Australia Although the first scientific diving expedition in
Australia was carried out by Sir
Maurice Yonge to the
Great Barrier Reef in 1928, most scientific diving did not start until 1952 when the
Commonwealth Scientific and Industrial Research Organisation began work to understand the
pearl beds of northern Australia in 1957. Commercial divers worked under Australian Standard CZ18 "Work in Compressed Air" in 1972. This standard applied to
caisson workers and divers so the underwater work was drafted into AS 2299 "Underwater Air Breathing Operations" in 1979. In 1987, a re-write of AS 2299 included scientific diving in the regulations even though the divers had been self-regulating under the
Australian Marine Sciences Association (AMSA). At that time, the AMSA and the
Australian Institute for Maritime Archaeology (AIMA) began a collaboration to draft a new standard for scientific diving.
Germany In the 1960s there were no regulations for scientific diving in Germany, but two fatal accidents in 1969 led to the implementation of guidelines for scientific diving based on the commercial diving guidelines. These define the equipment, training, protocols and legal background for scientific diving for German universities, research institutes and government organisations. Divers trained to these requirements are mostly science students or technicians, and are subsequently registered as scientific divers. Scientific diving is done by a diver in the water, monitored by a dive tender at the surface, controlled by a dive operation leader (supervisor) and with a standby diver on site. Diving equipment can include full-face mask and dry suit. Most dives do not require decompression stops. All German scientists and students need the "Certified research diver / European Scientific Diver" qualification to conduct scientific diving work, which is based on the German Health and Safety at Work Act () and the Rule for Safety at Work GUV-R 2112 Operation of Scientific Divers. There are seven certified training centres where the qualification
Geprüfter Forschungstaucher (Certified Research Diver) can be obtained.
Poland In Poland, the beginnings of scientific diving are associated with Prof.
Roman Wojtusiak, who used an open surface supplied helmet commissioned in 1935, and used from 1936 for biological observations and experiments in Poland and Yugoslavia. Polish units involved in scientific diving include the
Polish Academy of Sciences in Sopot, and the
University of Gdańsk, which carried out biological observations and installed measuring equipment. The Central Maritime Museum of Gdańsk carried out research on a large number of wrecks in the Baltic sea. Other units involved in underwater archaeology and training of divers for this work include the
Nicolaus Copernicus University in Toruń and the
University of Warsaw. Poland had a problem with scientific diving in that for natural sciences it was legally classified as recreational diving, but for archeology it was considered underwater work, until the act of 17 October 2003 classified scientific diving as professional diving, and the Act of 9 May 2014 then exempted scuba diving for research purposes organised by universities and research institutes.
South Africa In
South Africa, scientific diving is considered a form of commercial diving and is within the scope of the Diving Regulations 2009 and the Code of Practice for Scientific Diving published by the Chief Inspector of the
Department of Employment and Labour, Under DR 2009 the Codes of Practice are guidance and not compulsory practice. They are provided as recommended good practice, and in theory need not be followed providing an acceptable level of safety is achieved in terms of the
Occupational Health and Safety Act No.85 of 1993. However, in this case the onus is on the diving contractor to ensure acceptable safety during the diving operation based on risk assessment. The level of safety required is specified in the OHS act as "reasonably practicable" taking into account a number of factors, including cost effectiveness, availability of technology for mitigation and available knowledge of hazards. Use of the relatively flexible scientific code rather than the default
Code of Practice for Inshore Diving is restricted to clients which are registered as organisations engaged in either scientific research or higher education. The qualification required to dive at work in South Africa is linked to the mode of diving, the equipment to be used, and the diving environment. There are six classes of occupational diver registration, all of which may be employed in scientific diving operations within the scope of the specified competence and when supported by the required infrastructure. • Class 1 divers are competent to do saturation dives while supervised by a class I supervisor. • Class 2 divers are competent to do surface orientated open bell dives to a maximum depth of 70 msw, while supervised by a Class 2 supervisor. • Class 3 divers are competent to do surface supplied dives to a maximum depth of 50 msw while supervised by a Class 3 supervisor. • Class 4 divers are competent to do open circuit scuba dives to a maximum depth of 30 msw while supervised by a class 4 supervisor. • Class 5 divers are competent to do open circuit scuba dives for scientific work to a maximum depth of 20 msw while supervised by a class 4 supervisor. • Class 6 divers are competent to do open circuit scuba dives in a benign environment to a maximum depth of 8 msw while supervised by a class 4 supervisor. In each of these classes, the fundamental diving or supervisory competences include those of the class with the next higher number, though specialist skills may differ from person to person and may have no obvious connection to the registered class. All scientific dives must be under the supervision of a registered diving supervisor of a class appropriate to the specific diving operation. Most scientific diving in South Africa is done on open circuit scuba by Class 4 and 5 divers as no-stop dives on air or nitrox. The
Code of Practice for Scientific Diving allows for the use of alternative
modes and technologies provided appropriate competence is achieved by training and assessment, and the risk of the project is assessed as acceptable by both the organisation and the members of the diving team.
Minimum personnel requirements are as stated in the
Diving Regulations, and may only be varied under authorisation of an exemption from the
Chief Inspector of the Department of Employment and Labour. Training of scientific divers can be done at any commercial diving school registered with the Department of Employment and Labour. There is no distinction between scientific and other commercial diving registration. The Research Diving Unit of the
University of Cape Town has specialised in training divers to Class 3, 4 and 5 for scientific work continuously since the mid-20th century, and is the university's in-house diving contractor.
United Kingdom As diving is an activity that is considered to put the diver at a higher than normal risk to health, in the UK all diving at work, including scientific diving, is regulated through the Diving at Work Regulations, 1997 and the associated approved codes of practice, which are implemented by the
Health and Safety Executive. The code of practice for scientific diving also covers archaeological diving and diving in public aquariums. The professional body representing the scientific and archaeological diving sector is the
Scientific Diving Supervisory Committee (SDSC), and it is responsible to the
Natural Environment Research Council The determining factors indicating that a person is diving at work, and therefore are subject to the regulations, are: • The diving is done as part of the person's work – they are paid to do it,
or • If diving out of working hours, or as a student or volunteer, the data obtained from the diving activity goes towards publication with some academic or financial value
and • The diving operation is within UK territorial waters. HSE regulations are only enforceable within UK waters, but operations from UK registered merchant vessels may also require adherence to the regulations and codes of practice. Undergraduate students and volunteers are generally not regarded as being at work, but if diving as part of an organised event or programme, the diving contractor will still have a duty of care. Postgraduate students are more likely to be considered at work when the diving is a significant part of their research.
United States In the United States scientific diving is permitted by the
Occupational Safety and Health Administration (OSHA) to operate under an alternative consensual standard of practice that is maintained by the
American Academy of Underwater Sciences.
29 CFR Part 1910 – Subpart T "Commercial Diving Operations," establishes mandatory occupational safety and health requirements for commercial diving operations which apply wherever OSHA has statutory jurisdiction. This covers the inland and coastal territorial waters of the United States and possessions. The
United Brotherhood of Carpenters and Joiners of America petitioned the Federal Government in 1975 to issue an emergency temporary standard covering all professional diving operations, which was issued on June 15, 1976, to be effective from July 15, 1976. This was challenged in the US Court of Appeals and was withdrawn in November 1976. A permanent standard for commercial diving was subsequently formulated which became effective from October 20, 1977. The American Academy of Underwater Sciences applied for an exemption for scientific diving, citing 20 years of self-regulation and a lower accident rate than the commercial diving industry. An exemption was issued effective from November 28, 1982, after negotiation. To be able to avail itself of the Scientific Diving Exemption the institution under whose auspices the work is carried out must meet four tests: • The
Diving Control Board consisting of a majority of active scientific divers must have autonomous and absolute authority over the scientific diving program's operations. • The purpose of all projects using scientific diving is the advancement of science; therefore, information and data resulting from the project are non-proprietary. • The tasks of a scientific diver are those of an observer and data gatherer. Construction and trouble-shooting tasks traditionally associated with commercial diving are not included within scientific diving. • Scientific divers, based on the nature of their activities, must use scientific expertise in studying the underwater environment and, therefore, are scientists or scientists in training. The AAUS promulgates and regularly reviews the consensus based
Standards for Scientific Diving Certification and Operation of Scientific Diving Programs, which is a guideline for scientific diving programs in the US, and also used in some other countries. this document is currently the "Standard" of the scientific diving community and must be followed by all organizational members, these standards allow for reciprocity between institutions, and are widely used throughout the United States and some foreign countries. The AAUS uses three levels of scientific diver authorisation: • Diver-in-Training signifies that the diver has completed entry-level training requirements through a recognised recreational scuba certification agency or scientific diving programme. • Scientific Diver certification is a permit to dive using compressed air within no-decompression limits. • Temporary Diver authorisation is issued following a demonstration of the required competence and if the person can contribute significantly to a planned dive. It is valid only for a specific operation and is subject to the standard policies, regulations and standards. There are also depth limitations which may be incrementally increased based on satisfactory experience, for 9 msw, 18 msw, 30 msw, 40 msw 45 msw and 58 msw. A range of specialty qualifications may follow additional training and assessment. These are: decompression diving, surface-supplied diving, mixed-gas diving, nitrox diving, rebreather diving, lock-out and saturation diving, blue-water diving, drysuit diving, overhead environment diving, altitude diving, and use of dive computers for decompression monitoring.
International scientific cooperation Various methods may be used to allow for international recognition of scientific divers, allowing them to work together on projects. In some cases the professional diver qualifications may be mutually recognised between countries, and in other cases the exemption allows the controlling bodies to make the necessary arrangements.
Europe The European Scientific Diving Panel (ESDP) is the European platform for the advancement of underwater scientific excellence and to promote and provide a practical support framework for scientific diving at a European scale. The ESDP was initiated in 2008 as a European Marine Board Panel (until April 2017) and currently is receiving organizational support from the
European network of Marine Stations (MARS). The following countries are members of the ESDP as of 2020: • Belgium (statutory member) • Bulgaria (member) • Croatia (member) • Finland (statutory member) • France (statutory member) • Germany (statutory member) • Greece (candidate member) • Italy (member) • Norway (statutory member) • Poland (candidate member) • Portugal (member) • Slovenia (candidate member) • Sweden (statutory member) • United Kingdom (statutory member) The ESDP is intended to maintain and develop a system for recognition of scientific diving competencies issued by member states, which may be issued under various training routes and levels of national legislation, to facilitate participation and mobility by diving scientists in European research programmes, and to improve diving safety, quality of science, and underwater techniques and technologies. Two levels of scientific diver registration are recognised: the European Scientific Diver (ESD) and the Advanced European Scientific Diver (AESD). AESDs are qualified to lead scientific diving trips, while ESDs are only permitted to take part. These represent the minimum level of training and competence required to allow scientists to participate freely throughout the countries of the European Union in underwater research projects diving using scuba. Certification or registration by an authorized national agency is a prerequisite, and depth and breathing gas limitations may apply. This competence may be gained either through a formal training program, by in the field training and experience under appropriate supervision, or by a combination of these methods. These standards specify the minimum basic training and competence for scientific divers, and do not consider any speciality skill requirements by employers. Further training for job-specific competence is additional to the basic competence implied by the registration. All member countries of the European Union are expected in terms of directive EEC 92/51 to recognise one or both of these training levels. An applicant who satisfies the requirements will be issued with either an ESD or an AESD certificate that is valid for five years, and must be renewed every five years by application to the issuing authority. The certificate holders must comply with all national and local rules regarding medical fitness, workplace safety, insurance, and limitations on scientific diving activities when engaged in scientific diving in a host member country. The certificate only indicates previously assessed competence to the training level, and not the current level of competence.
Standards, reference manuals and codes of practice • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • ==Gallery==