An Autonomous Underwater Architecture for Long-Term Deep-Ocean Inspection with Opportunistic (Re)planning
Elisa Tosello, Paolo Bonel, Alberto Buranello, Marco Carraro, Alessandro Cimatti, Lorenzo Granelli, Stefan Panjkovic, Andrea Micheli
Abstract
Robots are increasingly used in subsea environ- ments due to their positive impact on human safety and operational capabilities in the deep ocean. However, achie- ving full autonomy remains challenging due to the extreme conditions they encounter. In this context, we propose an Autonomous Underwater Architecture for long-term deep- ocean inspection that robustly plans activities and efficiently deliberates with no human help. It combines the innovative Saipem’s Hydrone-R subsea vehicle with an advanced planning architecture, resulting in a robot that autonomously perceives its surroundings, plans a mission, and adapts in real-time to contingencies and opportunities. After describing the robot hardware, we present the technological advancements achieved in building its software, along with several compelling use cases. We explore scenarios where the robot conducts long-term underwater missions operating under resource constraints while remaining responsive to opportunities, such as new inspection points. Our solution gained significant reliability and acceptance within the Oil & Gas community, as evidenced by its current deployment on a real field in Norway.