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CMS components
CMS components
The system is capable of operating in stand-alone and network versions.
It should be noted that stations installed in different company divisions
can operate within a single information environment.
The interface allows the use of system functions in the most convenient
and clear manner. Work with this interface does not require any special
computer skills except those of a PC user.
 Information structure of monitoring system
Main unit
- emergency response control module, which includes emergency comtrol (organisation of control for each contingency complying with international law standards and requirements of the RF legislation,
formation of the work procedure), models for assessing costeffectiveness of decisions taken, means and methods of control, weather module enabling the processing of forecasts, statistics and photographs taken from space;
- resource management module which includes supply of resources and an account of their activities, Internet access (data exchange between the monitoring centres, communications and connection with suppliers), a single information centre (preparation of information for
mass media, graphic data display, modelling of forecasts, generation of reports on losses), records (of purchases, expenditure tracking, generation of reports and forecasts on the use of resources), control of emergency response and rescue operations (order of works, recommended actions);
- logistics module which includes a communication centre (telephones, satellite communications, Internet, exchange recording, switchboard), automatic warning signals (hints, prompts);
- GIS stations – geoinformation systems (electronic cartography, topographic and municipal maps, graphs, photographs, information module of main routes and objects, sources of weather information
and tidal data), processing of photographs (taken from space, aerial photographs, pictures made on the site);
- forecast modules – models of forecasts, propagation of the distress, effect on the environment, effectiveness of measures taken, change of situation in time), distress types (oil spills, floods, forest fires,
earthquakes, hurricanes, epidemics, nuclear/chemical contamination), models of effect on the environment (nature sensitivity model, wild life), models of economic damage assessment (damage to production,
damage to tourism, commercial loss, loss of people and material loss).
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