1993-
Present Managing Director of Fellows International Limited (FIL).
Involved in proposal writing and bidding for contracts in the current and
future Government and International Agencies Competing For Quality programmes
for munitions clearance on land and below the seas. His Company's first major
under underwater munitions location and clearance project, for North West Water
Engineers, had a £2M turnover in 9 months. It was the first commercial
large scale underwater munitions clearance contract in the UK. FIL have now
completed many major munitions clearance projects on land and underwater in the
UK on old Ministry of Defence land and others abroad including the
implementation of Munitions Awareness and First Aid Trauma Treatment Training
for refugees in Slovenia for the British Aid Agency aLERT in parts of Africa
for SOS Kinderdorf/Austria. FIL are renowned throughout the industry
for their unique professional approach, use of state of the art equipment and
regard for safe practices. Safety and leading from the front have been of
paramount importance throughout his bomb and mine disposal career and he has
carried this into his commercial practice as an integral part of the company
policy. FIL are the first UK Company to achieve BS ISO
EN 9002 for Diving, Explosives and Munitions Clearance Services.
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1990-1996 Employed by Drager of Germany, UK and USA, as a
Business Development Consultant on Military Diving, Minewarfare and Explosive
Ordnance Disposal (EOD) and Special Forces Equipment. Modified and redesigned
much of the in-service equipment for Military use. Gained many
inquiries and sales from successfully introducing Drager diving equipment and
life support technology to the UK Ministry of Defence (Navy and Army). Involved
in many successful Bids for MOD(N) contracts: significant ones were for the
replacement oxygen diving equipment, (circa £5M) one man recompression
chambers (circa £3M) and War Gas Detection Equipment (circa £1.5M)
Combat Swimmers Life Support Harness (circa £1M).
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1990-1994 Trelleborge International of Sweden. Consultant
responsible for advising the Company on UK Military Diving, Firefighting and
Chemical Warfare procedures and equipment requirements. Designed Mine Clearance
equipment such as the Non-magnetic Mine Probe and Mine Safe Walking Platform
currently in use by munitions clearance engineers in many theatres of
operations. Designed the Waterproof Equipment Transportation Bag and other
specialist to task equipment for the UK Military Special Forces.
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1990-1993 As the Diving and Explosive Ordnance Disposal
Consultant for Rimfire International Limited successfully introduced them into
munitions clearance operations. As their Horn of Africa Project Manager he was
responsible for formulating, gaining approval and issuing policy for the
training of 440 Somali personnel in basic EOD and minefield clearance
techniques. He then controlled a very successful 3 year programme for the
UNHCR, EEC, US Aid, MSF, ODA and Dutch Government in Somaliland clearing in
excess of 125,000 non metallic mines and hundreds of tons of unexploded
ordnance. The project was valued at £9 Million.
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1986-1990 As the Royal Navy's first Inspector
of Clearance Divers and Special Forces responsible to The Superintendent of
Diving for monitoring all Diving, Bomb and Mine Disposal and Health and Safety
Standard by advisory and formal Inspections and to provide expert advice to the
Clearance Diving Teams, Special Boat Squadron and Special Air Service. Provided
detailed operational papers that laid down the optimum characteristics that
would be required for future equipment to support diving and EOD. As
the Duty Mine-warfare and Diving Officer on The Superintendent of Diving's
staff, instigated the rescue attempt of the Herald of Free Enterprise disaster
and later led the on-board party of British and Belgian CDs who removed the 191
corpses from the ship. Last noteworthy operational Royal Naval task was to
investigate the damage and formulate the successful safe plan for the removal
of collision damaged missiles from HMS Southampton in the Persian Gulf in 1989.
Awarded Membership of the Order of the British Empire.
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1983-1986 Assistant to The Superintendent of Diving.
Responsible for implementing lessons learnt from the Falklands
Campaign, and was required to liaise with external organisations to manage and
administer the provision of new equipment and facilities in support of
clearance diving activities world-wide. Advised Coroners Courts on commercial
diving accidents and trained in Occupational Health and Safety at Highbury
College, Portsmouth. Designed, built and commissioned the first mobile
containerised recompression chambers, special mine investigation units and
air-mobile diving support units. Standardised the RNs Bomb and Mine
Disposal and Diving motor transport and the Sunken Submarine Rescue Diving
Logistic Support organisation. Monitored Research Objectives, within the
Defence Research Agency and Director General Underwater Weapons organisation,
for future Minewarfare and Diving equipment. Awarded the Royal Navy Meritorious
Service Medal.
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1981-1983 Second in Command of the Fleet Clearance Diving
Term. During this time conducted numerous mine-countermeasure exercises with
NATO. During the Falklands Campaign in a ten hour operation in the burning
sea-slug missile magazine on board HMS Antrim, whilst under constant air
attack, disposed of the World's first recorded unexploded bomb on board a
warship at sea. Without any sleep or break then attended an unexploded bomb on
HMS Argonaut leaving that task only to recover survivors from the water when
HMS Antelope exploded almost alongside. Planned and led the joint Army/SBS/CD
Mine Clearance Team, behind the enemy lines, to clear a landing for the main
Stanley seaborne assault. Defused two unexploded bombs in the mortar magazine
of HMS Plymouth and removed damaged volatile Seacat missiles from her
launchers. Stripped and certified as safe in Gibraltar
a recovered Argentinian mine that was being returned to the UK for
investigation. Awarded the Distinguished Service Cross for bomb and mine
disposal services during the Falklands Campaign. The only non commissioned
Officer in the Military to be so honoured since the award's inception.
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1978-1981 Assistant Fleet Mine-Warfare and Clearance
Diving Officer to The Commander in Chief Fleet, responsible for the Health and
Safety in diving and explosives demolition practice of all of the diving units
in the Fleet world-wide. Advising the CinC on maritime counter terrorist
procedures, diving and explosive ordnance disposal capabilities. Conducted
Inspections of all Fleet Diving Units ashore and afloat.
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1975-1977 Chief of The Scottish and Northern Ireland Bomb
and Mine Disposal Team with responsibility for the whole of the British Isles
North of The Wash and Barrow in Furness. During this period defusing many
British and German bombs and mines on land and on board trawlers including a
1000lb bomb jammed in the bucket of a dredger in the centre of Aberdeen. Led
the teams that de-ammunitioned the sunken wrecks of HMS Vanguard in the Orkney
Isles, HMS Drake at Rathlin Island and HMS Natal at Invergordon. He attended
the first recorded terrorist device on board an offshore drilling platform in
the North Sea. He was awarded the British Empire Medal, Military Division for
Gallantry, for his bomb and mine disposal achievements. (The BEM* of which he
was the last recipient, was the forerunner of today's Queen's Gallantry Medal).
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1974-1975 Chief Diver of a Joint Service EOD Team which
located and destroyed 6 Japanese defensive war-time minefields at Funafuti
Atoll in the South Pacific, a shark-infested sea area of some 14 square miles.
Supervised the disposal of 1,240 tones of World War Two unexploded ordnance on
land at Nanameia during the same period including 137 one thousand pound bombs.
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1973-1974 Coxswain and Chief Diver of a Ton Class MCMV.
Responsible for the Clearance Diving Team, Ships Discipline, Victualling and
Medical welfare.
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1970-1973 Chief Diver of the Clyde Submarine Base
Clearance Diving Team. Responsible for the hull maintenance and support of the
Polaris and conventional submarine Fleet. Bomb and mine disposal in the Clyde
Areas.
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1968-1970 Diving and EOD Supervisor in the Far East
Clearance Diving Team responsible for Second World War munitions location and
disposal, salvage and general clearance diving duties. Whilst in the Far East
CD Team involved in hands on clearance of Japanese and Allied mines and bombs
in the Malayan Peninsular and as far South as Fiji. Worked with the US EOD
Forces in Cambodia and Vietnam. Salvaged explosives and bullion from RFA
Ennerdale before flattening the wreck with explosive charges in the Seychelle
Islands. With a 3 man team he blasted channels through coral reefs in the
Maldive Islands and Diago Garcia for military logistic support.
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1966-1968 Qualified as a Diving Supervisor/Instructor,
attended the Defence EOD School's Advanced Staff course and then commissioned
the Clearance Diving EOD and Diving Support Team at the then new Polaris
Submarine Base in Faslane. Responsible for the clearance of first and second
world war mines and munitions on old MofD ranges prior to the fabrication of
the Naval base and Polaris magazines.
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1964-1966 Chief Bosun's Mate on board the first of the
Royal Navy's mine-hunter vessels conducting first of class
mine-countermeasures trials detecting all Nations underwater
weapons. Successfully conducted mine clearance operations in wartime munitions
contaminated zones.
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1955-1964 Joined the Royal Navy as a Boy Seaman. Qualified
as a Clearance Diver in 1959. Qualified in chemical, nuclear, conventional
weapons and improvised explosive device disposal. Undertook various tours with
Clearance Diving Teams in the UK, Far and Middle East directly involved in bomb
and mine disposal operations on land and subsea as well as maritime counter
terrorist activities and the salvage of numerous sunken ships and aircraft.
Trained and worked with the Special Boat Service (SBS) Royal Marines and the
Special Air Service (SAS). |