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Tor Bejnar

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Re: USCGC Healy: scientific missions to the Arctic
« Reply #200 on: June 09, 2018, 06:36:52 PM »
Here are updated Healy links, conveniently posted in post #200:
As this is a new season, some repeated info:
ship position:  http://www.sailwx.info/shiptrack/shipposition.phtml?call=NEPP
ship webcam:  http://icefloe.net/Aloftcon_Photos/index.php?album=2018 [images start May 31, 2018]
Healy Track Map: http://icefloe.net/uscgc-healy-track-map [currently showing end of recent sea trials]
current mission http://icefloe.net/healy-current-mission [showing three 2018 missions, but
only the Sept/Oct mission link has info at this time.]
current deployment info:  https://www.pacificarea.uscg.mil/Our-Organization/Cutters/cgcHealy/ [current as of July 26.]
Healy background, tour and specs, etc.:  http://icefloe.net/healy-main
Press releases and selected published articles:  https://www.pacificarea.uscg.mil/Our-Organization/Area-Cutters/CGC-Healy/Updates/AWS18/ [no 2018 data, but some 2017 stuff at this time]
Wikipedia page
« Last Edit: July 26, 2018, 07:03:58 PM by Tor Bejnar »
Arctic ice is healthy for children and other living things because "we cannot negotiate with the melting point of ice"

Tor Bejnar

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Re: USCGC Healy: scientific missions to the Arctic
« Reply #201 on: June 28, 2018, 07:44:12 PM »
Coast Guard icebreaker stops in San Diego before Arctic mission (this past Sunday)
Quote
A head of its annual summer research deployment to the Arctic, U.S. Coast Guard Cutter Healy is stopping over in San Diego to pick up supplies [from the Scripps Institution of Oceanography] and give the public a window inside the ice-breaking operations of the branch’s largest ship.
...
This year, Healy’s missions revolve around studying climate change, examining how sound spreads under water and studying ocean currents. Missions are typically funded by a science institution with 2018’s operations financed by the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration, the Office of Naval Research and the National Science Foundation.
...
Healy depart[ed] San Diego on Tuesday and will return to Seattle for a two-week break before a five-month deployment to the Arctic.

The Healy is a little north of San Francisco right now.
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Re: USCGC Healy: scientific missions to the Arctic
« Reply #202 on: July 09, 2018, 08:23:05 PM »
A research team led by Woods Hole Oceanographic Institution (WHOI) found the fingerprint of a massive flood of fresh water in the western Arctic, thought to be the cause of an ancient cold snap that began around 13,000 years ago.

https://phys.org/news/2018-07-fingerprint-ancient-abrupt-climate-arctic.html

Next steps in future research, Keigwin says, will be for scientists to answer remaining questions about the quantity of fresh water delivered to the North Atlantic preceding the Younger Dryas event and over how long of a period of time.

"Events like this are really important, and we have to understand them better," adds Keigwin. "In the long run, I think the findings from this paper will stimulate more research on how much fresh water is really necessary to cause a change in the system and weakening of the AMOC. It certainly calls further attention to the warming we're seeing in the Arctic today, and the accelerated melting of Greenland ice."

Earlier this year, a paper by researchers at the University College London and WHOI found evidence that the AMOC hasn't been running at peak strength since the mid-1800s and is currently at its weakest point in the past 1,600 years. Continued weakening could disrupt weather patterns from the U.S. and Europe to the African Sahel.
Science is a thought process, technology will change reality.

Tor Bejnar

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Re: USCGC Healy: scientific missions to the Arctic
« Reply #203 on: July 26, 2018, 06:56:15 PM »
Healy is headed north (map)

Coast Guard Icebreaker Healy Deploying to Arctic Ocean
Quote
SEATTLE — The Coast Guard Cutter Healy is scheduled to depart July 24 for a four-month deployment to the Arctic Ocean to carry out multiple scientific research missions, the 13th Coast Guard District announced in a release.

Healy will provide presence and access to the Arctic while conducting three major science research missions. In partnership with the National Science Foundation, National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration (NOAA) and the Office of Naval Research, scientists will conduct physical and biological oceanographic research in the Arctic Ocean.

Healy’s first mission is a NOAA-sponsored mission to increase understanding of biological processes along Alaska’s Continental Shelf. This mission comprises three mission subsets: Distributed Biological Observatory, Northern Chukchi Integrated Study, and the Ecosystems and Fisheries-Oceanography Coordinated Investigations.
...
Remember, top post (Reply #200) has various links.
« Last Edit: July 26, 2018, 07:05:48 PM by Tor Bejnar »
Arctic ice is healthy for children and other living things because "we cannot negotiate with the melting point of ice"

Tor Bejnar

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Re: USCGC Healy: scientific missions to the Arctic
« Reply #204 on: August 01, 2018, 06:41:02 PM »
Just left Kodiak Island.  Presumably headed around the Alaska Peninsula on the way to the Arctic.
A reminder that there is weather conditions data on the Healy location map webpage (scroll down)
Quote
Last reported at 2018-Aug-01 15:00 UTC. Time now 2018-Aug-01 16:25 UTC.
Position  N 56°42' W 151°54'.
Type: Other ship. MMSI: 303902000.
AWS
Wind from 260 at 20 knots
Barometer 1018.1 mb
 Air temperature 10.6 ° C
 Dewpoint 8.9 ° C
 Water temperature 12.0 ° C
Arctic ice is healthy for children and other living things because "we cannot negotiate with the melting point of ice"

Tor Bejnar

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Re: USCGC Healy: scientific missions to the Arctic
« Reply #205 on: August 14, 2018, 05:51:36 PM »
The Healy is going back and forth, back and forth.  Alas, no ice in sight.  But there is a UFO - Unidentified (by me) Flickering (period: 1 day - lasts a few hrs) Optic (or light) - probably a reflection of equipment on the bridge.

(Remember: multiple Healy links at the top of this page.) [Note to self: post #1955: a very good year!]
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Tor Bejnar

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Re: USCGC Healy: scientific missions to the Arctic
« Reply #206 on: August 14, 2018, 08:25:23 PM »
Quote
WASHINGTON — The U.S. Senate passed its annual defense authorization bill Wednesday, ... and directing the Navy to procure a new Arctic icebreaker.
...

The bill would procure a single icebreaker via the Navy, but it would also authorize the Coast Guard to "enter into one or more contracts for the procurement of up to five additional polar-class icebreaker vessels," according to the conference report.

How to procure an icebreaker has been more controversial than whether to do it. The Coast Guard has not bought a new icebreaker since the early 1970s, and the cost of building one is roughly as much as the Coast Guard's entire annual shipbuilding budget — $1 billion. That makes funding difficult to get through Congress.

Last year, [Alaska Sen. Dan] Sullivan included a provision allowing purchase of six polar-class heavy icebreakers in the FY18 authorization bill "and it got stripped out of the conference," he said.

Currently, the U.S. has just two polar icebreakers in working order, one heavy-duty ship and one medium-duty research vessel. Reports indicate Russia has more than 40 icebreakers, and more in the works.
Anchorage Daily News

I think icebreaker funding has been stripped out of bills during Senate-House conferences many times over the years.  Will this year be different?
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Jim Hunt

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Re: USCGC Healy: scientific missions to the Arctic
« Reply #207 on: August 15, 2018, 11:34:19 PM »
Healy has found some sea ice!



71.57 N, 161.52 W

SailWX is slightly behind:

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Re: USCGC Healy: scientific missions to the Arctic
« Reply #208 on: August 16, 2018, 01:53:39 AM »
Healy has found some sea ice!

In not too many years, I can imagine the Healy retrieving such a piece of ice -- so it can be put in a museum. 

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Re: USCGC Healy: scientific missions to the Arctic
« Reply #209 on: August 20, 2018, 02:08:08 AM »
Rain and ice

Tor Bejnar

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Re: USCGC Healy: scientific missions to the Arctic
« Reply #210 on: November 02, 2018, 08:14:51 PM »
It looks cold now... (image below)
And from the ship track:
Quote
Oceanographic research ship USCGC Healy (USA)
...
Last reported at 2018-Oct-29 00:00 UTC. Time now 2018-Nov-02 19:05 UTC.
Position  N 66°48' W 168°24'.

Type: Other ship. MMSI: 303902000.
AWS

Wind from 280 at 8 knots
Barometer 1013.6 mb
 Air temperature -1.2 ° C
 Dewpoint -3.7 ° C
 Water temperature 5.5 ° C
Odd that the last info is from October 29, although the cam is current.  Would the water have been warmer where the ship was 4 days ago (3º further south, per image lat./long/)?

Some of the current crew’s 'positions' include:  CTD watchstander, Collaborating scientist, Collaborating student, Post-doc/Microstructure, Student/Chlorophyll, Student/Radium, Seabird Observer. (from here)  All of their nationalities are "TBD".  Hmmmmm
« Last Edit: November 02, 2018, 08:24:58 PM by Tor Bejnar »
Arctic ice is healthy for children and other living things because "we cannot negotiate with the melting point of ice"

Tor Bejnar

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Re: USCGC Healy: scientific missions to the Arctic
« Reply #211 on: November 09, 2018, 08:11:42 PM »
Healy today - near the edge of the continuous floe, it seems.  Is that some pancake ice amongst broken floe bits?
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Re: USCGC Healy: scientific missions to the Arctic
« Reply #212 on: December 04, 2018, 07:10:10 PM »
Quote
Some of the current crew’s 'positions' include:  CTD watchstander, Collaborating scientist, Collaborating student, Post-doc/Microstructure, Student/Chlorophyll, Student/Radium, Seabird Observer. (from here)  All of their nationalities are "TBD".  Hmmmmm

So that list is just a submitted questionnaire from the Chief Scientist of that particular leg- so it's actually a list of embarked Science Party members, who aren't permanent crew.   They join the ship for their research trip and leave afterward.   The active duty USCG crew stay on all season (and just got back last Friday, as it happens).     

The group from this linked questionnaire was the HLY1803 (third expedition for Healy's Arctic West Summer 2018 mission season), which was the second trip of the year on Healy for Bob Pickart, who is one of Healy's most frequent customers (he was also the ChiSci for HLY1801, back in August).     He's a physical oceanographer from Woods Hole Oceanographic Institute.     

The other trip this year was HLY1802, SODA (Stratified Ocean Dynamics in the Arctic), which was a component of a multiyear Arctic oceanography research program funded by the Office of Naval Research and run by the University of Washington.

Tor Bejnar

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Re: USCGC Healy: scientific missions to the Arctic
« Reply #213 on: December 05, 2018, 04:24:28 PM »
Thanks, amstenseth,
Here is the last image with some ice: FROM 2018-11-27.  The lat-long on the picture [57.8333; -133.1167] puts it in [near???!!!  :o] Tracy Arm Fjord.

Healy is now 'safely' back in harbor.
« Last Edit: December 05, 2018, 04:59:01 PM by Tor Bejnar »
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Re: USCGC Healy: scientific missions to the Arctic
« Reply #214 on: December 10, 2018, 04:35:45 PM »
Yep, Healy sailed the Tracey arm on her way back home as part of the TIGER cruise, which is an event where family & friends of the crew are invited aboard to get a taste of shipboard life.   

This year a wedding was held aboard, officiated by the Captain.

Some photos (of the fjord, not the wedding):
https://www.icloud.com/sharedalbum/#B0vGRMtznGNW6JO

Tor Bejnar

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Re: USCGC Healy: scientific missions to the Arctic
« Reply #215 on: July 23, 2020, 09:01:17 PM »
Did we ignore the Healy all of 2019!  My, my, how time does fly.

Anyway the Coast Guard cutter is in the North Pacific right now.  From Facebook (CGCHEALY): on July 6 they were "Bound for the Arctic!" but on the 11th, they were headed back to Washington (state) to drop off the training team.  Training folks were still on-board on the 15th.  Radio silence since then (at least on Facebook).

I cannot access their webcam ("Zenphoto encountered an error ...").  See links at the top of this page, some of which work (Reply #200).  Can anybody figure out how to access their webcam?

And what are their missions this year? (Icefloe.net)
Quote
2020 Science Missions
HLY2001 - National Science Foundation  - Toxic Algal Blooms
Dr. Bob Pickart - Woods Hole Oceanographic Insitution

HLY2002 - NERSC CAATEX - Coordinated Arctic Acoustic Experiment
Dr. Matthew Dzieciuch - Univ. California San Diego - Scripps Institution of Oceanography

HLY2003 - Office of Naval Research - AMOS - Arctic Mobile Observing System/Science)
Dr. Craig Lee - University of Washington - Applied Physics Laboratory

I did find some news about 2021:
Quote
The U.S. Coast Guard anticipates deploying USCGC HEALY for operational exercises in and around Baffin Bay in late summer 2021, which will include a transit through the Northwest Passage. The UNOLS Office and the AICC are working with the Coast Guard to help the research community identify and coordinate Science of Opportunity uses of HEALY during this deployment.
 ...
« Last Edit: July 23, 2020, 09:10:59 PM by Tor Bejnar »
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Re: USCGC Healy: scientific missions to the Arctic
« Reply #216 on: August 30, 2020, 10:01:25 PM »
And Then There Was One ... Fire On Coast Guard Icebreaker Healy Ends Arctic Scientific Mission
https://www.upi.com/Defense-News/2020/08/26/Fire-on-Coast-Guard-icebreaker-Healy-ends-Arctic-scientific-mission/9541598457372/

A engine room electrical fire aboard the Coast Guard cutter Healy, one of only two U.S. icebreakers, has put a temporary end to U.S. scientific missions and patrols in the Arctic Ocean.

There were no injuries aboard the 21 year-old ship, but its diesel-powered starboard propulsion motor and shaft were damaged.

The Coast Guard's other ship with icebreaking capability, the 44 year-old USCGC Polar Star, had a fire in 2019 as it traveled to Antarctica.

That leaves just one sea-going U.S. icebreaker, the 44-year-old Polar Star, to serve both the Arctic and Antarctic. 

... Russia currently operates four nuclear-powered icebreakers -- one, the Taymyr, built in 1987, suffers frequent radiation leaks-- and is expected to build five more, in addition to numerous conventionally-powered ice-capable ships. China is constructing one nuclear-powered icebreaker as well.
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Tor Bejnar

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Re: USCGC Healy: scientific missions to the Arctic
« Reply #217 on: July 29, 2021, 04:40:41 PM »
Coast Guard icebreaker will make Northwest Passage transit in new Arctic mission
Quote

SEATTLE — A Seattle-based Coast Guard icebreaker damaged by a shipboard fire in 2020 is back at sea this summer on a lengthy mission that will include an Arctic transit through the Northwest Passage.

As sea ice retreats in a changing climate, the passage has become an increasingly accessible route, and researchers who will board the Coast Guard Cutter Healy are scheduled to conduct work that will include seafloor mapping and analyzing the ocean fate of meltwater from Greenland’s glaciers.

The Northwest Passage part of the voyage is expected to last about 10 days, and take place in September on a Canadian Arctic maritime route that connects the North Pacific to the North Atlantic. It will be a highlight of a mission that began with a July 10 departure from Seattle and also includes an Atlantic transit, and traverse of the Panama Canal as part of a circumnavigation of North America.
...
much more at link
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Tor Bejnar

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Re: USCGC Healy: scientific missions to the Arctic
« Reply #218 on: August 04, 2021, 08:00:00 PM »
https://www.facebook.com/CGCHEALY/
Quote
U.S. Coast Guard Cutter Healy
August 2 at 11:18 AM ·

Our first stop during our 2021 deployment? Dutch Harbor, AK! ...

I cannot find any ship webcam.
I cannot find a current ship location, just where it was on July 22 (Dutch Harbor)

Anybody know how to find these things?
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Jim Hunt

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Re: USCGC Healy: scientific missions to the Arctic
« Reply #219 on: August 04, 2021, 09:06:58 PM »
Sailwx seems to be broken at the moment, as indeed is AloftCon etc.

http://www.sailwx.info/shiptrack/shipposition.phtml?call=NEPP

Failing that the only option that I'm aware of is to pay money to one of the satellite tracking sites, or wait until Healy gets within radio range of an onshore receiver:

https://www.marinetraffic.com/en/ais/details/ships/shipid:359133/mmsi:303902000/imo:9083380/vessel:HEALY
« Last Edit: August 04, 2021, 09:17:59 PM by Jim Hunt »
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Tor Bejnar

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Re: USCGC Healy: scientific missions to the Arctic
« Reply #220 on: September 03, 2021, 09:32:25 PM »
Cross-post - Thanks Jim for finding this elusive craft!
USCGC Healy is currently heading west to east using Route 2 via the Prince of Wales Strait:

https://GreatWhiteCon.info/2021/05/the-northwest-passage-in-2021/#comment-474362
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Jim Hunt

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Re: USCGC Healy: scientific missions to the Arctic
« Reply #221 on: September 04, 2021, 12:14:30 PM »
Thanks Tor,

Using this handy URL I've been doing an impersonation of SailWX:

https://www.ndbc.noaa.gov/box_search.php?lat1=71&lat2=76&lon1=-126&lon2=-98&uom=M&ot=S&time=12

See the attachment:
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Jim Hunt

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Re: USCGC Healy: scientific missions to the Arctic
« Reply #222 on: September 04, 2021, 08:55:23 PM »
Healy has been logging some sea ice reports:

2021-09-04 18Z 75.00N 103.20W 23070
2021-09-04 12Z 74.50N 107.70W 36092

Codes explained at: https://www.ndbc.noaa.gov/ice/sea_ice.shtml

Currently heading in the general direction of Resolute:
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Tor Bejnar

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Re: USCGC Healy: scientific missions to the Arctic
« Reply #223 on: September 04, 2021, 09:59:27 PM »
Jim,
Does "23070" mean:
2- Sea ice present in concentrations less than 3/10 (3/8) ...
3- Predominantly new and/or young ice with some first year ice
0- No ice of land origin
7- Principle ice edge towards NW
0- Ship in open water with floating ice in sight

and 6 hrs earlier:
3- Sea ice present in concentrations 4/10 to 6/10 (3/8 to less than 6/8)
6- Predominantly medium first-year ice ... and thick first-year ice ... with some
       thinner (younger) first-year ice
0- No ice of land origin
9- [no ice edge] ... (ship in ice)
2- Ship in easily penetrable ice; conditions not changing

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Jim Hunt

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Re: USCGC Healy: scientific missions to the Arctic
« Reply #224 on: September 04, 2021, 11:44:00 PM »
That's my assumption Tor.
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Tor Bejnar

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Re: USCGC Healy: scientific missions to the Arctic
« Reply #225 on: July 04, 2022, 09:00:31 PM »
Currently in port in Seattle (Washington).  If you learn of any Healy mission, etc., please update this thread.  (Boy do I miss it's webcam days!)
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Re: USCGC Healy: scientific missions to the Arctic
« Reply #226 on: August 03, 2022, 10:51:44 AM »
Healy is back in the Beaufort Sea:
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Re: USCGC Healy: scientific missions to the Arctic
« Reply #227 on: December 16, 2023, 11:46:53 PM »
(USCG upping its request for polar icebreakers to help the Healy. CRS report)

The following is the Dec 12, 2023, Congressional Research Service report, Coast Guard Polar Security Cutter (Polar Icebreaker) Program: Background and Issues for Congress.
From the report

Required number of polar icebreakers. The Coast Guard testified in April, June, and November 2023 that a new Coast Guard fleet mix analysis concluded that the service will require a total of eight to nine polar icebreakers, including four to five heavy polar icebreakers and four to five medium polar icebreakers, to perform its polar (i.e., Arctic and Antarctic) missions in coming years. Prior to this new fleet mix analysis, the Coast Guard had stated that it would need at least six polar icebreakers, including three heavy polar icebreakers.

Current operational polar icebreaker fleet. The operational U.S. polar icebreaking fleet currently consists of one heavy polar icebreaker, Polar Star, and one medium polar icebreaker, Healy. In addition to Polar Star, the Coast Guard has a second heavy polar icebreaker, Polar Sea. Polar Sea, however, suffered an engine casualty in June 2010 and has been nonoperational since then. Polar Star and Polar Sea entered service in 1976 and 1978, respectively, and are now well beyond their originally intended 30-year service lives. The Coast Guard plans to extend the service life of Polar Star until the delivery of at least the second Polar Security Cutter (PSC).

Polar Security Cutter (PSC). The Coast Guard Polar Security Cutter (PSC) program is a program to acquire at least three new PSCs (i.e., heavy polar icebreakers), to be followed at some later point by the acquisition of additional new Arctic Security Cutters (ASCs) (i.e., medium polar icebreakers). The Navy and Coast Guard in 2020 estimated the combined total procurement cost of the first three PSCs in then-year dollars as $2,673 million (i.e., about $2.7 billion). The procurement of the first two PSCs is fully funded. The Coast Guard’s proposed FY2024 budget requests $170.0 million in continued procurement funding for the PSC program, which would be used for procurement of long leadtime materials (LLTM) and government-furnished equipment (GFE) for the PSCs, and for other program expenses. (GFE is equipment that the government purchases and then provides to the shipbuilder for incorporation into the ships.)

On April 23, 2019, the Coast Guard-Navy Integrated Program Office for the PSC program awarded a fixed-price, incentive-firm contract for the detail design and construction (DD&C) of the first PSC to Halter Marine Inc. of Pascagoula, MS, a shipyard that was owned by Singapore Technologies (ST) Engineering. On December 29, 2021, the Coast Guard exercised a fixed price incentive option to its contract with Halter Marine for the second PSC. In November 2022, ST Engineering sold Halter Marine to Louisiana-based Bollinger Shipyards. The former Halter Marine is now called Bollinger Mississippi Shipbuilding.

Commercially available polar icebreaker (CAPI). The Coast Guard’s proposed FY2024 budget also requests $125.0 million in procurement funding for the purchase of an existing commercially available polar icebreaker (CAPI) that would modified to become a Coast Guard polar icebreaker, so as to help augment the Coast Guard’s current polar icebreaking capacity until the new PSCs enter service, and to continue augmenting the Coast Guard’s polar icebreaking capacity after the PSCs enter service.

https://news.usni.org/2023/12/15/report-to-congress-on-coast-guard-polar-security-cutter-22#more-107650


https://crsreports.congress.gov/product/pdf/RL/RL34391

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Re: USCGC Healy: scientific missions to the Arctic
« Reply #228 on: January 11, 2024, 09:59:39 PM »
USCG on Polar Star and Polar Security Cutter Heavy Icebreakers

(...)
In January 2024, the United States Coast Guard (USCG) has just one operational heavy icebreaker in service, the nearly 50-year-old Polar Star (WAGB 10) that deploys solely to the Antarctic South Pole to resupply the U.S. scientific bases there.The USCG’s newer medium-class icebreaker, USCG cutter (USCGC) Healy, operates only in the Arctic Northern Pole waters.
 
The Repairs and Enhancements to the 48-year-old Polar Star

After each annual “Operation Deep Freeze” mission to the Antarctic, USCGC Polar Star gets serviced, usually at Mare Island Dry Dock in Vallejo, California, as part of its Service Life Extension Program (SLEP) until the new Polar Security Cutters (PSC) are delivered sometime in 2025.

Besides the propellers and shafts that are normally disassembled and dismounted during each dry dock, USCG Headquarters told Naval News, “Polar Star SLEP recently completed year three of a five-year phased work program to extend the service life of the cutter by replacing obsolete systems.  The work occurs between Operation Deep Freeze deployments where Polar Star supports National Science Foundation initiatives in Antarctica. 

“Recent work included the replacement of the ship’s evaporator salinity monitoring system for making drinking water, replacement of the fire detection system to increase shipboard safety, improvements to shipboard ventilation systems for crew comfort, and replacement of galley cooking appliances. Additionally, the high-frequency power converters were replaced, providing more reliable power to sensitive electronics.  A complete redesign of the propulsion and machinery control systems was completed, reducing the time required for system maintenance from weeks to days and ensuring the equipment was supportable and maintainable. Propeller and shaft work are routine maintenance items completed every one to two years. This work was completed during SLEP but is not part of the SLEP program funding.”

Working on a heavy icebreaker built and commissioned in the 1970s presents daunting challenges for the engineers, shipyard workers, and mechanics at dry dock due to vendors, manufacturers, supply chains, and spare parts no longer available after over four decades. Naval News asked how can these challenges be addressed for an icebreaker so old. “Polar Star is in good condition structurally,” replied USCG Headquarters.  “Therefore, SLEP work is focused on various systems that are obsolete or difficult to maintain.  These systems are upgraded and/or replaced to increase reliability and maintainability while reducing costs. A simple analogy is the structure of a house can be in good condition, but the systems within the house such as the water heater, appliances, HVAC system, etc. need renewal as the home ages.

    “Numerous engineering challenges were encountered in the effort to upgrade many antiquated systems aboard a nearly 50-year-old ship. However, with great teamwork that included such diverse entities as NAVSEA [U.S. Navy’s Naval Sea Systems Command] Philadelphia and a Coast Guard Yard “Road Team”, these challenges were overcome.  Polar Star recently completed Phase Three of the SLEP program.  She departed Mare Island Dry Dock on October 18, 2023, meeting this year’s schedule requirements in support of Operation Deep Freeze. Polar Star also successfully supported Operation Deep Freeze following SLEP Phase One in 2021 and SLEP Phase Two in 2022.”

    USCG Headquarters’ Office of Public Affairs

More Polar Star Phase Three SLEP information is also available on the USCG’s website. With Phase Three SLEP completed, USCGC Polar Star is currently headed down to Antarctica for its “Operation Deep Freeze” deployment as of December 2023

Naval News inquired about the design and new features of the Polar Security Cutters (PSC) over the past few years and these PSC inquiries were often not answered due to the prematurity of the PSC program. Now, in December 2023, USCG Headquarters replied with some information as to how the PSCs are designed and what new features they will contain.

“The PSC design includes several important new features and capabilities relative to Polar Star, such as:

    An integrated diesel-electric propulsion plant allowing flexible and economic power generation, resulting in equivalent or better icebreaking performance with significantly lower fuel consumption;
    Directional thrusters providing enhanced maneuverability in both open-ocean and icebreaking operations;
    Double hull for enhanced safety and reduced risk of environmental impacts;
    Multi-beam sonar for high-resolution seafloor mapping;
    Hangar space for two helicopters and support for unmanned aerial systems; and
    More than 2,000 square feet of flexible mission space.”

The Polar Security Cutters should be the first USCG ships to mount the Mark 38 Mod 4 30mm autocannons.
Author’s Comments

The USCG Headquarters remained purposefully vague in details as to the new PSC feature information and how the engineers will incorporate these systems. One design feature of the new PSCs is that the engines rest underneath the smokestacks, so unlike the medium-class icebreaker, USCGC Healy, where the dock workers had to cut a hole into the side of the hull to replace an engine damaged by fire, the PSCs’ engines can be lifted straight out through the smokestacks by crane.

This is important because the Polar Star’s sister icebreaker, the Polar Sea, suffered an engine malfunction (the Polar Sea’s engine cylinder heads and values were grounded to the wrong dimensions so the whole engine froze in place in 2010). To replace the Polar Sea’s engines deep inside the hull would mean cutting through the upper decks and the hull to remove them, a monumental job. Thus, the Polar Sea remains inactive, tied and docked to a Seattle pier and is used to feed necessary spare parts to the Polar Star.

https://www.navalnews.com/event-news/sna-2024/2024/01/uscg-on-polar-star-and-polar-security-cutter-heavy-icebreakers/


(this is the service company that does it all around the globe, add to your nitter feed. They helped with a cool, detachable bow breaker, that powers out and breaks the ice ahead of the main hull)

https://nitter.poast.org/AkerArctic

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Re: USCGC Healy: scientific missions to the Arctic
« Reply #229 on: March 05, 2024, 04:48:59 PM »
Coast Guard Poised To Buy Badly Needed Private Icebreaker
https://www.twz.com/sea/coast-guard-poised-to-buy-badly-needed-private-icebreaker


The M/V Aiviq, seen here, is widely assumed to be the existing commercial icebreaker the US Coast Guard now says it plans to buy. USCG

The U.S. Coast Guard says it is planning to buy an existing commercial icebreaker to help support operations in the highly strategic Arctic region, a possibility that has been discussed since at least 2015. This comes as work on a new class of Polar Security Cutter heavy icebreakers for the Coast Guard has suffered substantial delays, with the first of those ships now potentially not set to be delivered until 2028. The service currently only has one operational heavy icebreaker, the USCGC Polar Star, which is becoming increasingly difficult to operate and maintain.


The USCGC Polar Star, the Coast Guard's only currently operational heavy icebreaker. USCG

The U.S. Coast Guard's main contracting office put out a public notice on March 1 about the service's intent to purchase a "domestically produced, commercially available icebreaker" from shipbuilding and marine services company Offshore Service Vessels (which does business as Edison Chouest Offshore) via a sole-source contract. An updated version of the notice was posted earlier today. The stated "objective" of this acquisition is "to provide an operational surface asset capable of projecting U.S. presence in the Arctic."

"Offshore Service Vessels, LLC is the only company that can meet USCG needs based on the requirements set forth in the Request for information" the service put out in 2022, according to the updated notice. The stated requirements in the RFI were: https://sam.gov/opp/4c92c33258ae4487b6e8f4a2b22f1439/view

“There are three classes of people: those who see. Those who see when they are shown. Those who do not see.” ― anonymous

Insensible before the wave so soon released by callous fate. Affected most, they understand the least, and understanding, when it comes, invariably arrives too late