Underwater Drone Eelume Moves Like a Snake

May 9, 2019
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2 min read

Having just watched the video below I am at a nearly total loss for words to describe what this underwater drone is capable of doing.

Since my days in earning my Ph.D. in marine geotechnical engineering I have known that the engineering required for offshore  platforms is among the most demanding in the world. Space exploration and nuclear power are right up there, but I am biased towards offshore. The Eelume “snake” is just another example of the sophistication of the offshore industry.

From an article in SPE – Oil Gas Facilities.

Photo of Underwater Drone Eelume
Underwater Drone Eelume


Equinor is installing an underwater drone in Norway’s Trondheim Fjord for testing and will soon deploy it for seabed maintenance work at the Asgard field in the Norwegian Sea.

The company developing the drone as well as the drone itself are named Eelume. The drone is described by the company as a snake-like, self-propelled robotic arm “whose slender and flexible body can transit over long distances.” It consists of several modules that allow it to be connected in different combinations to form various types of vehicles. Sensors and tools can be mounted anywhere on the drone.



The flexibility enables the drone to perform subsea inspection, maintenance, and repair work in confined, difficult-to-reach places without being tethered to a support vessel. It will inspect pipelines and operating valves, reducing costs from previous, more strenuous methods of subsea inspection, Equinor said. The drone is to permanently remain underwater and reside in a subsea docking station, where its battery will be charged.

The drone was conceived at the Norwegian University of Science and Technology in partnership with the research organization SINTEF, and the company was spun off in 2015. A strategic partnership was formed a year later via Equinor Technology Ventures’ LOOP program—then known as Statoil Technology Invest—and Kongsberg Maritime to advance development of the drone. The group continues to work to increase the drone’s level of autonomy.

Among the Norwegian Continental Shelf’s largest projects, Equinor-operated Asgard field lies in 240–310 m of water around 200 km off Norway. The oil, gas, and condensate field consists of 63 production and injection wells drilled through 19 subsea templates. Production began in 1999.



For the complete article click here.

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