Groundbreaking ceremony for NOAA Marine Operations Center-Atlantic on May 6, 2024. (Image credit: NOAA)

Today, the Department of Commerce’s National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration (NOAA) held a groundbreaking ceremony for a new facility on Naval Station Newport in Rhode Island that will serve as the future home of the NOAA Marine Operations Center-Atlantic.

In December, the U.S. Navy, on behalf of NOAA, awarded $146,778,932 to Skanska USA to build the new NOAA facility. The design and construction of the facility is funded in part by the Inflation Reduction Act, the largest climate investment in history, as part of President Biden’s Investing in America agenda.

The facility will include a pier to accommodate four large vessels, a floating dock for smaller vessels, space for vessel repairs and parking and a building to be used for shoreside support and as a warehouse. Construction is anticipated to be completed in 2027. This project will operate under a Project Labor Agreement, consistent with EO 14063, issued by President Biden. 

Secretary Gina Raimondo speaking at the groundbreaking ceremony for the NOAA Marine Operations Center-Atlantic on May 6, 2024. (Image credit: NOAA)

“Thanks to the leadership of President Biden and the hard work of Rhode Island’s elected leaders we are making transformative investments in Rhode Island and all across the country,” said U.S. Secretary of Commerce Gina Raimondo. “President Biden’s Investing in America Agenda made it possible for NOAA to construct this new facility and make advances in critical climate and ocean research, while also cementing NOAA’s relationships with the Navy and the community of Newport. This facility will support science and a healthy economy well into the future.

“I’m proud to say that this new facility has been designed to take future changes in our climate into consideration,” said NOAA Administrator Rick Spinrad, Ph.D. “It will be LEED certified and will soon be the homeport for one of our newest, lower-emissions vessels, working towards the goal to minimize NOAA’s own impact on the environment.”

“The new, state-of-the-art Marine Operations Center-Atlantic facility is critical to NOAA’s mission and delivering on our commitments to regional, international and other diverse partners,” said NOAA Corps Rear Admiral Nancy Hann, Director of the NOAA Commissioned Officer Corps and NOAA Marine and Aviation Operations. “Newport has always been a welcoming community to NOAA, and we are appreciative of the support from local, state and congressional leaders, as well as our mission partners at Naval Station Newport.”

An illustration of the new NOAA marine operations center planned for Naval Station Newport in Rhode Island.
An illustration of the new NOAA marine operations center planned for Naval Station Newport in Rhode Island. (Image credit: Burns & McDonnell)

NOAA’s fleet of 15 research and survey ships are operated, managed and maintained by NOAA Marine and Aviation Operations. Ranging from large oceanographic research vessels capable of exploring the world’s deepest ocean, to smaller ships responsible for charting the shallow bays and inlets of the U.S., the fleet supports a wide range of marine activities, including fisheries surveys, nautical charting and ocean and climate studies. NOAA ships are operated by NOAA Corps officers and civilian professional mariners.

 “NOAA is the top scientific weather and oceans agency and I was pleased to help Rhode Island land MOC-A. Naval Station Newport’s location and the years of strategic federal investments we’ve made here are really paying off. Bringing NOAA’s premiere research fleet and Atlantic operations center to the Ocean State means hundreds of jobs for Rhode Island and a brighter future for our Blue Economy,” said Senator Jack Reed.

“I am very pleased to celebrate the groundbreaking of NOAA’s new Atlantic Marine Operations Center right here in Rhode Island. The research conducted here will help us better understand the effects of climate change on the oceans and support job growth for years to come,” said Senator Sheldon Whitehouse. “This day would not have been possible without Senator Reed’s longtime dedication to relocating the Center to the Ocean State.” 

“The National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration’s growing footprint in the Ocean State will be a massive jobs and economy boon for years to come,” said Congressman Gabe Amo. “The work to construct and staff the Marine Operations Center-Atlantic, right here on Naval Station Newport, will improve our national security — and non-military — operations. I am grateful for the leadership of Senators Jack Reed and Sheldon Whitehouse, Secretary Gina Raimondo, and all our state and local partners here today to break ground on new climate-resilient infrastructure that continues Rhode Island’s fight against climate change.”

“Rhode Island is proud to be selected as the home of the new NOAA Marine Operations Center-Atlantic,” said Governor Dan McKee. “This facility will bolster our efforts to build climate-resilient infrastructure and support our blue economy. We’re grateful to President Biden, Secretary Raimondo and our congressional delegation for their support of this project which will put Rhode Islanders to work in good-paying jobs and pay dividends for generations to come.”

Source: NOAA

Senator Reed

Senator Jack Reed’s office provided the following press release on Monday.

After Working to Bring NOAA Hub to RI, Reed Helps Break Ground on New MOC-A Complex at NAVSTA Newport

NOAA Marine Operations Center – Atlantic expected to complete move from Norfolk, Virginia to Naval Station Newport by 2027 with a brand new $150 million shoreside facility as well as pier and floating dock

NEWPORT, RI – The National Oceanographic and Atmospheric Administration (NOAA) is increasing its presence along the Newport waterfront and bringing some premiere ocean research jobs, vessels, and operations to the Ocean State.

After working for more than a decade to help efficiently consolidate federal resources for ocean exploration and marine research in Rhode IslandU.S. Senator Jack Reed today joined U.S. Secretary of Commerce Gina Raimondo; the head of NOAA, Rick Spinrad, Ph.D.; NOAA Corps Rear Admiral Nancy Hann, director of NOAA Marine and Aviation Operations and the NOAA Commissioned Officer Corps; Governor Dan McKeeU.S. Senator Sheldon WhitehouseCongressman Gabe Amo; and other special guests for a groundbreaking ceremony on a 5 acre site at Naval Station (NAVSTA) Newport for NOAA’s new Marine Operations Center – Atlantic (MOC-A).

The MOC-A coordinates NOAA’s ships operating in the Atlantic Ocean and Great Lakes and serves as a homeport for some of NOAA’s flagship research vessels

The MOC-A is moving from Norfolk, Virginia to Naval Station Newport in Rhode Island, a secure facility used by both the U.S. Navy and U.S. Coast Guard, and in close proximity to the University of Rhode Island’s Graduate School of Oceanography. 

When it is completed, the new $150 million NOAA hub will help support jobs on land and at sea.  While many NOAA workers will serve aboard research vessels for long stretches as they conduct oceanographic research missions, there will also be dozens of shoreside NOAA employees based at the new facility responsible for monitoring and supporting the research fleet at sea.  Jobs at the new facility will include marine engineers, electrical technicians, budget specialists, and medical support staff and human resources administrators. 

Approximately 60 NOAA staffers worked at the NOAA MOC-A office in Norfolk, while many more also worked aboard vessels and were based in the area when not at sea.

“I was pleased to help Rhode Island land NOAA’s regional headquarters for Atlantic operations.  This will be a first-class facility.  It will be a major asset for NOAA that will help further their important mission and make them more efficient, achieving cost savings for taxpayers while bringing jobs to Rhode Island,” said Senator Reed.

NOAA has long planned to consolidate its fleet and upgrade its facilities and Senator Reed, a senior member of the Appropriations Committee and the Chairman of the Senate Armed Services Committee, successfully worked to ensure Rhode Island was best-positioned to be the homeport for the MOC-A and four major NOAA research vessels.

In December, the U.S. Navy, on behalf of NOAA, announced a $146,778,932 contract for Skanska USA to build the new 22,000 square foot facility, which will serve as the headquarters for NOAA’s Atlantic fleet.

Funded in part by the Inflation Reduction Act, the new NOAA facility will also include a pier that will accommodate four large vessels, a floating dock for smaller vessels, space for vessel repairs, and parking, and a warehouse.

Work has been underway for about five months and the project is expected to be completed in the summer of 2027. 

“NOAA is the top scientific weather and oceans agency and I was pleased to help Rhode Island land MOC-A.  Naval Station Newport’s location and the years of strategic federal investments we’ve made here are really paying off.  Bringing NOAA’s premiere research fleet and Atlantic operations center to the Ocean State means hundreds of jobs for Rhode Island and a brighter future for our Blue Economy,” said Senator Reed.

Currently, NOAA has two ships homeported at Naval Station Newport’s Pier 2 on Narragansett Bay: the 209-foot Henry B. Bigelow (R 225), which is a fisheries research vessel, and the 224-foot Okeanos Explorer (R 337), known as “America’s ship for ocean exploration,” which is dedicated to oceanographic research and conducts operations around the globe, including mapping the seafloor.

A third NOAA ship is slated to homeport at NASTA Newport: Thomas Jefferson (S 222) is a 208-foot long deep-water hydrographic survey ship that uses sonar to map the bottom of the seafloor and provides data that informs the management of fisheries, navigation safety, ice models, hydrodynamic models, and geological work.

Additionally, a fourth NOAA vessel that will be homeported in Newport is now under construction: the 244-foot Discoverer, which will be a state-of-the-art oceanographic research vessel, is currently being built in Louisiana.  The ship’s sponsor is Second Gentleman Douglas C. Emhoff, and the ship is scheduled to join the fleet in 2026.

Overall, NOAA’s fleet currently includes fifteen oceanographic research vessels, fisheries survey vessels, and hydrographic survey vessels.

The ships in NOAAs Atlantic fleet are operated, managed, and maintained by NOAA Marine and Aviation Operations.  They collect data essential to protecting marine mammals and ocean ecosystems, managing commercial fisheries, understanding climate change and producing nautical charts that help keep mariners safe. NOAA ships also deploy and help maintain buoys that gather oceanographic and weather information and warn of tsunamis.  NOAA ships are operated by NOAA Corps officers and civilian professional mariners.

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