The search for Malaysia Airlines Flight MH370 was called off
in January this year, after the governments of China, Australia and Malaysia
had spent as much as $200 million on efforts to solve the incredible mystery,
coming up with very few answers as to what happened to the Boeing 777-200ER
that vanished on March 8, 2014. Since then, some new evidence has been
identified through satellite imagery analysis, but the families of the 227
passengers and 12 crew members are still left with questions.
Now, Houston-based Ocean Infinity hopes
to answer them once and for all.
Last week, Malaysia’s Department of
Civil Aviation announced that
it has received and considered proposals from “interested parties” that would
like to continue the search for MH370, and Ocean Infinity’s “No Cure No Fee”
offer — meaning the company will only collect payment upon discovery of the
missing aircraft — has been approved by officials for negotiation. That does
not mean, as media outlets previously reported, that the deal is done, which
officials were quick to point out.
“The Malaysian Government has yet to ink
an agreement with Ocean Infinity for the search of MH370 as widely reported in
the media recently,” the DCA clarified in a statement. “Once the negotiation is
completed and the terms and conditions have been agreed on with Ocean Infinity,
the Malaysian Government will seek agreement from the Governments of Australia
and China to proceed with the search of MH370 in the spirit of tripartite
cooperation.”
According to a
report, Aziz Kaprawi, Malaysia’s deputy transport
minister, said Australia already “informally agreed” to the selection of Ocean
Infinity’s deal, while “It is still under discussion with China.”
In August, the Australian Transport
Safety Bureau and Commonwealth Scientific and Industrial Research
Organization provided
optimism for resolution with satellite imagery
revealing “at least 70 identifiable objects,” 12 of which are “probably man
made,” in an area reportedly defined as having a “high probability” as being
the location of MH370. That area (as large as 25,000 sq. km) is presumably
where Ocean Infinity will pick up.
The company boasts “The world’s most
advanced fleet of autonomous vehicles,” or specifically six HUGIN autonomous
underwater vehicles (AUV) that “are capable of operating in 6,000 m water depth
collecting high resolution data at record breaking speeds.” The AUV have the
capability to explore deeper areas of the ocean, which could provide a
long-awaited breakthrough.
(Evangle Luo of TTFLY shared with you)
没有评论:
发表评论