Manila Bulletin

Extreme conditions await MH370 recovery if plane wreckage found

- By GLENDA KWEK

SYDNEY (AFP) – Salvagers are confident debris and human remains can be recovered if Malaysia Airlines MH370 is finally found, despite the pitch-black darkness, crushing pressure and icecold water awaiting them.

The disappeara­nce of the Boeing 777 carrying 239 passengers and crew almost four years ago is one of aviation's greatest mysteries, with an Australian-led hunt across a 120,000 square-kilometer (46,000 square-mile) zone failing to reveal the crash site.

Yet a new probe now underway by private firm Ocean Infinity – commission­ed by Malaysia on a ''no find, no fee'' basis – has revived hopes the doomed plane might be found.

If the wreckage is located in treacherou­s terrain up to six kilometers (19,685 feet) deep – far off Western Australia and north of the earlier search site – experts say high-tech underwater robots can handle the demands of recovery.

''They (searchers) are working at the extreme edge of what's capable,'' South African salvage master Nick Sloane, who led the operation to recover the stricken Italian cruise ship Costa Concordia, told AFP.

''(But) the benefits to the manufactur­ers of the aeroplane, operators and the families are that if you actually locate the wreckage, it's worthwhile to go ahead and take the next step and recover it.''

That expedition would require cutting-edge technology, likely last months and potentiall­y cost more than the maximum US$70-million reward Malaysia is offering Ocean Infinity, according to deep-ocean salvagers.

To aid the previous search – the largest in aviation history – the ocean floor was mapped in detail for the first time, revealing the varied underwater terrain.

It showed seafloors more than 4,700 meters deep, vast mountains 1,500-meters high and kilometers wide, deep canyons and massive underwater landslides of sediment, Geoscience Australia said.

If debris is found between 2,0006,000 meters – known as the abyssal zone – salvagers would work in a perpetuall­y dark and near-freezing region where the pressure can reach up to 9,000 pounds per square inch (psi).

Wreckage has been recovered from such depths previously: Air France 447 at nearly 4,000 meters in the Atlantic, the cargo ship El Faro (4,500 meters) off the coast of the Bahamas, and South African Airways 295 (4,900 meters) off Mauritius – far deeper than where oil and gas companies operate.

Machines that can operate at such extremes include deep-ocean operator Odyssey Marine Exploratio­n's remotely operated vehicles, which have frames constructe­d out of high-strength aluminum. A handful of other companies have similar technology.

The ROV, tethered to the mother ship, is fitted with LED lights that illuminate the dark environmen­t and can record high-definition footage, Odyssey Marine's chief operating officer John Longley told AFP.

The submersibl­e – remotely driven by pilots on a surface ship – has two manipulato­r arms that function like ''human hands'' and can retrieve smaller objects, added deep-sea shipwreck hunter David Mearns.

Larger parts such as the jet's wings can be brought to the surface using baskets or slings.

Mearns said such underwater journeys could take several hours with the overall mission possibly lasting up to half a year.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Philippines