Phoenix International Holdings
Phoenix International Holdings, Inc. (Phoenix) is an employee owned marine services company that performs complex manned and unmanned underwater operations worldwide. Phoenix was incorporated in 1996 as Phoenix Marine, Inc. and started doing business in 1997. It changed its name in January 2000 to Phoenix International, Inc., and then to Phoenix International Holdings, Inc. in November 2007 when it became an employee owned company.
The company’s core business segments include waterborne ship repairs; underwater inspection, maintenance and repair; deep ocean search and recovery; submarine rescue; and marine engineering. They provide expertise in underwater welding (wet and dry chamber); non-destructive testing; conventional and one-atmosphere manned diving; and side scan sonar and Remotely Operated Vehicle (ROV) operations. The marine engineering services that Phoenix provides include unmanned underwater vehicles, underwater robotics, cofferdams & weight handling fixtures, and diving systems. Its customers include U.S. and foreign navies and government agencies; the oil and gas, subsea mining and entertainment industries; and the archaeological community.
Contracts
Phoenix currently holds three US Navy contracts that require emergency response. These three contracts are:
- Undersea Operations - worldwide rapid response undersea search and salvage operations and related engineering services in support the Director of Ocean Engineering, Supervisor of Salvage and Diving (SUPSALV).[1]
- Diving and Diving Related Services - air, mixed gas and saturation diving and related engineering services in support of the SUPSALV mission areas of diving, salvage and underwater ship repair.[2]
- Submarine Rescue - management, engineering, technical and logistical support services required to operate and maintain the U.S. Navy’s Domestic and International Submarine Rescue Program assets in rescue ready status 24 hours a day, seven days a week.[3]
Notable Projects
Notable projects in which Phoenix has participated include:
- The search for Malaysia Airlines Flight 370;[4]
- Air France 447,[5] Yemenia Flight IY626,[5] Adam Air 574,[6] and Tuninter 1153[7] black box recoveries;
- Underwater inspection of the Deepwater Horizon control room;[8]
- The discovery and forensic survey of the Israeli submarine INS Dakar;[9]
- The search for Space Shuttle Columbia debris;[10]
- USS Monitor turret recovery;[11]
- RMS Titanic documentary investigations and mapping projects;[12]
- The design, fabrication, and testing of a Saturation Fly-Away Diving System (SAT FADS) for the U.S. Navy;[13]
- Bold Monarch 2011.
Offices
Phoenix has eight offices in seven geographic locations:
- Largo, MD
- Bayou Vista, LA
- Norfolk, VA
- Houston, TX
- San Diego, CA (two separate offices)
- Pearl City, HI
- Fort Lauderdale, FL
References
- ↑ "U.S. Department of Defense, Contracts, September 21, 2006".
- ↑ "U.S. Department of Defense, Contracts, December 06, 2010".
- ↑ "U.S. Department of Defense, Contracts, September 29, 2006".
- ↑ "Maryland Salvage Firm Tapped for Malaysia Flight 370 Search". Wall Street Journal, 25 March 2014.
- 1 2 Troadec, Jean-Paul. "BEA Press conference, Recife harbour (Brazil), 25 March 2010, English transcript of Mr Troadec's speech".
- ↑ "Black box retrieved from crashed Indonesian plane". Reuters. Aug 28, 2007.
- ↑ FINAL REPORT ACCIDENT INVOLVING ATR 72 AIRCRAFT REGISTRATION MARKS TS-LBB (PDF), Agenzia Nazionale per la Sicurezza del Volo (ANSV), p. 76
- ↑ Pol, Daniel; John Tomasi (December 2010). "xBot III: Exploring Treacherous Spaces". Sea Technology Magazine 51 (12): 10–13.
- ↑ Baumgartner, Henry (August 1999). "The Sub That Vanished". Mechanical Engineering Magazine.
- ↑ Riendeau, Roger (November 2003). "Space Shuttle Columbia Water Recovery Operations" (PDF). FACEPLATE.
- ↑ Cavey, Rick (November 2002). "USS MONITOR Turret Recovery" (PDF). FACEPLATE.
- ↑ Lynch, Don; Ken Marschall; introduction by James Cameron (2003). Ghosts of the Abyss: A Journey Into The Heart of the Titanic. Cambridge, MA: Da Capo. ISBN 0-306-81223-1.
- ↑ Burgess, Richard (May 2011). "Mobile Saturation Site". Seapower 54 (5): 26–28.