Ocean Infinity Review: Faster subsea intelligence, lower offshore exposure

Ocean Infinity is a good fit when the “hard part” of a job is getting high-quality subsea data or inspections without burning time, fuel, and headcount offshore. Their model leans heavily on robotics, software, and remote operations to deliver surveys, inspections, and specialist missions with a smaller offshore footprint.

Ocean Infinity • UK (London)
1 Warwick Street,
London, W1B 5LR, United Kingdom
Website: oceaninfinity.com Contact: Contact page
Owners and project teams benefit by:
Ocean Infinity positions itself around tech-enabled offshore services that aim to deliver high quality marine data and inspections faster, with fewer people offshore and a reduced operational footprint. What they do
  • Reducing offshore exposure with robotics and remote operations: Their Armada concept is built around lean-crewed vessels connected to onshore control for monitoring and remote control of robotic subsystems, aiming to cut the number of people offshore while still delivering complex workscopes.
  • Faster seabed intelligence for build decisions and risk removal: For offshore projects, their data services span geophysical seabed mapping, hydrographic surveys, and geotechnical sampling to support foundation design and ongoing operations.
  • Cleaner inspection cycles for subsea assets: High-resolution inspection and data capture can reduce “unknowns” in planning, helping teams scope maintenance windows and avoid expensive late-stage surprises.
  • Practical support for subsea cable planning and integrity work: Ocean Infinity highlights pre-installation surveys and infrastructure inspections tied to the global subsea cable network, which matters when routing, burial, and integrity assumptions affect schedules and claims.
  • UXO survey and clearance support for safer installation corridors: Their UXO services include detection, identification, and clearance/removal to de-risk subsea installation work.
  • Search and salvage capability across shallow to ultra-deep water: They market search and salvage services for location and recovery of lost assets from coastal waters down to the deepest depths, where specialist methods and good data handling make or break the outcome.
  • Operational efficiency with a lower-impact posture as a stated goal: Across their positioning, “faster, safer, cleaner” is a consistent theme, with an emphasis on smaller environmental impact and improved safety through tech-led operations.
  • A defined fleet roadmap rather than one-off experimentation: Ocean Infinity has publicly described the build and deployment of a 14-vessel Armada fleet and the integration of these vessels into onshore control centres as part of its operating model. Armada fleet milestone
Notes: For any project, the commercial “win” usually shows up in fewer offshore days, fewer people exposed, faster data turnaround, and fewer redesign loops when ground conditions and constraints are confirmed early.
Notable mentions and external references
Independent coverage touching fleet buildout, remote operations, offshore energy services, and high-profile search work.
  • Armada fleet completion coverage gCaptain
    Trade coverage on the completion of the 14-vessel Armada concept and the “lean-crewed” survey vessel approach. Open the gCaptain piece.
  • Final Armada vessel delivery MarineLink
    MarineLink’s report on Ocean Infinity taking delivery of the final vessel in its Armada fleet. Read on MarineLink.
  • Remote vessel operations approval Offshore Energy
    Coverage describing a DNV “Statement of Compliance” related to Ocean Infinity’s remotely supported operational concept for its Armada fleet. Open the Offshore Energy item.
  • Five-year Shell agreement coverage Splash247
    Splash coverage on a multi-year agreement with Shell for subsea services, framing Ocean Infinity as a “robotic vessel” player in offshore energy. Read on Splash.
  • Shell subsea tie-up (second outlet) Offshore Energy
    Another write-up on the Shell global framework agreement, useful for confirming the basic headline details across outlets. Open the article.
  • MH370 search resumption coverage CBS News
    Mainstream coverage of the renewed MH370 search with a “no-find, no-fee” arrangement, highlighting Ocean Infinity’s role in the operation. Open CBS News.
  • Robotic operations center in Australia Ocean Science & Technology
    Coverage on Ocean Infinity’s plans for a robotic ship operations center in Australia, reinforcing the onshore-control operating model. Read the coverage.
This list is illustrative, not exhaustive. It’s intended as quick third-party context for how Ocean Infinity is showing up in offshore data, remote operations, and specialist missions.
Robotics mission ROI quick check
This tool uses your assumptions to compare a conventional crewed approach versus a lean-crewed, robotics-heavy approach. It’s meant for early planning, not procurement.
Adjust inputs to see estimated cost, exposure, and fuel deltas.
Offshore days People exposure Fuel and CO₂ Planning tradeoffs
Notes: Real projects vary by task, sensors, weather, standby risk, permitting, and client presence requirements. Use your own contract rates and vessel performance assumptions.

Ocean Infinity is easiest to understand by looking at outcomes: faster data turnaround, fewer offshore days, and fewer people exposed offshore while still delivering the level of survey, inspection, or search quality the project demands. The outside coverage above is useful because it shows where the company is being validated beyond its own marketing: fleet scale, remote-operations acceptance, offshore energy contracts, and specialist missions where credibility is tested in public.

We welcome your feedback, suggestions, corrections, and ideas for enhancements. Please click here to get in touch.
By the ShipUniverse Editorial Team — About Us | Contact