and Malaysia.

Government sponsors
The U.S. Environmental Protection Agency, the Ohio River Valley Sanitation Commission (ORSANCO), the U.S. National Park Service.

The company
Baxter Technologies, Inc. (BTI) is based in Marco Island, Florida and New York City is a high technology development company offering environmental monitoring services and equipment. BTI has conducted research and development on environment monitoring systems since 1993. It's principal product is the Genesis Alert System. John F. (Jack) Baxter, inventor of the patented Genesis Alert System technology, serves as president of BTI.

News Releases

07/19/99

Public service announcements unveiled
on drinking water right-to-know program

WASHINGTON -- The U.S. EPA has unveiled public service announcements to let Americans know that they will soon receive important new information on the safety of their local drinking water. The new right-to-know information, called a "Consumer Confidence Report," is required by amendments to the Safe Drinking Water Act, signed by President Clinton on August 6, 1996.

"These new public service ads inform the public that they soon will receive important information on the quality of their drinking water," said EPA Administrator Carol M. Browner. "Getting key environmental information like facts about your drinking water into the hands of the public is a critical part of the Clinton Administration's commitment to protect public health and the environment."

According to the Agency, between now and October, most Americans will receive notices from their drinking water suppliers, providing information on the quality of local drinking water supplies, any contaminants and the potential health effects of those contaminants exceeding public health standards, enforcement and compliance information, sources of local drinking water, and where consumers can get additional information.

Under the requirement, approximately 55,000 water systems serving 250 million Americans will provide the reports once a year, either in water bills or in a separate mailing. Many systems also will provide this information on the Internet.

Under the new public information campaign, EPA is providing radio and print public service announcements to the media, the drinking water community, and other interested parties that will alert consumers to the availability of the drinking water reports. Three 30-second radio spots, two of them also available in Spanish, are being released. Two black and white print ads are available in three sizes, also both in English and Spanish. Posters are also available.

More specific information on the public service announcements is available at:
http://www.epa.gov/safewater/psa.html

[top]

May 29, 1999
President Clinton:

Protecting Our Water and Our Environment

Today, in his weekly radio address, President Clinton will announce three new actions to improve water quality: expanded public health protections for thousands of miles of federal beaches; measures to prevent sewage spills that force beach closures; and a comprehensive strategy to better protect rivers and other water bodies on federal lands. The President also will call on Congress to reject proposed budget cuts that threaten public health and the environment, and to pass budget bills free of anti-environmental riders.

Cleaner Water, Safer Beaches. America has made tremendous strides in cleaning rivers, lakes, and coastal waters, yet much work remains. Too often, for instance, beaches must be closed because of sewage spills and other pollution that can cause dysentery, gastroenteritis, hepatitis, and other illnesses. Last year, 350 of the 1,062 beaches surveyed by the Environmental Protection Agency (EPA) reported closures or health advisories. The President's five-year $2.3 billion Clean Water Action Plan is helping states, communities, and landowners clean up the 40 percent of American's surveyed waterways that are still too polluted for fishing and swimming. Consistent with that effort, the President today will issue a memorandum that:

* Directs the National Park Service and other agencies to expand water quality monitoring along thousands of miles of federal beaches -- including the Cape Cod, Cape Hatteras, and Pt. Reyes National Seashores -- to identify pollution sources and protect beach-goers from potential health threats and directs EPA to work with the states to strengthen public health protections at other beaches, with a goal of stricter state water quality standards no later than 2003.

* Directs EPA to propose within one year a new national rule to prevent overflow from sewage systems --the major cause of beach closures; and

* Directs federal agencies to adopt a comprehensive strategy to better safeguard rivers, lakes, and other bodies of water on federal lands, after consultation with states, tribes and other stakeholders.

Investing in Our Environment. President Clinton's FY 2000 budget proposes significant investments to improve air quality, restore salmon and other endangered species, combat global warming, and preserve American's extraordinary lands legacy. But the spending guidelines released recently by the Republican leadership could instead stall toxic cleanups, shut down national parks, cripple clean water protections, and deny communities the help they need to save farms, forests and other disappearing green spaces. The President will call on Congress to reject these devastating cuts and join him in strengthening environmental and public health protections.

No More Stealth Attacks. President Clinton also will call on Congress to pass budget bills free of special-interest "riders" that roll back protections already in place. The President has vetoed bills before because they contained anti-environmental riders and, if necessary, is prepared to do so again.

[top]

May 28, 1999

House 302(b) Allocations
Sacrificing Our Environment and Public Health

The House 302(b) allocation slashes funding by 12 percent for priority domestic programs from their 1999 level. Assuming across-the-board cuts in affected subcommittees, VA/HUD, Labor/HHS, Agriculture, Interior, and Energy and Water, this could have devastating impacts on public health and the environment in such programs as toxic waste clean-up, water and public health programs, global warming prevention, and national parks:

* Stopping 15 Toxic Waste Cleanups -- EPA's Superfund program could be cut by $135 million from FY 1999 enacted levels. This could eliminate funding for 15 new federally-led cleanups due to begin during FY 2000, needlessly jeopardizing public health for citizens living near affected sites and making it more difficult to meet the 900-site cleanup goal in 2002.

* Shutting Down National Parks -- Cuts to the National Park Service could reduce services and hours of operation at 378 parks and other facilities serving almost 300 million visitors a year. The $240 million below FY 1999 enacted level could shut smaller parks and back-country areas in larger parks, and jeopardize visitor safety by preventing vital maintenance and repairs.

* Squandering Our Land Legacy -- By failing to support the President's Lands Legacy initiative, the House allocation could cripple Federal efforts to preserve natural treasures, and deny states and communities $588 million to protect farmland, coastland, urban parks and other green spaces.

* Slashing Water and Public Health Protections -- The reduction to EPA operations from the FY 1999 enacted level could severely hamper implementation of the Clean Water Action Plan, which helps communities clean up the 40 percent of surveyed waters still too polluted for fishing or swimming; and could let polluters off the hook by severely limiting EPA's ability to enforce public health protections.

* Gambling with Global Warming -- Cuts to the Department of Energy and the EPA could gut efforts toward cleaner, more efficient energy for homes, transportation, and industry; and keep the Partnership for a New Generation of Vehicles from meeting its goal of new cars three times more fuel-efficient than today's models by 2004.

* Crippling Wildlife Protections -- Cuts to the Fish and Wildlife Service, National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration, and Army Corps of Engineers could hamper salmon restoration in the Pacific Northwest, shut down some wildlife refuges, and reduce efforts to restore endangered species.

* Raising the Risk of Deadly Wildfires -- Cuts to the Forest Service and Bureau of Land Management (19 percent below FY 1999) could close some lands to the public and reduce firefighting capabilities. A total decrease of about $160 million below FY 1999 in the wildland firefighting requests for Agriculture and Interior in FY 2000 could severely hamper their capabilities to suppress wild fires, jeopardizing lives and property throughout the West.

[top]

May 18, 1999

Rough Waters Ahead For Oil Spills, Pfisteria And Other Toxins/Pollutants EPA, U.S. Park Service To Test Water Contaminant Detection/Tracking System

WASHINGTON, DC -- A new patented, global, real-time satellite and microwave radio remote water contaminant detection system will be field tested in the Ohio River Basin and New York Harbor starting this year.

In a pilot project funded by the U.S. Environmental Protection Agency, the Ohio River Valley Water Sanitation Commission (ORSANCO), Genesis Alert Systems, Inc., a division of Baxter Technologies, Inc., (BTI) will field test the varied capability of the Genesis Alert System of remote sensing buoys to identify various source drinking water pollutants/toxins. Twenty-four water treatment facilities serving cities such as Cincinnati, Ohio and Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania will be include in this pilot test. The U.S., National Park Service is also beginning a pilot test site for the Gateway National Recreation Area, New York, to help identify and protect the ecosystem of areas such as Jamaica Bay for toxins and pollutants. Additional test projects are scheduled for Berlin, Germany, Taiwan and Malaysia.

"This technology will allow instant detection and continuous tracking of a variety of substances tat could contaminate our water supply, from an oil spill to Pfisteria." said John F. (Jack) Baxter, inventor of the patented technology and president o f Baxter Technologies. "This is a giant leap for ward in sensing/tracking technology. Water authorities will now be able to detect contaminates at their source, instead of waiting for the contaminants to overcome their water intake facilities."

Water-borne Genesis Alert Tracking buoys contain remote testing mechanisms that monitor water in real time and transmit data via satellite or microwave radio to land-based dispatch centers. When a buoy detects contaminants, authorities are immediately alerted, and a smaller buoy can be released from the mother buoy to track the spill or other toxic plumes where applicable. Real-time transmissions may be made via Internet over the companion EnviroWatch.com internet-based, patent pending technology.

Baxter Technologies, Inc. (BTI) is based in Marco Island, Florida and New York City is a high technology development company offering environmental monitoring services and equipment. BTI has conducted research and development on environment monitoring systems since 1993. It's principal product is the Genesis Alert System. John F. (Jack) Baxter, inventor of the patented Genesis Alert System technology, serves as president of BTI.

[top]

May 4, 1999
Naples Daily News, Business News

EPA, National Park Service plan field tests

Naples, FL -- A Marco (FL) based inventor will open an environmental technology business this summer featuring a product that has already attracted the interest of federal officials.

Inventor Jack Baxter's company, Baxter Technologies, Inc. in Naples, will research and develop its Genesis Alert System, a water-quality monitoring system that has drawn attention from the Environmental Protection Agency.

Genesis Alert checks temperatures and collects data ranging from salt and pH levels to the presence of pollutants in the water. The system, attached to buoys or other flotation devices, transmits the real time information via satellite to a control station on the ground. The tracking sensors on the device emit radio and communications satellite signals that are received by a software program. Baxter's company also has developed several types of buoys for rivers, deep sea or stationary mounts.

The inventor owns patents for the Genesis Alert System sensor and buoys.

Baxter said his company will run field-testing programs and continue research at the Naples facility, located in a corporate plaza on Radio Road. "Most of my work is aimed at the betterment of humanity," said Baxter 45, adding that the new facility will probably be doubled in size from 10,000 square feet to 20,000 square feet this year.

He said the water-quality system could eventually provide early detection of red tide, algae blooms and other water problems that can affect Florida. Baxter, whose company is also launching the testing system in Malaysia in Germany, first created the technology for on-site detection of oil spills after the Exxon Valdez disaster in Alaska.

Jim Lazorchak, an EPA aquatic ecologist, said Monday that the agency will field-test the Baxter system in the next three months on the Ohio River near Cincinnati.

"The Baxter project is included in an EPA program that test innovative programs that could improve the way we monitor and react to pollutants in the water," Lazorchak said.

The U.S. National Park Service also plans to test Genesis Alert in the Gateway National Recreational Area in New York. John Tanacredi, a Park Services Spokesman, said the system will be tested in parts of New York City harbor as part of a two-year trial program.

Tanacredi said that up to 20 Genesis Alert units may be set afloat for testing during the program.

According to the Baxter Technologies, Inc. business plan, the company will start marketing and selling the testing system in about three years. Initial stock offerings are also targeted for that time.

Letter From Vice President Al Gore

[top]

April 10, 2002
Detroit, Michigan

GenAlert D-TECS Tracks Oil Spill Flows Into Detroit River

Personnel from federal and state agencies are working to contain an oil spill that has reached the Detroit River the Genalert System is being used to track the spill.

About 500 gallons of what U.S. Coast Guard Commander Brian Hall describes as "weathered oil" spilled from a storm drain catch basin into the Rouge River Tuesday and has now reached the Detroit River. Officials do not yet know the source of the oil spill, nor its exact size, but as their investigation continues this rough estimate - of 200 gallons in the Rouge River and 300 gallons in the Detroit River - is expected to increase.

Coast Guard Chief Adam Wine says his agency is working with personnel from the U.S. Environmental Protection Agency, and the Michigan State Department of Environmental Quality to contain the spill and minimize its impact on sensitive environmental areas. Local communities and response contractors bring the number of people working to clean up the mess to about 50.

The company Marine Pollution Control has been hired to start cleanup on the Rouge River in concert with state and federal agencies.

The company GenAlert a division of Baxter Technologies Inc. are using the D-TECS tracking system GS-6 and GS-7 developed by Baxter.

GenAlert’s D-TECS network for tracking is allowing the Coast Guard and first responder contractors to stay ahead of the spill. The GenAlert D-TECS networks operates with satellite and internet the network developed by Baxter Technologies, Inc from Marco Island Fl is being used to track toxins around the world and is a system that allows faster response.

Chief Wine explained, "On the Rouge River, we have several booms set up for collection sites to divert oil in so it can be collected. We also have the mouth of the Rouge River boomed off."

Vessel traffic is being allowed through now, although the Rouge River was closed to traffic earlier in the day. Containment booms have also been set up along the Detroit River, and some protective booming is being installed near the Humbug Marsh and Pointe Mouillee right at the edge of Lake Erie near the Huron River.

Chief Wine says the sensitive areas being protected from the spill, "are like a wetland where waterbirds and other birds go in for nesting. There are those type of places along the Detroit River and down into Lake Erie." The Coast Guard is asking that the public not go down to the shoreline or bring their pets there until the spill is cleaned up.

[top]

* NEW RELEASE: 2002

After a long turn around on a defaulted sale of GenAlert by Crusader Technologies Corp, Baxter Technologies Inc. and Founder and patent holder have a new operating company CBR Technologies Inc in Rockville Maryland under the division of BTI we have in placed over $330,000,000.00 in contracts on the 2002 and 2003 production load.

GenAlert has full control of the patents and with the new reps worldwide interest in the new technologies offered in November 2001 will change the monitoring world as known.

GenAlert is reviewing offers to merge with a German environmental water company and have new interest from oneof the top 10 environmental companies in the US.

GenAlert will be the # one bidder in Malaysia for the Oil spill monitoring project due to the latest patent issued in Dec 2001.

[top]

April 11, 2002

GenAlert Systems and BentleyTel USA reach agreement

Today the two companies one a environmental water monitoring network and the other a telecom network join forces to place a global monitoring network with VOIP.
The network will allow voice alerts for early warning network .

The system will operate the EWOS and D-TECS network and will be called VEMN.

The VEMN will allow quicker response understanding needs at the time of a reporting.

[top]

April 12, 2002

Baxter visits the White House Office of Homeland Security

Mr. John F Baxter Jr. of Baxter Technologies Inc.and George Barstis of CBR Technologies Inc. visit the White House Office of Homeland Security to review the early warning water alerting technology for Bio –Terrorism of US Drinking Water.

GenAlert has the license from BTI for Bio-Terrorism monitoring of drinking water a patented technology developed by Baxter for the advanced warning system to protect against threats of terrorism.

[top]

Homeland Early Warning Defense System
For Bio-Terrorism In The USA Now Available

Anti-Terrorist Early Warning Technology Available For Hazardous Nuclear, Biological And Chemical Water And Airborne Attacks. Homeland Monitoring System Offers Early Warning For All Of USA With Reporting Over The Internet And Phone.

[top]

Apr. 15, 2002

MARCO ISLAND, FL
EnviroWatch.com and GenAlert.com team up
for Homeland monitoring for Bio

Terrorism in our water, air, schools, offices, and homes with the latest to the market - HazAlert(TM) anti-terrorist technology that will report immediately and track nuclear, biological and chemical (NBC) airborne hazardous materials attack on civilian and military personnel. Jack Baxter, founder of this new anti-terrorist technology, said today that HazAlert(TM) could be placed in strategic locations anywhere in our country to monitor and report the presence of terrorist release of these NBC’s. HazAlert(TM) has built-in capabilities not only to identify and report on these NBC’s but to trigger the release of a tracking balloon with a sensor package to track and report their altitude and plume path. This will allow civil and military officials to respond rapidly and take necessary measures to protect the public."

Baxter said that HazAlert(TM) technology could be a significant part of our response to our nation’s commitment to protect our citizens from further expected acts by terrorists using NBC’s. "While this technology is not designed to prevent such acts," he explained, "it does significantly reduce response time of civil and military officials charged with responding to such emergencies. Hundreds, perhaps thousands of lives can be saved with the on- going reporting by HazAlert’s(TM) communications component" Baxter said.

HazAlert(TM) technology consists of a variety of sensors placed in strategic locations in the public and private sectors. For example, one or more sensors and communications units would be placed on the stacks or sides of a chemical plant or large office complex or shopping mall. If a hazardous airborne substance were identified the sensor would send a message to the airborne unit. This would trigger inflation of a balloon that would carry aloft a package of sensors and communications software. The balloon would follow the plume of the hazardous substances and report its altitude and path to monitoring stations in civilian and military installations.
"Of particular interest to both civilian and military ground forces is an application of

HazAlert(TM) attached to personnel and vehicles that triggers the same response as that fixed to buildings" said Baxter Mr. Baxter has received a "Patent 6,317,080" from the U.S. Patent Office and the HazAlert(TM) patent issued in November 13, 2001. "We were surprised when the U.S. Patent Office responded to our patent application and designated it as an "anti-terrorism" invention" Baxter said.

Baxter has held discussions with a number of federal agencies and submitted a proposal to the Environmental Protection agency for funding to complete further refinements of HazAlert(TM) technology. "Given the events of September 11th, it is my hope that as a nation we quickly can put in place any and every capability to thwart the distorted minds of those committed to destroy our way of life. We’re ready to do our part" Baxter said.
The system will give the notice we all need to protect our loved ones and lay way to combat the terrorist.

[top]

Apr. 18, 2002

MARCO ISLAND, FL
Bio-Terrorism Early Warning Alert By Phone And Email Now Possible Using New VoIP Technology

eVoiceInMail.com teams up with HazAlert (TM) for Homeland monitoring of Bio-Terrorism in our Drinking Water, Indoor and Outdoor Air, Schools, Office Buildings, Hospitals and Homes and immediate alerting of relevant authorities and residents using the latest to the market VoIP technology. The HazAlert(TM) anti-terrorist technology detects and tracks real-time nuclear, biological and chemical (NBC) airborne hazardous materials attacks on civilian and military personnel. The VoIP technology then alerts local residents, hospitals, rescue workers and other regional authorities of the contamination for appropriate action.

Jack Baxter, founder of this new anti-terrorist technology, said today that VoIP-HazAlert(TM) could be placed in strategic locations anywhere in our country to monitor and report the presence of a terrorist release of these NBC's.

The combined VoIP-HazAlert(TM) has built-in capabilities not only to identify and report on these NBC's but to trigger the release of a tracking balloon with a sensor package to track and report their altitude and plume path. This will also allow civil and military officials to respond rapidly and take necessary measures to further protect the public.

Baxter said that VoIP-HazAlert(TM) technology could be a significant part of our response to our nation's commitment to protect our citizens from further expected acts by terrorists using NBC's. "While this technology is not designed to prevent such acts," he explained, "it does significantly reduce response time of civil and military officials charged with responding to such emergencies. Hundreds, perhaps thousands of lives can be saved with the on- going reporting by VoIP-HazAlert (TM) communications component" Baxter said.

HazAlert(TM) technology consists of a variety of sensors placed in strategic locations in the public and private sectors. For example, one or more sensors and communications units would be placed on the stacks or sides of a chemical plant or large office complex or shopping mall. If a hazardous airborne substance were identified the sensor would send a message to the airborne unit. This would trigger inflation of a balloon that would carry aloft a package of sensors and communications software. The balloon would follow the plume of the hazardous substances and report its altitude and path to monitoring stations in civilian and military installations.

"Of particular interest to both civilian and military ground forces is an application of VoIP-HazAlert(TM) attached to personnel and vehicles that triggers the same response as that fixed to buildings" said Baxter. Mr. Baxter has received a Patent 6,317,080 from the U.S. Patent Office and the HazAlert (TM) patent issued in November 13, 2001.

Baxter is actively pursuing participation from telecommunications companies.

[top]

Satellite/Internet-Based Detection and Notification System Provides Real-Time Environmental Protection

Jack Baxter, Baxter Technologies

Our highly evolved society, by its very nature, puts enormous pressure on the environment. Our dependency on fossil fuels results in periodic oil spills and other environmental catastrophes. Land development causes change in wildlife migration, water use, pollution, even weather patterns. As a result, it is becoming increasingly important not only to limit damage, but actually to anticipate and detect potential problems before they develop into situations with severe consequences for our communities and the environment.

This highlighted technology is an early detection and notification system that takes advantage of global satellite technology and the Internet. Baxter Technologies has developed a system comprising remote environmental sensors that transmit data via satellite to a database server which, in turn, can provide data through any number of available technologies, including computer, e-mail, telephone, even a pager. The database can also be accessed through the Internet and searched for relevant data based on particular search criteria, such as geographic location. The sensors can be modified to track an enormous range of environmental conditions, including hydrocarbon and toxin concentrations (oil spills and excessive fertilizer run-off, for example), atmospheric activity and water temperature (key to severe weather forecasting), plate tectonics (critical for earthquake and volcanic activity alerts), even animal migration.

Marine applications hold particular promise

Marine applications hold particular promise because of the wide variety of uses. Sensors could be used to monitor atmospheric and water conditions to help detect and forecast severe weather such as tropical storms and hurricanes, and also to aid in navigation and ocean current research. However, one of the most promising uses is oil-spill detection and notification.

Central to the network are the sensors, composed of a sensing assembly, a sealed housing to protect the battery-powered transmitter, and float-tipped arms extending laterally from all sides for stability and proper depth maintenance. For oil contamination monitoring, an oil-sensitive permeable membrane is contained in a sensing assembly chamber through which ocean water is allowed to flow. When the membrane picks up the presence of oil, a change in condition triggers a signal transmitted to a low-earth-orbit (LEO) satellite that relays the data to a shore-based data server. Predetermined value ranges would then trigger a notification to the proper recipient if the range is exceeded. A variation of the sensing element uses the dielectric value of contaminants to affect the voltage in the sensor, triggering an alarm. This enables a multi-channel sensor to be programmed to detect a number of contaminants with known dielectric values, triggering a specific alarm for a specific contaminant.

Baxter´s detection and notification system is equally at home in the air, capable of detecting and monitoring airborne chemical, biological, even nuclear substances. In place of the sensor buoys used for the marine version, the airborne system relies upon balloons. A launch balloon carries a deflated tracking balloon to the target altitude, where it is inflated and released to intercept and track airborne substances. The tracking balloon carries multi-channel sensors, a global positioning system (GPS) and a battery-powered transmitter to relay information to a base station data server. The sensors are capable of relaying data for a large number of substances, including airborne toxins, microorganisms, radioactive fallout, volcanic debris, and forest fire smoke, to name a few.

This versatile, flexible system is ideally suited for any organization that must provide round-the-clock monitoring capabilities but lacks the budget or manpower for that level of service. It is also extremely useful for monitoring or research in areas hampered by environmental conditions or remoteness. The system is currently being evaluated by the United States Environmental Protection Agency and the US Park Services.

As published in yet2.com

[top]

 

For licensing contact info@baxtech.com