China/At Sea-Arctic Expedition/Submersibles

China achieves historic undersea collaboration between manned submersible, ROV in Arctic expedition

  • English

Shotlist


FILE: At Sea - Date Unknown (CCTV - No access Chinese mainland)
1. Aerial shot of vessel sailing, operating at sea

FILE: At Sea - August 2025 (CCTV - No access Chinese mainland)
2. Various of submersible Jiaolong diving
3. Remotely operated vehicle (ROV) diving
4. Screens showing underwater footage
5. Jiaolong underwater
6. SOUNDBITE (Chinese) Fu Wentao, chief pilot of submersible Jiaolong's first Arctic dive (ending with shots 7-8):
"As a manned submersible, Jiaolong has traditionally operated alone. This time, we expanded its capabilities by working together with an ROV. We had to overcome challenges related to communication, positioning, and coordination -- key issues for successful joint underwater operations."
7. Various of Jiaolong underwater
8. View outside submarine
9. Various of submersible Jiaolong diving
10. Fu giving orders
11. Various of ROV, submersible Jiaolong working underwater

Qingdao City, Shandong Province, east China - Recent (CCTV - No access Chinese mainland)
12. SOUNDBITE (Chinese) Li Dewei, deputy director, Deep Sea Engineering Technology Center, National Deep Sea Center (starting with shot 11/ending with shot 13):
"Collaborative operations between a manned submersible and an ROV can produce results greater than the sum of their parts. This approach addresses the limited sampling capacity of manned vehicles underwater and exemplifies how human ingenuity and robotic precision can be combined. It's a natural and necessary evolution for deep-sea exploration."

FILE: At Sea - August 2025 (CCTV - No access Chinese mainland)
13. Various of ROV, submersible Jiaolong working underwater

FILE: At Sea - Date Unknown (CCTV - No access Chinese mainland)
14. Aerial shot of vessel sailing, operating at sea

Storyline


China has completed the world's first underwater cooperative operation involving both a manned submersible and a remotely operated vehicle (ROV) in polar regions during its 15th Arctic Ocean scientific expedition.

Concluding last Friday, this expedition is the largest of its kind for China to date. Organized by the Ministry of Natural Resources, this round of Arctic survey was jointly carried out by four vessels, including Xuelong 2, Jidi, Shenhai-1 and Tansuo-3.

During the expedition, the Jiaolong manned submersible carried by Shenhai-1 (Deep Sea No.1) scientific research vessel conducted the underwater collaborative operation with an ROV.

"As a manned submersible, Jiaolong has traditionally operated alone. This time, we expanded its capabilities by working together with an ROV. We had to overcome challenges related to communication, positioning, and coordination -- key issues for successful joint underwater operations," said Fu Wentao, chief pilot of Jiaolong's first Arctic dive.

On August 14, Jiaolong and the ROV completed their first synchronized dive, testing underwater positioning and communication systems. The following day, they carried out a second joint mission, during which the ROV captured videos of Jiaolong taking samples of underwater life and sediments on the seabed, while Jiaolong handed over rocks and operation markers to the ROV. The two also recorded footage of each other operating deep beneath the sea.

"Collaborative operations between a manned submersible and an ROV can produce results greater than the sum of their parts. This approach addresses the limited sampling capacity of manned vehicles underwater and exemplifies how human ingenuity and robotic precision can be combined. It's a natural and necessary evolution for deep-sea exploration," said Li Dewei, deputy director of the Deep Sea Engineering Technology Center at China's National Deep Sea Center.

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  • ID : 8447728
  • Dateline : Recent/File
  • Location : China;At Sea
  • Category : Science/Other
  • Duration : 1'31
  • Audio Language : Chinese/Part Mute
  • Source : China Central Television (CCTV)
  • Restrictions : No access Chinese mainland
  • Published : 2025-10-04 18:09
  • Last Modified : 2025-10-04 21:06:20
  • Version : 3

China/At Sea-Arctic Expedition/Submersibles

China achieves historic undersea collaboration between manned submersible, ROV in Arctic expedition

Dateline : Recent/File

Location : China;At Sea

Duration : 1'31

  • English


FILE: At Sea - Date Unknown (CCTV - No access Chinese mainland)
1. Aerial shot of vessel sailing, operating at sea

FILE: At Sea - August 2025 (CCTV - No access Chinese mainland)
2. Various of submersible Jiaolong diving
3. Remotely operated vehicle (ROV) diving
4. Screens showing underwater footage
5. Jiaolong underwater
6. SOUNDBITE (Chinese) Fu Wentao, chief pilot of submersible Jiaolong's first Arctic dive (ending with shots 7-8):
"As a manned submersible, Jiaolong has traditionally operated alone. This time, we expanded its capabilities by working together with an ROV. We had to overcome challenges related to communication, positioning, and coordination -- key issues for successful joint underwater operations."
7. Various of Jiaolong underwater
8. View outside submarine
9. Various of submersible Jiaolong diving
10. Fu giving orders
11. Various of ROV, submersible Jiaolong working underwater

Qingdao City, Shandong Province, east China - Recent (CCTV - No access Chinese mainland)
12. SOUNDBITE (Chinese) Li Dewei, deputy director, Deep Sea Engineering Technology Center, National Deep Sea Center (starting with shot 11/ending with shot 13):
"Collaborative operations between a manned submersible and an ROV can produce results greater than the sum of their parts. This approach addresses the limited sampling capacity of manned vehicles underwater and exemplifies how human ingenuity and robotic precision can be combined. It's a natural and necessary evolution for deep-sea exploration."

FILE: At Sea - August 2025 (CCTV - No access Chinese mainland)
13. Various of ROV, submersible Jiaolong working underwater

FILE: At Sea - Date Unknown (CCTV - No access Chinese mainland)
14. Aerial shot of vessel sailing, operating at sea


China has completed the world's first underwater cooperative operation involving both a manned submersible and a remotely operated vehicle (ROV) in polar regions during its 15th Arctic Ocean scientific expedition.

Concluding last Friday, this expedition is the largest of its kind for China to date. Organized by the Ministry of Natural Resources, this round of Arctic survey was jointly carried out by four vessels, including Xuelong 2, Jidi, Shenhai-1 and Tansuo-3.

During the expedition, the Jiaolong manned submersible carried by Shenhai-1 (Deep Sea No.1) scientific research vessel conducted the underwater collaborative operation with an ROV.

"As a manned submersible, Jiaolong has traditionally operated alone. This time, we expanded its capabilities by working together with an ROV. We had to overcome challenges related to communication, positioning, and coordination -- key issues for successful joint underwater operations," said Fu Wentao, chief pilot of Jiaolong's first Arctic dive.

On August 14, Jiaolong and the ROV completed their first synchronized dive, testing underwater positioning and communication systems. The following day, they carried out a second joint mission, during which the ROV captured videos of Jiaolong taking samples of underwater life and sediments on the seabed, while Jiaolong handed over rocks and operation markers to the ROV. The two also recorded footage of each other operating deep beneath the sea.

"Collaborative operations between a manned submersible and an ROV can produce results greater than the sum of their parts. This approach addresses the limited sampling capacity of manned vehicles underwater and exemplifies how human ingenuity and robotic precision can be combined. It's a natural and necessary evolution for deep-sea exploration," said Li Dewei, deputy director of the Deep Sea Engineering Technology Center at China's National Deep Sea Center.

ID : 8447728

Published : 2025-10-04 18:09

Last Modified : 2025-10-04 21:06:20

Source : China Central Television (CCTV)

Restrictions : No access Chinese mainland

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