GAIA Marine supported a major maritime technology familiarisation program in Western Australia, helping deliver practical exposure to uncrewed underwater systems, mini-ROV operations, metocean instrumentation and subsea acoustic technologies for defence personnel.
The broader program was established to provide Navy personnel with hands-on familiarisation and practical learning across robotic, remote and autonomous maritime systems. Publicly available information confirms that the campaign included vessels, robotic and autonomous systems, experienced personnel, and practical learning services focused on autonomous, uncrewed and deep-ocean systems for geospatial data collection, seabed feature identification and maritime hydrographic survey. The program was scheduled across seven 21-day voyages between late 2023 and mid-2024, with activities conducted off Fremantle and north-west Australia.
GAIA Marine’s contribution focused on the applied use of subsea and ocean-technology systems within realistic training environments. This included support for uncrewed underwater vehicle workflows, mini-ROV operations, metocean system deployment and recovery, and subsea acoustic system familiarisation. The intent was not classroom training alone; personnel were exposed to how different technologies are selected, deployed, managed and interpreted in the field, including the operational trade-offs between autonomous systems, remotely operated systems, seabed sensors and survey platforms.
Each campaign built toward an applied defence-based scenario where participants were required to select and combine available tools to meet a defined operational objective. This scenario-based structure is important because it reflects how modern maritime survey and undersea operations are actually delivered: no single technology solves the whole problem. Personnel needed to assess the environment, understand sensor limitations, plan platform deployment, manage data flow and combine outputs from multiple systems into a coherent operational picture.
This project is a strong example of GAIA Marine’s capability at the intersection of field operations, subsea robotics, metocean systems and applied ocean data. GAIA was trusted with key delivery roles because its value sits beyond equipment supply: practical offshore execution, technology integration, system familiarisation, data interpretation and the ability to translate complex marine technologies into operationally useful workflows. That combination is directly relevant to defence, offshore energy, ports and any client operating in complex underwater environments.