Story Published:
Feb 10, 2005 at 12:44 AM PST
Story Updated:
Aug 31, 2006 at 1:51 AM PST
SEATTLE - At a time of year when U.S. Coast Guard
icebreakers are cutting icy paths to deliver fuel and equipment to
science stations in the Antarctic, one of two American Polar-class
icebreakers is itself broken.
The Polar Sea has been out of service for months with three
failed motors, and is now undergoing an initial inspection to
determine the cause and extent of damage, said John Lockwood,
director of marketing and business development at Todd Pacific
Shipyards in Seattle.
The 399-foot icebreaker was docked in early January at the
shipyard on Harbor Island in West Seattle. It returned March 31,
2004, from a 5½-month deployment in the Antarctic, breaking ice for
ships to resupply McMurdo Research Station, the logistics hub for
the U.S. Antarctic Program. Its efforts allowed the delivery of
more than 8 million gallons of fuel and 11 million pounds of cargo.
The vessel operates as part of the Coast Guard's Polar Ice
Program, which also include its sister ship, the Polar Star, and
the icebreaker Healy, all based in Seattle. While the Healy
operates primarily in the polar north, the Polar Star and Polar Sea
mostly work near Antarctica.
The Polar Sea was built in 1977, and damage to its motors could
be the long-term effect of years of operations in ice-covered
waters.
"It's just a combination of wear and tear and the extremely
adverse environment in which the ships operate each year,"
Lockwood said of the problem.
The ship's three main electric motors, which drive the
propellers, get their power from three gas turbines and up to six
diesel engines that help as the cutter plows through ice. The
ship's reinforced hull is shaped to ride up on the ice, which
breaks under the ship's weight. At a continuous speed, the Polar
Sea is capable of breaking ice 6 feet thick, or 21 feet thick if it
backs up and rams the ice.
"It's like backing your car up and driving it into a
building," said Lockwood, a former rear admiral with the Coast
Guard.
During the "open and inspect" process, Lockwood said Todd
Shipyards will determine what condition the motors are in and the
repairs necessary. He was optimistic the motors can be repaired.
Coast Guard officials said there is no immediate timeline for
repairs, nor is there a final cost.
"We are looking at the ship to see what maintenance the ship
needs and what alternatives to use," said Lt. Cmdr. Glynn Smith, a
public affairs officer with Coast Guard Pacific Area in Alameda,
Calif., which oversees the polar program. "We are definitely
working to try and achieve some low-cost alternatives."
The Coast Guard deploys an icebreaker each year to Antarctica to
break ice and escort supply ships to McMurdo.
In 2003, ice conditions were some of the worst in 50 years, and
the Polar Sea required assistance from the Healy to clear a channel
to the station. Without the Polar Sea this year, the Russian
icebreaker Krasin was brought in to work with the Polar Star,
cutting a 94-mile path through ice 10 feet thick in areas.
The ice pack was nearly double its normal 48 mile width after
building up behind the world's biggest iceberg that has blocked
wind and water currents that usually break up ice floes in McMurdo
Sound.
Polar Sea has a crew of about 180 and carries two Coast Guard
HH-65A helicopters during polar deployments for science and
logistics support. The icebreaker accommodates as many as 35
scientists and technicians and is equipped to function as a
scientific platform with five internal laboratories. It has room
for an additional seven portable science laboratories on deck.