Chinese Research Ship Collects Samples, Tests Submersibles in Vietnam-Claimed Waters

Zachary Haver
2021.02.17
Washington
Chinese Research Ship Collects Samples, Tests Submersibles in Vietnam-Claimed Waters The Chinese ship Tan Suo 2, which recently conducted a scientific research expedition in contested waters in the South China Sea.
Xinhua

A Chinese government scientific research ship has completed an expedition in South China Sea waters disputed by Hanoi and Beijing, according to Chinese state media and data from a ship-tracking platform.

The Tan Suo 2 left the Chinese port of Sanya on Feb. 2, sailing to waters west of the Paracel Islands – roughly 140 nautical miles off the coast of Da Nang in Vietnam – where Chinese state media says it collected biological samples, tested submersibles and carried other such research until Feb. 9.

The ship’s voyage into Vietnam’s claimed exclusive economic zone is just the latest such research expedition by China, which claims most of the South China Sea for itself despite competing claims from six other Asian governments, Brunei, Indonesia, Malaysia, the Philippines, Taiwan and Vietnam. While Indonesia does not regard itself as party to the South China Sea dispute, Beijing claims historic rights to parts of that sea overlapping Indonesia’s exclusive economic zone. 

On Wednesday, a U.S. warship, the USS Russell, conducted a so-called freedom of navigation operation (FONOP) in the Spratly islands, an area contested by China, Vietnam, the Philippines, Malaysia, Brunei and Taiwan, the U.S. 7th Fleet said in a statement.

Notwithstanding the disputes over maritime and territorial claims, Chinese research ships have consistently carried out research in the South China Sea and beyond – searching for natural resources, mapping the seabed, testing new technologies and conducting other types of scientific inquiry. At times, China’s research activities have drawn ire from neighboring countries.

For instance, in January the Jia Geng – a ship owned and managed by Xiamen University – operated in Philippine waters without permission from the Philippine government, the Inquirer reported.

And in December 2020, Indonesia discovered a likely Chinese unmanned underwater vehicle near Selayar Island, which may have been collecting data to aid People’s Liberation Army (PLA) Navy submarines.

Coverage of the recent expedition by the Tan Suo 2 in Chinese state media indicates that the ship belongs to the Chinese Academy of Sciences Institute of Deep-sea Science and Engineering, a state-run research organization. Records reviewed by BenarNews confirm that this institute owns and manages the Tan Suo 2.

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Automatic identification system (AIS) data reveals the Tan Suo 2 operating in waters disputed by China and Vietnam between Feb. 2 and Feb. 9. [Data from MarineTraffic; analysis and annotation by BenarNews.]

The Tan Suo 2 reportedly carried a 60-person team from the Chinese Academy of Sciences and the “Deep Sea Warrior” manned submersible.

Over the course of the expedition, the researchers completed nine dives where they collected deep-sea biological, sedimentary and water samples which will be used to build a “South China Sea deep-sea biological resource bank” and study how organisms adapt to the deep-sea environment, state-run Xinhua news agency reported.

The researchers also carried out the first joint operation involving the “Deep Sea Warrior” and the “Luling” mobile multi-site submersible, the report said.

The Vietnamese government has not publicly commented on the Tan Suo 2’s recent expedition, which took place in an area that both China and Vietnam claim as part of their exclusive economic zones.

Coastal states have the right to regulate, authorize and conduct scientific research in their exclusive economic zones, which typically extend up to 200 nautical miles from a country’s territorial sea baseline, according to the United Nations Convention on the Law of the Sea (UNCLOS).

Over the past year, the Tan Suo 2 repeatedly has operated in the South China Sea and has ventured into the waters of the Pacific Ocean as well.

For example, the ship sailed down to an area southeast of the Paracel Islands in July 2020. And it finished at least four additional excursions into the South China Sea between the start of August and mid-October.

In December 2020, the Tan Suo 2 completed a 57-day expedition to the Mariana Trench. During this voyage, the ship deployed the “Deep Sea Warrior” for 32 dives where it collected a range of different biological and sedimentary samples, Xinhua reported.

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AIS data showing the Tan Suo 2’s activity between February 2020 and February 2021. [MarineTraffic]

 

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