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After Titanic sub disaster, industry faces scrutiny

The first fatal accident aboard a deep-sea tourist submersible is certain to raise calls for additional safety regulations, but industry experts say that any new measures may be impossible to enforce given the international nature of the business.

Moreover, they say that the tragedy of the Titan submersible that imploded during its expedition to the wreckage of the Titanic was an outlier, given that the maker of the vessel opted against certifying the vessel, defying industry convention.

All five people aboard the Titan, made by OceanGate of Everett, Washington, were killed in an incident that launched a multinational search and captured the world’s attention.

Industry experts say they were the first known fatalities in more than 60 years of civilian deep-sea submergence.

But even as industry leaders braced for increased scrutiny, they said it was difficult to forecast what sort of changes may come.

In the high seas where the Titan and other submersibles operate, there are no regulations and there is no government that controls international waters.

Movie director James Cameron, who became a deep-sea explorer in the 1990s while researching and making his Oscar-winning blockbuster Titanic and is part owner of Triton Submarines, said that he would support regulation to require certification of vessels, but it would have to be passed in every country where submersibles operated.

“If it’s taking passengers, whether they’re science observers or citizen explorers, it should be certified,” said Cameron, who is part of the small and close-knit submersible community, or manned underwater vehicle (MUV) industry.

OceanGate has not addressed queries about its decision to forgo certification from industry third parties such as the American Bureau of Shipping or the European company DNV.

Of roughly 10 submersibles that exist in the world and are capable of diving to the depth of the Titanic – nearly 4,000m below the surface – only OceanGate’s Titan was uncertified, said Will Kohnen, chairman of peer-review group Marine Technology Society’s (MTS) committee on manned submersibles.

Most tourist submersibles explore coral reefs and other natural phenomenon at 500m or less.

In 2018, Kohnen authored a letter warning OceanGate CEO Stockton Rush that forgoing third-party certification for the Titan could result in a “catastrophic” outcome. Rush, the pilot of the Titan, was killed in the implosion.

Source: CNA

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