Interviews

Rural eye

by Mark Rowe

Mercury Security Management Ltd, the Northern Irish security company, has developed a solution that it claims will protect even the most rural of areas, delivering a faster police response to catch lawbreakers in the act and prevent loss or damage to property and animals.

The Mercury Eye is a security camera that operates wirelessly in all types of weather and that doubles up as an alarm to detect intruders and, once triggered, transmit a live visual feed to Mercury’s monitoring centre. The camera does not require electricity or broadband so can be utilised in the most remote areas. Once an intruder is detected and visually verified by the monitoring centre, the police will be informed at once, enabling them to send a patrol out to the property and make arrests if the intruders have not already been scared off by a verbal warning via an in-built speaker or a number of audio warnings, sirens or flashing lights.

A residential version known as Home Watch is also available for homes, which transmits a live visual feed to the resident’s smart phone or to Mercury’s monitoring centre.

Mercury Security director Liam Cullen claims that the Mercury Eye is the complete security solution for farmers, property owners and managers. He said: “Farms and rural communities across Northern Ireland are feeling increasingly vulnerable as organised crime gangs set their sights on valuable machinery, tools and livestock worth millions of pounds. We’ve heard of tractors stolen in Northern Ireland turning up in countries as far away as New Zealand and with modern day tractors costing up to £100,000, it’s no surprise to hear that rural theft cost the local farming community almost £4 million last year.

“Livestock, tractors, trailers, horse boxes, valuable machinery and tools are often left in unsecured or remote locations so it is important that these assets are properly monitored and protected.

“Our Mercury Eye and Home Watch cameras will detect intruders, visually record them and transmit live moving images in real time to enable our monitoring staff, farmers themselves and the police to act quickly to protect the property and catch the criminals in the act or scare them off,” he added.

“Our solution guarantees farmers and property owners peace of mind and 24-hour monitored security of their assets, while also saving them over 80 per cent on traditional security costs and lowering insurance costs.

“There has never been a more effective deterrent to prevent property theft and vandalism in Northern Ireland, and the good news is that the Mercury Eye costs around the same as a blind alarm system, making it affordable for even the smallest farm, business and home owner.”

The visual confirmation alarm system uses up to 24 cameras which can be set up outdoors or indoors, including farms, construction sites, factories, vacant real estate, railway tracks, roads, motorways, offices and foreclosed properties where all the utilities have been disconnected – as well as residential homes and holiday homes.

Mercury adds that it can offer 24-hour remotely managed real time CCTV, diesel tank alarms, number plate recognition, and the opening and closing of farm gates by remote means. Pictured are Mercury Security directors Eoin O’Brien (left) and Francis Cullen.

Visit www.mercurysecurity.biz.

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