Categories: Top Stories

Dstl specialists support USS Gerald R Ford aircraft carrier visit

F.P. Report

LONDON: Specialists from the Defence Science and Technology Laboratory (Dstl) provided ensured UK statutory requirements were met to enable the aircraft carrier USS Gerald R. Ford to anchor outside Portsmouth Harbour during its recent UK visit.

 

The carrier and other vessels in its strike group were conducting operations and training exercises alongside NATO allies and partners throughout the Atlantic Ocean.

 

At approximately 100,000 tonnes, 330 metres long and with over 5000 crew, USS Gerald R. Ford is too large to enter His Majesty’s Naval Base (HMNB) Portsmouth and had to be anchored off Stokes Bay in the Solent.

 

In common with all other US aircraft carriers, it is powered by nuclear reactors. The presence of these nuclear reactors in the Solent requires an enhanced level of support from UK shore staff.

 

Dstl’s Radiation Sciences Group’s Radiation and Nuclear Emergency Response Organisation provides a vital component of the support for visiting nuclear powered warships. This involves the provision of a highly trained Nuclear Emergency Monitoring Team, able to provide immediate response monitoring staff and assets, and secondly by providing health physics advisers who would, in the event of an emergency, deploy to the main response command cell locations within one hour, to provide expert radiation protection advice.

 

Barry Tarr, Project Manager Nuclear, HMNB Portsmouth, said:

 

The expertise, professionalism and commitment provided by the Dstl Radiation Sciences Group to support and enable operational visits by nuclear-powered warships in meeting UK statutory requirements was, and continues to be, instrumental in allowing this to happen for the authorised berths in HMNB Portsmouth and the authorised berth in Southampton.

 

This commitment requires continued training and demonstration of the radiation science capabilities that would be relied upon in the unlikely event of a radiation emergency occurring during such visits. Such visits as the one recently supported are of course extremely important in maintaining the joint US and UK accords at all levels. What is absolutely certain is that the visit was extremely well received and indeed vital for the hearts and minds of the 5000+ crew who enjoyed their brief stand down in the UK.

 

The Frontier Post

Recent Posts

Earthquake in Afghanistan kills 812

KABUL (Pajhwok): The death toll from the devastating earthquake in eastern Afghanistan has reached 812,…

9 hours ago

Gandapur says controversial Kalabagh Dam should be built

F.P. Report PESHAWAR: Khyber Pakhtunkhwa Chief Minister Ali Amin Gandapur said on Monday that controversial…

9 hours ago

Pakistan offers solidarity after deadly Afghanistan quake

F.P. Report ISLAMABAD: Deputy Prime Minister and Foreign Minister Ishaq Dar held a telephonic conversation…

9 hours ago

Chief of Staff of Bahrain Defence Force visits Air HQs

F.P. Report ISLAMABAD: Lieutenant General Thiab Saqer Abdulla Al Nuaimi, Chief of Staff, Bahrain Defence…

9 hours ago

UK ‘outraged’ at Israel restricting aid as it works to evacuate children from Gaza for treatment

LONDON (AP) : British officials are working to get critically sick and injured children out…

9 hours ago

850,000 Syrian refugees have returned home since Assad’s fall, UN says

DAMASCUS (AP): Since the fall of Bashar Assad’s government in December, some 850,000 Syrian refugees…

10 hours ago

This website uses cookies.