China Is Mapping the Ocean Floor as It Prepares for Submarine Warfare With the U.S.
Published by Global Banking & Finance Review®
Posted on March 24, 2026
5 min readLast updated: March 24, 2026
Add as preferred source on GooglePublished by Global Banking & Finance Review®
Posted on March 24, 2026
5 min readLast updated: March 24, 2026
Add as preferred source on GoogleChina’s extensive undersea mapping via the Dong Fang Hong 3 and other vessels—claimed for scientific research—likely also supports submarine warfare readiness, by charting seabed topography and deploying sensors in strategically vital waters such as near Taiwan, Guam, the Malacca Strait and Ninety E
By Pete Mckenzie
SYDNEY, March 24 (Reuters) - China is conducting a vast undersea mapping and monitoring operation across the Pacific, Indian and Arctic oceans, building detailed knowledge of marine conditions that naval experts say would be crucial for waging submarine warfare against the United States and its allies.
In one example, the Dong Fang Hong 3, a research vessel operated by Ocean University of China, spent 2024 and 2025 sailing back and forth in the seas near Taiwan and the U.S. stronghold of Guam, and around strategic stretches of the Indian Ocean, ship-tracking data reviewed by Reuters shows. In October 2024, it checked on a set of powerful Chinese ocean sensors capable of identifying undersea objects near Japan, according to Ocean University, and visited the same area again last May. And in March 2025, it criss-crossed the waters between Sri Lanka and Indonesia, covering approaches to the Malacca Strait, a critical chokepoint for maritime commerce.
According to the university, the ship was carrying out mud surveys and climate research. But a scientific paper co-written by Ocean University academics shows it has also conducted extensive deep-sea mapping. Naval-warfare experts and U.S. Navy officials say the type of deep-sea data being collected by the Dong Fang Hong 3 – via mapping and placement of sensors in the ocean – is giving China a picture of the subsea conditions it would need to deploy its submarines more effectively and hunt down those of its adversaries.
The Dong Fang Hong 3 isn't operating alone. It is part of a broader ocean mapping and monitoring operation involving dozens of research vessels and hundreds of sensors. In tracing this effort, Reuters examined Chinese government and university records, including journal articles and scientific studies, and analyzed more than five years of movement by 42 research vessels active in the Pacific, Indian or Arctic oceans using a ship-tracking platform built by New Zealand company Starboard Maritime Intelligence.
While the research has civilian purposes – some of the surveying covers fishing grounds or areas where China has mineral prospecting contracts – it also serves a military one, according to nine naval-warfare experts who reviewed Reuters' findings.
To gather information about underwater terrain, research vessels map the sea floor while traveling back and forth in tight lines. The tracking data shows that type of movement by the vessels Reuters tracked across large sections of the Pacific, Indian and Arctic oceans.
At least eight of the vessels Reuters tracked have conducted seabed mapping, while another 10 have carried equipment used for mapping, according to a review of Chinese state media articles, vessel descriptions published by Chinese universities, and press releases by government organizations.
The vessels' survey data "would be potentially invaluable in preparation of the battlespace" for Chinese submarines, said Peter Scott, a former chief of Australia's submarine force. "Any military submariner worth his salt will put a great deal of effort into understanding the environment he's operating in."
The ship-tracking data show that China's seabed-surveying effort is focused in part on militarily important waters around the Philippines, near Guam and Hawaii, and near U.S. military facilities on Wake atoll in the north Pacific.
"The scale of what they're doing is about more than just resources," said Jennifer Parker, an adjunct professor of defense and security at the University of Western Australia and former Australian anti-submarine warfare officer. "If you look at the sheer extent of it, it's very clear that they intend to have an expeditionary blue-water naval capability that also is built around submarine operations."
Moreover, Parker and other experts added, even where data is gathered for scientific purposes, the integration of civilian scientific research and military technology development has become a key focus of the Chinese government under President Xi Jinping. Beijing refers to this approach as "civil-military fusion."
China's ministries of defense, foreign affairs and natural resources didn't respond to requests for comment about the seabed mapping and ocean-monitoring activities.
The U.S. Defense Department didn't respond to questions from Reuters.
In testimony to a congressional commission this month, Rear Admiral Mike Brookes, the commander of the U.S. Office of Naval Intelligence, said China had dramatically expanded its surveying efforts, providing data that "enables submarine navigation, concealment, and positioning of seabed sensors or weapons." He added that "potential military intelligence collection" by Chinese research vessels "represents a strategic concern."
America recently overhauled its own efforts to map and monitor the ocean, but it typically does so with military vessels that are allowed to turn off the tracking system monitored by civilian software. China's civilian survey ships also sometimes disable tracking, meaning its campaign may go further than Reuters could determine.
This is the first time the extent of China's mapping and monitoring across the Pacific, Indian and Arctic oceans has been reported. Previous reporting has revealed a portion of the effort around Guam and Taiwan, and in parts of the Indian Ocean.
"It is frankly astonishing to see the enormous scale of Chinese marine scientific research," said Ryan Martinson, an associate professor specializing in Chinese maritime strategy at the U.S. Naval War College.
"For decades, the U.S. Navy could assume an asymmetric advantage in its knowledge of the ocean battlespace," added Martinson. China's efforts "threaten to erode that advantage. It is obviously deeply concerning."
The data that Ch
China is mapping the ocean floor to gather critical data for submarine warfare, improving its ability to deploy submarines and detect adversaries.
China’s mapping efforts focus on the Pacific, Indian, and Arctic oceans, especially militarily important areas near Taiwan, Guam, Hawaii, and the Philippines.
Dozens of Chinese research vessels, such as the Dong Fang Hong 3, are involved, with at least eight conducting seabed mapping and others carrying mapping equipment.
While some mapping supports civilian aims, naval experts say it also serves military objectives by preparing for submarine operations.
Seabed mapping provides knowledge crucial for effective submarine deployment and navigation, enhancing China’s naval readiness and combat capabilities.
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