Alain Norro (2016)
The closed circuit rebreather (CCR): is it the safest device for deep scientific diving ?
Underwater Technology, 34(1):'31-38'.
The closed circuit rebreather (CCR) is not a new diving technology.
From the late 1990s CCR units were commercially
available in Europe, and increasingly more divers, and
among them scientific divers, have been trained to use
them. Even if many benefits exist for using CCR for all diving
depth ranges, it is in the deep diving zone ranging from
50 m to 100 m of sea water where the main advantages to
using this equipment exist. Using rebreathers does carry
additional risks, and these must be mitigated to ensure safe
usage. A standard for CCR scientific diving has existed for
many years in the USA, and the levels of expertise within the
European scientific diving community are now sufficient for
a European standard to be established. National legislation
for occupational scientific diving in many cases excludes
CCR diving, which can limit its use for scientific purposes.
This paper suggests that, where possible, legislations
should be allowed to evolve in order to include this type of
equipment where and when its use has direct advantages
for both the safety and the efficiency of scientific diving. This
paper provides a brief description of the fundamentals of
closed circuit rebreather diving and outlines the benefits
that its use offers diving scientists. Special attention is given
to safety issues with the assertion that the CCR concept is,
if strictly applied, the safest available technique today for
autonomous deep scientific diving purposes.
Peer Review
Scientific-diving, Closed circuit rebreather, diving safety, deep diving
- DOI: 10.3723/ut.34.031
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