MH370 search to resume after a 'no-find, no-fee basis' contract was inked by Malaysia and a U.S. marine surveyor

Messages of hope for the passengers of the MH370 flight that disappeared back in March 2014Reuters/ Damir Sagolj

The search for the Malaysia Airlines Flight 370 will resume to shed some light on one of the biggest mysteries of the modern era. A U.S. Marine surveyor Ocean deployed one of its ships in hopes of progress for the search.

Seabed Intelligence company Ocean Infinity received the green light from the Malaysian Government to push through with the search. According to reports, the search will be a "no-find, no-fee basis." This policy indicates that Ocean Infinity will only get paid if they find the wreckage of the plane.

Ocean Infinity dispatched one of its vessels closer to the search area near Australia. The vessel made its way to the capital of Western Australia, Perth. The company considered the final report indicating the area where the MH370 landed. According to a report, the aircraft is probably somewhere along the remote waters west of the land down under.

The Boeing Co. 777 carrying the MH370 flight with 239 passengers disappeared in thin air on Mar. 8, 2014. The flight from Kuala Lumpur never made it to Beijing, with only small parts of the plane surfaced along the eastern seaboard of Africa. The disappearance made headlines all over the world and sparked a major search mission.

The disappearance of the MH370 remains as one of the biggest mysteries of modern aviation. Millions of people from all over the world, especially the loved ones of the people on board MH370, are hoping for new developments with the search. The family are hoping for more than just fragments of the Boeing aircraft.

Other than the wreckage of the MH370, many people are still debating about the possible reason for the disappearance of the aircraft. Few reports still suggest the theory that the pilot of MH370, Captain Zaharie Ahmad Shah, hijacked the plane he was piloting.