The
Royal Navy’s Ice Patrol ship HMS Protector is on her way for an eight-month
deployment surveying and patrolling Antarctica. She left Portsmouth late
September and is currently visiting St Helena to conduct surveys of the harbour
in preparation for the building of a new jetty.
The Ice
Patrol during her last foray in Antarctica
HMS
Protector is scheduled to call in the Falkland Islands and will arrive in
Antarctica for the austral summer and has plans to make four forays into the
ice. During this time she will utilize her multi beam echo sounder and deploy
her survey motor boat to ensure the UK provides cutting-edge, hydrographic
imagery of the Antarctic region.
Around
80% of the world’s charts are provided by the Royal Navy’s hydrographic
department.
The ship
will also assist with the re-supply of British Antarctic Survey stations in the
region.
Protector’s
Commanding Officer, Captain Peter Sparkes, said: “Building upon the success -
and the lessons identified - from HMS Protector’s inaugural deployment to
Antarctica, the ship and her company is ready in all respects to face again the
challenges of the southern ocean. HMS Protector exemplifies the Royal Navy’s
global reach and the UK government’s commitment to British interests in the
South Atlantic.”
The
5.000 ton ice patrol is equipped with a flotilla of small boats, including: the
state-of-the-art survey motor boat, ‘James Caird IV’; a. 8.5m ramped Work Boat,
‘Terra Nova’, and; two Pacific 22 rigid inflatable boats (‘Aurora and
‘Nimrod’). Three BV206 all-terrain vehicles and four quad bikes, complete with
trailers, will also be carried and craned directly onto the ice to assist with
the re-supply of British Antarctic Survey scientific stations.
HMS
Protector has a historic connection with Britain's Antarctic commitment: it was
the name of the ship, which preceded the former Endurance (1968-91) in the
South Atlantic role.
She will
carry out all the functions of an Antarctic patrol ship such as deployed to
patrol and survey the Antarctic and South Atlantic, maintaining a UK presence
and supporting the international community in the region. This involves close
links with the Foreign and Commonwealth Office, the UK Hydrographic Office and
the British Antarctic Survey.
No comments:
Post a Comment