Role Definition
| Field | Value |
|---|---|
| Job Title | ROV Pilot-Technician |
| Seniority Level | Mid-Level |
| Primary Function | Operates and maintains remotely operated vehicles (ROVs) for subsea inspection, survey, and intervention work from surface vessels. Pilots ROVs via control systems and joysticks, operates manipulator arms for subsea tasks (valve turning, cable connection, structural repair), and maintains hydraulic, electrical, mechanical, and fiber optic systems between dives. Works across oil & gas, offshore wind, telecoms cable, and marine infrastructure sectors. |
| What This Role Is NOT | NOT a commercial diver who goes underwater in person (see Commercial Diver, AIJRI 64.3). NOT an AUV operator running pre-programmed autonomous survey missions. NOT an ROV Supervisor/Superintendent who manages teams and client relationships. NOT a desk-based data analyst processing inspection footage onshore. |
| Typical Experience | 3-8 years. IMCA ROV logbook, BOSIET/FOET offshore survival, OGUK offshore medical, HV/LV safety, fiber optics splicing. Typically progressed from trainee through Pilot-Tech I/II. Background in electronics, mechanical, or electrical engineering common. |
Seniority note: Trainee ROV Pilot-Technicians (0-2 years) score lower on judgment and would sit in lower Green or upper Yellow. ROV Supervisors/Superintendents (10+ years) score deeper Green with added operational accountability and client management responsibilities.
Protective Principles + AI Growth Correlation
| Principle | Score (0-3) | Rationale |
|---|---|---|
| Embodied Physicality | 2 | Significant physical component. The technician portion (~40% of role) involves hands-on maintenance of complex electro-hydraulic-mechanical systems on offshore vessel decks and workshops — replacing hydraulic hoses, splicing fiber optics, troubleshooting electronics in confined vessel spaces with vessel motion. Not unstructured underwater environments (that's the commercial diver), but semi-structured offshore environments with real physical demands. 10-15 year protection. |
| Deep Interpersonal Connection | 1 | Crew coordination during subsea operations, safety-critical communication with ROV Supervisor and bridge crew, shift handovers. Trust matters in high-stakes offshore environments but is not the core value proposition. |
| Goal-Setting & Moral Judgment | 2 | Real-time judgment calls during subsea intervention: how to approach a complex manipulator task on a corroded valve, whether conditions are safe to continue operating, when to abort a dive due to current or visibility, assessing risk to multi-million-dollar subsea assets. Works within procedures set by ROV Supervisor but makes consequential operational decisions autonomously during piloting. |
| Protective Total | 5/9 | |
| AI Growth Correlation | 0 | Demand driven by offshore energy infrastructure — oil & gas maintenance/IMR, offshore wind farm construction and maintenance, subsea cable installation. Growth is energy-transition-driven, not AI-driven. Offshore wind is a major growth driver but that is clean energy investment, not AI adoption. |
Quick screen result: Protective 5/9 with neutral growth — likely Green Zone (Transforming). Proceed to confirm.
Task Decomposition (Agentic AI Scoring)
| Task | Time % | Score (1-5) | Weighted | Aug/Disp | Rationale |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| ROV piloting & manipulator operations | 30% | 2 | 0.60 | AUGMENTATION | AI auto-pilot and station-keeping systems maintain position and heading. But complex intervention tasks — turning corroded valves, connecting subsea cables, navigating around structures in strong currents — require human spatial reasoning, manual dexterity via joystick, and real-time adaptation. AI assists with navigation; humans lead intervention. |
| ROV maintenance & repair (hydraulic/electrical/mechanical) | 25% | 1 | 0.25 | NOT INVOLVED | Physical hands-on work in vessel workshops and on deck. Troubleshooting hydraulic leaks, replacing seals, repairing electronics boards, splicing fiber optic umbilicals, testing thrusters. Every repair is different depending on what failed and why. No AI or robotic pathway for this work offshore. |
| Subsea inspection & data acquisition | 15% | 3 | 0.45 | AUGMENTATION | AI-enhanced cameras and sonar systems process inspection data faster. Anomaly detection algorithms flag corrosion, cracks, and marine growth from video feeds. But the pilot still directs the inspection, positions the ROV, and makes judgment calls about what to examine closely. AI processes data; human directs the camera. |
| Pre-/post-dive system checks & testing | 10% | 1 | 0.10 | NOT INVOLVED | Physical inspection and functional testing of all ROV systems before every deployment — safety-critical, tactile, and procedural. Checking umbilical integrity, testing manipulator grip, verifying camera and sonar function, pressure-testing hydraulics. Hands-on and irreducible. |
| Documentation, reporting & data management | 10% | 4 | 0.40 | DISPLACEMENT | Dive reports, maintenance logs, inspection data compilation, shift handover documentation. Follows structured templates (IMCA standards). AI generates reports from ROV telemetry and sensor data. Human reviews but much of the writing is automatable. |
| Mission planning & safety briefings | 5% | 2 | 0.10 | AUGMENTATION | AI-assisted dive planning software models currents, tides, and vessel positioning. But operational risk assessment, weather window decisions, and intervention approach require human judgment informed by experience of that specific vessel and ROV system. |
| Equipment mobilization & tooling setup | 5% | 1 | 0.05 | NOT INVOLVED | Physical rigging and installation of specialized tooling — manipulator jaw changes, sonar mounts, cutting tools, cleaning brushes. Deck operations in offshore conditions with crane lifts, weather constraints, and vessel motion. Pure physical work. |
| Total | 100% | 1.95 |
Task Resistance Score: 6.00 - 1.95 = 4.05/5.0
Displacement/Augmentation split: 10% displacement, 50% augmentation, 40% not involved.
Reinstatement check (Acemoglu): Yes. AI creates new tasks: validating AI-generated inspection anomaly reports, operating AUV systems alongside ROVs (emerging "subsea robotics specialist" role), interpreting AI-processed sonar/bathymetric data, and managing remote operations technology. The role is broadening, not narrowing.
Evidence Score
| Dimension | Score (-2 to 2) | Evidence |
|---|---|---|
| Job Posting Trends | 1 | ~11,360 US ROV-related jobs (ZipRecruiter 2026). Offshore wind driving significant new demand — construction, installation, and maintenance of turbine foundations, subsea cables, and scour protection all require ROV support. Oil & gas IMR (inspection, maintenance, repair) and decommissioning provide steady baseline demand. Not surging but growing with energy transition. |
| Company Actions | 1 | Oceaneering, Subsea 7, DOF Subsea, TechnipFMC actively recruiting ROV personnel. No reports of ROV pilot layoffs citing AI. Companies investing in AUV fleets (Saab Seaeye, Kongsberg) but simultaneously maintaining ROV capability for intervention work. Offshore wind developers (Orsted, Equinor, RWE) expanding subsea services contracts that require ROV teams. |
| Wage Trends | 1 | Glassdoor US average $90,167 (2026). Offshore ROV Pilot average $130,916 (ZipRecruiter). UK day rates £300-£600. Contract rates commanding premiums with offshore wind growth. Wages growing with market, tracking energy sector expansion. No stagnation signals. |
| AI Tool Maturity | 1 | AI auto-pilot and station-keeping deployed on modern ROVs. AI-enhanced inspection cameras with anomaly detection in production use. AUVs handling routine survey tasks autonomously. But no AI system performs subsea intervention — valve operations, cable connections, structural repairs — autonomously. Anthropic observed exposure for parent maritime occupations: 0.0%. Tools augment but do not replace the core intervention and maintenance work. |
| Expert Consensus | 1 | Industry consensus (IMCA, DNV, major contractors): AUVs and ROVs are complementary, not substitutional. AUVs handle broad-area survey; ROVs handle targeted intervention. Role evolving toward "subsea robotics specialist" with broader skillset but human piloted intervention persists. No credible source predicts ROV pilot elimination within 10 years. |
| Total | 5 |
Barrier Assessment
Reframed question: What prevents AI execution even when programmatically possible?
| Barrier | Score (0-2) | Rationale |
|---|---|---|
| Regulatory/Licensing | 1 | IMCA competency framework is the de facto industry standard. BOSIET/FOET offshore survival training mandatory. OGUK offshore medical required. Not PE-level statutory licensing, but substantial certification and training requirements that explicitly assume human operators. Offshore operators and classification societies (DNV, Lloyd's) require qualified human ROV crews for critical subsea work. |
| Physical Presence | 2 | Must be physically present on offshore vessels — often for 2-4 week rotations in remote locations (North Sea, Gulf of Mexico, West Africa, Asia-Pacific). Physical maintenance of ROV hardware cannot be performed remotely. Vessel deck operations, crane lifts, and equipment mobilization in sea states require physical presence. Remote onshore piloting is emerging for routine monitoring but cannot replace vessel-based operations for intervention and maintenance. |
| Union/Collective Bargaining | 0 | Limited union representation in the ROV sector globally. Largely contract-based workforce. Some maritime union coverage in specific regions (Norway, Australia) but not a significant barrier to automation. |
| Liability/Accountability | 1 | Responsible for multi-million-dollar ROV systems and subsea assets. Equipment failures during intervention can cause environmental damage (pipeline rupture, cable damage) and project delays costing millions per day of vessel time. Insurance and contractual frameworks require qualified human operators. Not personal criminal liability at dive supervisor level but significant operational and financial accountability. |
| Cultural/Ethical | 1 | Offshore operators, oil companies, and wind farm developers trust experienced human pilot-technicians for complex intervention on critical infrastructure. Cultural resistance to autonomous subsea intervention on live pipelines, wellheads, and power cables. Growing acceptance of AI-assisted inspection but strong preference for human-in-the-loop for intervention tasks where errors have catastrophic consequences. |
| Total | 5/10 |
AI Growth Correlation Check
Confirmed 0 (Neutral). ROV demand tracks offshore energy investment — oil & gas maintenance, offshore wind construction, subsea cable installation, and decommissioning. These are driven by energy policy, commodity prices, and climate transition investment, not AI adoption. Offshore wind is a structural growth driver but this is clean energy investment. The role does not exist because of AI and does not grow or shrink with AI adoption. This is Green (Transforming), not Green (Accelerated).
JobZone Composite Score (AIJRI)
| Input | Value |
|---|---|
| Task Resistance Score | 4.05/5.0 |
| Evidence Modifier | 1.0 + (5 × 0.04) = 1.20 |
| Barrier Modifier | 1.0 + (5 × 0.02) = 1.10 |
| Growth Modifier | 1.0 + (0 × 0.05) = 1.00 |
Raw: 4.05 × 1.20 × 1.10 × 1.00 = 5.3460
JobZone Score: (5.3460 - 0.54) / 7.93 × 100 = 60.6/100
Zone: GREEN (Green >=48, Yellow 25-47, Red <25)
Sub-Label Determination
| Metric | Value |
|---|---|
| % of task time scoring 3+ | 25% |
| AI Growth Correlation | 0 |
| Sub-label | Green (Transforming) — AIJRI >=48 AND >=20% of task time scores 3+ |
Assessor override: None — formula score accepted.
Assessor Commentary
Score vs Reality Check
The Green (Transforming) label at 60.6 is honest and sits 12.6 points above the Green zone boundary — well clear of borderline territory. The dual nature of this role — combining piloting (desk-based control cabin work) with technician (hands-on electro-mechanical maintenance) — provides a natural hedge that purely analytical roles lack. The 40% of task time scoring 1 (NOT INVOLVED with AI) is anchored in physical maintenance and equipment operations that have no robotic pathway offshore. Compare to Commercial Diver (64.3) — the ROV Pilot-Technician scores 3.7 points lower because the pilot lacks the extreme physicality of being personally underwater, but the maintenance portion provides meaningful physical protection. The classification is not barrier-dependent: removing all barriers would drop the score to approximately 54.7, still Green.
What the Numbers Don't Capture
- Remote operations trend. Onshore remote operation centres (ROCs) are emerging, allowing some ROV piloting from land-based facilities. If this becomes standard, it would reduce the physical presence barrier and the number of personnel needed offshore. Currently a minority of operations and limited to routine monitoring — intervention still requires vessel-based crews. But this is a medium-term erosion vector (5-10 years) for the piloting portion of the role.
- AUV convergence compresses the survey market. AUVs are absorbing routine pipeline survey work that ROVs historically performed. The ROV Pilot-Technician who mostly flies survey passes is losing work to AUVs. The one who performs complex intervention retains the strongest moat. This creates an internal bifurcation within the same job title.
- Offshore wind as structural demand driver. The Global Wind Energy Council projects 380 GW of new offshore wind capacity by 2030. Every turbine foundation, subsea cable, and scour protection system requires ROV inspection and maintenance throughout its 25-30 year operational life. This is a one-directional forcing function that underpins demand regardless of AI capability improvements.
Who Should Worry (and Who Shouldn't)
If your daily work is primarily piloting survey passes along pipelines — collecting video footage and sonar data that follows pre-planned routes — you face the most exposure. AUVs are absorbing this work at scale, running pre-programmed survey missions autonomously with better endurance and lower cost. The "survey-focused" ROV pilot is the most at-risk sub-population.
If you perform complex subsea intervention — turning valves, connecting cables, performing structural repairs via manipulator arms, and working in unstructured subsea environments — you are well protected. No autonomous system performs these tasks at production scale. The spatial reasoning, manual dexterity, and real-time judgment required for manipulator work in currents, zero visibility, and around fragile subsea infrastructure remains firmly human.
If you are equally strong as both pilot AND technician — maintaining the ROV hardware, troubleshooting failures, and keeping the system operational offshore — you are the most protected version of this role. The maintenance work is irreducibly physical and the combined skillset makes you essential to vessel operations. The single biggest separator is whether you are a button-presser or a problem-solver.
What This Means
The role in 2028: The surviving ROV Pilot-Technician is a "subsea robotics specialist" — operating both ROVs and AUVs, interpreting AI-processed inspection data, and focusing human piloting time on complex intervention tasks. AI handles routine survey data processing, anomaly detection, and report generation. The pilot-technician spends more time on intervention and maintenance, less on routine survey. A 3-person ROV crew with AI tooling delivers what a 4-person crew did in 2024.
Survival strategy:
- Master intervention piloting and manipulator skills. Complex subsea intervention — valve operations, cable connections, structural repairs in strong currents — is the strongest moat against AUV displacement. Seek projects that develop this capability.
- Develop AUV competency. The role is evolving toward "subsea robotics specialist" covering both ROVs and AUVs. Pilot-technicians who can deploy, recover, and maintain AUVs alongside ROVs command premium rates and broader employability.
- Pursue offshore wind specialisation. The offshore wind sector is the primary growth driver for subsea services. Understanding turbine foundation inspection requirements, cable burial verification, and scour protection monitoring creates a demand-side moat independent of oil & gas cycles.
Timeline: 10-15+ years. The intervention portion of the role is protected by the same physical barriers that protect commercial divers — complex manipulator work in unstructured subsea environments has no autonomous pathway. The survey portion is eroding to AUVs over 3-7 years, making skill evolution essential.