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NOAA
AND VT HALTER MARINE LAUNCH SECOND FISHERIES SURVEY VESSEL
Work Also Starts on Third Research Ship in Series
July
8, 2005 — VT Halter Marine, Inc. and NOAA
today launched the second of four planned NOAA fisheries survey vessels.
The ship was christened Henry B. Bigelow by Catherine Silver of Winnacunnet
High School in Hampton, N.H., on behalf of the ship's sponsor, Mrs.
Judd Gregg, wife of the senior senator from New Hampshire. The ship
will be one of the most technologically advanced fisheries survey vessels
in the world when placed in operation in late 2006. (Click NOAA
image for larger view of the NOAA ship Henry B. Bigelow being launched
at the VT Halter Marine Inc., shipyard in Moss Point, Miss. Click
here for high resolution version. Please credit “NOAA.”)
Mrs. Gregg
was unable to attend the ceremony at the shipyard in Moss Point, Miss.,
but designated Silver as her representative. Silver was the team leader
of students from Winnacunnet High School who won a regional
NOAA contest in 2004 to name the ship. The students also participated
in the ship's keel laying ceremony in May 2004. The contest was an educational
initiative to help students learn more about their region's marine and
coastal environment as well as to generate a greater interest in scientific
studies.
"The
christening of Henry B. Bigelow is a significant milestone in the modernization
of our NOAA fleet," said retired Navy Vice Admiral Conrad
C. Lautenbacher Jr., Ph.D., undersecretary of commerce for oceans
and atmosphere and NOAA administrator. "We appreciate the contribution
Mrs. Gregg has made as the ship's sponsor and we are delighted that
Ms. Silver was able to represent her, maintaining the close connection
between the school and the vessel." (Click NOAA image for
larger view of the NOAA ship Henry B. Bigelow being christened at the
VT Halter Marine Inc., shipyard in Moss Point, Miss., by Catherine Silver
of Winnacunnet High School in Hampton, N.H. Click
here for high resolution version. Please credit “NOAA.”)
"We
would also like to thank Senators Gregg, Cochran and Lott and Congressman
Taylor for helping us obtain the funds to build this important asset
as we carry out NOAA's mission to assess and protect the nation's living
marine resources. Henry B. Bigelow and its sister ships will provide
higher quality data to fisheries managers about targeted fish populations
and the environment that sustains them," added Lautenbacher.
Henry
B. Bigelow is the second of four planned 208 ft. fisheries survey vessels
to be built by VT Halter Marine that will either augment or replace
aging ships in the NOAA fleet. Its capabilities will far exceed those
of older NOAA ships. It has been built to meet specific data collection
requirements of the NOAA Fisheries Service as well as to meet tough
standards for a low acoustic signature set by the International Council
for Exploration of the Seas. This feature will allow the ship to study
fish quietly without altering their behavior. After calibration, the
vessel will replace Albatross IV and will be home ported in New England.
(Click NOAA image for larger view of the NOAA ship Henry B.
Bigelow before being launched at the VT Halter Marine Inc., shipyard
in Moss Point, Miss. Click
here for high resolution version. Please credit “NOAA.”)
Construction
of the third fisheries survey vessel was kicked off Thursday at VT Halter
Marine's Moss Point shipyard. The vessel's base cost exceeds $39 million.
Approximately 150 VT Halter Marine employees will be working on the
two NOAA ships over the next three years. This third research ship will
be home ported in Pascagoula, Miss.
"VT
Halter Marine has a proven global track record of designing and constructing
ships that meet our clients' specific requirements. We are delighted
to be working with NOAA on this sophisticated new class of quiet fisheries
survey vessels that will greatly increase NOAA's technical capabilities
at sea," said Boyd E. King, CEO of VT Halter Marine, Inc. "Work
began yesterday on the next ship in this class, which speaks positively
of NOAA's confidence in our ability to meet their high performance standards."
(Click NOAA image for larger view of the NOAA ship Henry B.
Bigelow after being launched at the VT Halter Marine Inc., shipyard
in Moss Point, Miss. Click
here for high resolution version. Please credit “NOAA.”)
The ship's
namesake, Henry B. Bigelow, was a renowned oceanographer who worked
as a researcher, instructor and professor of zoology at Harvard from
1906 to 1962. He was also a founder of Woods
Hole Oceanographic Institution in 1931. Bigelow transformed the
Gulf of Maine from a scientific unknown to one of the most thoroughly
studied bodies of water in the world and developed the interdisciplinary,
ecosystem-oriented approach that characterizes modern oceanography.
Several grandchildren of Bigelow attended the ceremony today, including
Frederick S. Bigelow Jr. of Pennington, N.J., who was a speaker.
The
NOAA fleet of research and survey ships and aircraft is operated, managed
and maintained by NOAA Marine and
Aviation Operations. NMAO includes commissioned officers of the
NOAA Corps and civilians. The NOAA
Corps is the nation's seventh and smallest uniformed service, and,
as part of NOAA, is under the U.S. Department of Commerce. (Click
NOAA image for larger view of the NOAA ship Henry B. Bigelow launch
ceremony at the VT Halter Marine Inc., shipyard in Moss Point, Miss.
Click here for
high resolution version. Please credit “NOAA.”)
VT Halter
Marine is the marine operations of Vision Technologies Systems. Based
in Pascagoula, Miss., more than 2,600 vessels have been built at its
facilities in the United States. VT Halter Marine designs, builds and
repairs a wide variety of ocean-going vessels such as patrol vessels,
oil recovery vessels, oil cargo vessels, ferries, logistic support vessels
and survey vessels.
NOAA, an
agency of the U.S. Department of
Commerce, is dedicated to enhancing economic security and national
safety through the prediction and research of weather and climate-related
events and providing environmental stewardship of the nation's coastal
and marine resources.
Relevant Web Sites
NOAA Marine and Aviation Operations
NOAA
Corps
NOAA
Fleet
Media
Contact:
Jeanne Kouhestani,
NOAA Marine and Aviation Operations,
(301) 713-3431 ext. 220
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