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Posted by Caroline Drummond
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23 January, 2019
AMC alumnus Nick Browne has accepted the role of a lifetime as project manager of Australia’s new and highly-anticipated Antarctic icebreaker, RSV
Nuyina. “I always dreamed and hoped to be involved in a project as significant as the RSV
Nuyina project,” Mr Browne said. The vessel, currently under construction in Damen Shipyards in Galati, Romania, is set to operate out of Hobart following its intended completion in 2022. For the next generation’s Australian Antarctic scientists the icebreaker will provide new opportunities for scientific research in Antarctica and the Southern Ocean. The vessel’s design, build, 30-year operation and lifetime maintenance is projected to run at a cost of $1.9bn, making RSV
Nuyina Australia’s largest investment in the Antarctic program.
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Mr Browne, who has a Bachelor of Engineering in naval architecture from AMC, has called on fellow alumni for the project including Captain Mike Jackson and ex-AMC board chairman David Serrett. “There is a very exciting future here at the Australian Antarctic Division and its modernising Antarctic program… I get a real sense of satisfaction knowing that the work I do here directly supports the achievement of Australia’s national interests in Antarctica,” Mr Browne said approaching his seventh year working on the RSV
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