Santa Fe New Mexican

Crews race to find missing tourist sub

Five onboard were on way to Titanic wreck before losing contact early in trip Sunday

- By Maham Javaid, Andrea Salcedo and Timothy Bella

Time is running out for crews looking for the submersibl­e vessel that vanished in the North Atlantic on a five-person expedition to see the Titanic’s remains. The four passengers and the pilot operating the 22-foot vessel thousands of feet underwater have up to 41 hours of emergency oxygen left, the Coast Guard said Tuesday afternoon.

“The search efforts have not yielded any results,” said Capt. Jamie Frederick, the Coast Guard’s response coordinato­r in the search. He added U.S. and Canadian crews are working around-the-clock to support the complex effort, pulling together a fleet of ships and aircraft to comb a search area about the size of Connecticu­t.

The vessel, called the Titan, was piloted by Stockton Rush, chief executive of OceanGate, which operates the submersibl­e, the company said. The four guests on the expedition are an English businessma­n, a retired French navy commander and a British-Pakistani businessma­n and his teenage son.

Choppy seas and rolling fog have complicate­d the search, said Chief Petty Officer Robert Simpson, a spokesman for the Coast Guard’s First District, which is heading the effort. Another factor making it difficult is the distance to the search area, which is about 900 miles east of Boston.

Simpson and other defense officials have declined to say when the search-andrescue effort will transition to a recovery operation and whether the military will keep looking for the vessel past the point when they determine oxygen has run out.

It is also unclear what the plan is when and if the submersibl­e is found.

“If the sub is located, then it’s up to the experts to tell us the next steps for salvaging and recovery,” Frederick said. “Right now, our effort is on searching.”

The Navy dispatched a system designed to haul up objects like planes and small vessels from the deep ocean floor, a spokespers­on said. The Flyaway Deep Ocean Salvage System will arrive in Newfoundla­nd on Tuesday evening, but it is unclear how long it will take to set up and arrive at the search area.

For it to be used, the crew would first need to find the vessel if it is resting on the seafloor. Few remotely operated vehicles can operate at such depths. One, the Curv-21, can work as far down as 20,000 feet underwater. Multiple systems worked in tandem to recover a helicopter off the coast of Japan in 2021 at a depth of more than 19,000 feet. The remains of the Titanic are nearly 13,000 feet underwater.

It is unclear if the Navy has dispatched a search vehicle like the Curv-21. One complicati­on is getting it to the search area; it needs specialize­d ships to drop it into the water and recover it. The Navy has only a handful of those fleet ocean tugs, and in August it deactivate­d one such ship that operated in the Atlantic, the USNS Apache. It is also unclear if civilian ships with that capability have been mobilized.

The search continued Tuesday after the

Titan lost contact with its mother ship, the Canadian research vessel Polar Prince, during a dive Sunday morning.

Coast Guard Rear Adm. John Mauger, who is leading the search by the Coast Guard and the Royal Canadian Air Force, said Tuesday that rescuers “have been working around-the-clock to bring all capabiliti­es that we have to bear” to find the submersibl­e and the people onboard.

The Titanic dive was organized by OceanGate Expedition­s, a private research and tourism company that has conducted more than a dozen underwater expedition­s since 2010. The company had completed Titanic dives in the past two years.

“We pray for the safe return of the crew and passengers,” Andrew Von Kerens and Jim Wilkinson, spokespeop­le for OceanGate, said in a statement to The Washington Post.

In addition to the pilot, Rush, Mauger said those onboard include four “mission specialist­s” who paid to take part in the expedition.

Among them is Hamish Harding, a British businessma­n and seasoned adventurer, who posted on social media before the trip he was on the vessel.

“This mission is likely to be the first and only manned mission to the Titanic in 2023,” he wrote on social media before the dive.

Harding added “a couple of legendary explorers” were onboard, including retired French navy commander Paul-Henri Nargeolet.

Nargeolet is the director of underwater research for E/M Group, a media and exhibition company whose affiliate, RMS Titanic, researches the Titanic and runs Titanic-focused exhibition­s. His company did not immediatel­y confirm whether Nargeolet was onboard the Titan.

British-Pakistani businessma­n Shahzada Dawood, 48, and his son, Suleman, 19, were also on the expedition, their family confirmed in a statement.

“[They] had embarked on a journey to visit the remnants of the Titanic in the Atlantic Ocean,” the family said. “As of now, contact has been lost with their submersibl­e craft and there is limited informatio­n available.”

Ofer Ketter, a submersibl­e pilot, told The

one of his concerns is the passengers’ psychologi­cal well-being.

Ketter said that if he were piloting a submersibl­e stuck at the bottom of the ocean, he would lower the flow of oxygen to a point that it’s safe but less than standard, assess battery power, and monitor carbon dioxide exhalation as well as temperatur­e and humidity. But before all that, he would ensure that his passengers were remaining calm.

“You have to manage the mental system,” he said. “No one is trained to be in that condition.”

OceanGate has explored the Titanic wreck and documented its rate of decay in trips over the past two years. Rush told CBS News in 2022 OceanGate’s eight-day expedition­s cost $250,000 for every person who joins a dive to see the wreckage.

OceanGate alerted the Coast Guard of the Titan’s disappeara­nce Sunday afternoon after contact was lost roughly an hour and 45 minutes into its dive. After the news of the vessel’s disappeara­nce broke, OceanGate said in a statement it was “mobilizing all options” to rescue those onboard and that its “entire focus is on the crew members in the submersibl­e and their families.”

Finding the submersibl­e that far underwater has been described by experts as a monumental task. The wreckage of the Titanic, a ship that was touted as unsinkable before hitting an iceberg and sinking in April 1912, lies on the ocean floor under 12,500 feet of water, roughly 370 miles off the coast of Newfoundla­nd. More than 1,500 passengers and crew perished in the disaster.

Canadian P-3 Aurora aircraft arrived on the scene to conduct sonar searches, while the Polar Prince and another Canadian research vessel, Deep Energy, are continuing their surface searches, according to the Coast Guard. Mauger told ABC that the P-3 Aurora has been dropping sonar buoys and listening for any sign of the submersibl­e.

“So, if they are making sound, that’s certainly one of the ways we’re going to use to locate them,” he said.

 ?? OCEANGATE EXPEDITION­S VIA THE ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? An undated photo of OceanGate Expedition’s Titan submersibl­e, which went missing Sunday carrying five people on their way to view the wreckage of the Titanic. Continued searching Tuesday by U.S. and Canadian crews yielded no results, and the vessel is thought to have only enough emergency oxygen to last until Thursday.
OCEANGATE EXPEDITION­S VIA THE ASSOCIATED PRESS An undated photo of OceanGate Expedition’s Titan submersibl­e, which went missing Sunday carrying five people on their way to view the wreckage of the Titanic. Continued searching Tuesday by U.S. and Canadian crews yielded no results, and the vessel is thought to have only enough emergency oxygen to last until Thursday.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States