Red tape hindering equipment getting to Titanic sub search: Nat Geo

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Wednesday, June 21, 2023
Missing Titanic sub: Coast Guard searching where noise was detected
Submarine crews unable to communicate with the surface are taught to bang on their submersible's hull to be detected by sonar.

The ability to send potentially life-saving technology to locate and retrieve the missing Titan submersible have been delayed by the U.S. Coast Guard since Monday, according to a new National Geographic report.



According to the report, Explorers Club president Richard Garriott de Cayeux says that red tape has tied up offers to deliver working-class ROVs from deep-water firm Magellan to the search since Monday.



Hamish Harding and Paul-Henri Nargeolet, crew members onboard the missing submersible, are Explorers Club members.



Missing Titanic submersible: CEO of company leading expedition, billionaire adventurer on board


The people on board included OceanGate CEO Stockton Rush, who, according to the company, was serving as a member of the crew.


Garriott said the U.S. Navy Flyaway Deep Ocean Salvage System may damage Titan and could potentially kill any surviving crew members during the recovery process.



MORE: Why rescue mission for Titanic submersible is so difficult

Jules Jaffe, a research oceanographer at UC San Diego, discusses the challenges the people on board the missing submersible face.


According to the report, the Magellan Argus-class ROVs are currently located in the United Kingdom and could be delivered to the site within 16 hours.



Those ROVs are outfitted with external arms that can retrieve and raise Titan.



Read the full National Geographic report here.


WATCH: Former ABC reporter recalls near-death experience on trip to Titanic

Dr. Michael Guillen reports from the wreck of the Titanic at the bottom of the Atlantic Ocean.


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