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  • À l’heure du Brexit, la coopération militaire franco-britannique continue

    October 18, 2019 | International, Aerospace, Naval, Land, C4ISR, Security

    À l’heure du Brexit, la coopération militaire franco-britannique continue

    Par Nicolas Barotte La crise couve depuis longtemps entre le Pastonia et le Dragonia. Dans la région que les deux pays se disputent, les tensions intercommunautaires se sont aggravées, exploitées par un groupe terroriste aux volontés séparatistes. Face au risque de conflit, le conseil des Nations unies est parvenu à signer une résolution. Une force franco-britannique va être déployée sur place... Au large de l'Écosse, entre le loch Ewe et le loch Linnhe, l'exercice «Griffin Strike» peut commencer. Il s'achève ce vendredi. Le calendrier ne manque pas d'ironie. Tandis qu'à Bruxelles, un accord a été signé pour permettre le divorce entre le Royaume-Uni et l'Union européenne, la Marine française et la Royal Navy ont mis en scène pendant deux semaines la profondeur de leur coopération. https://www.lefigaro.fr/international/a-l-heure-du-brexit-la-cooperation-militaire-franco-britannique-continue-20191017

  • Contract Awards by US Department of Defense - October 17, 2019

    October 18, 2019 | International, Aerospace, Naval, Land, C4ISR, Security

    Contract Awards by US Department of Defense - October 17, 2019

    ARMY AECOM + Tetra Tech JV, Boston, Massachusetts (W912DY-20-D-0013); Black & Veatch Special Projects Corp., Overland Park, Kansas (W912DY-20-D-0012); and Jacobs Government Services Co., Arlington, Colorado (W912DY-20-D-0014), will compete for each order of the $149,969,200 hybrid (cost-plus-fixed-fee and firm-fixed-price) contract for architect and design services. Bids were solicited via the internet with five received. Work locations and funding will be determined with each order, with an estimated completion date of Oct. 16, 2024. U.S. Army Corps of Engineers, Huntsville, Alabama, is the contracting activity. South Dade Air Conditioning & Refrigeration Inc.,* Plantersville, Alabama, was awarded a $11,600,230 firm-fixed-price contract for mechanical maintenance services. Bids were solicited via the internet with five received. Work will be performed in Vicksburg, Mississippi, with an estimated completion date of April 30, 2025. Fiscal 2020 operations and maintenance; and civil works funds in the amount of $11,600,230 were obligated at the time of the award. U.S. Army Corps of Engineers, Vicksburg, Mississippi, is the contracting activity (W912HZ-20-C-0002). NAVY Raytheon Co., McKinney, Texas, is awarded a $17,897,746 cost-plus-incentive-fee order (N00019-20-F-0277) against a previously issued basic ordering agreement (N00019-15-G-0003). This order procures Advanced Targeting Forward Looking Infrared special test equipment updates to the Windows 10 operating system in support of the F/A-18E/F aircraft. Work will be performed in McKinney, Texas, and is expected to be completed in February 2022. Fiscal 2018 aircraft procurement (Navy) funds in the amount of $17,897,746 will be obligated at time of award, all of which will expire at the end of the current fiscal year. The Naval Air Systems Command, Patuxent River, Maryland, is the contracting activity. BAE Systems Technology Solutions and Services, Rockville, Maryland, is awarded a $7,930,867 modification (P00050) to a previously awarded cost-plus-fixed-fee contract N00421-15-C-0008. This modification exercises an option to provide engineering and technical services for integrated communications and information systems radio communications to Navy ships in support of the Ship and Air Integration Warfare Division, Naval Air Warfare Center – Webster Outlying Field. Work will be performed in Saint Inigoes, Maryland (60%); California, Maryland (30%); Bath, Maine (5%); and Pascagoula, Mississippi (5%), and is expected to be completed in October 2020. Fiscal 2020 shipbuilding and conversion (Navy) funds in the amount of $2,300,000 will be obligated at time of award, none of which will expire at the end of the current fiscal year. The Naval Air Warfare Center Aircraft Division, Patuxent River, Maryland, is the contracting activity. AIR FORCE Pride Industries, Roseville, California, has been awarded a $15,246,093 modification (P00059) to previously awarded contract FA2816-17-C-0001 for civil engineering services. The modification provides for operations and maintenance, engineering, environmental, and grounds maintenance for 61st Civil Engineer and Logistics Squadron. Work will be performed at Los Angeles Air Force Base, California; Fort MacArthur, California; and Defense Contract Management Agency, Carson, California, and is expected to be completed by Nov. 30, 2020. The total cumulative face value of the contract to $61,308,694. Fiscal 2020 operations and maintenance funds in the amount of $9,646,783 are being obligated at the time of award. The Space and Missile Systems Center, Los Angeles Air Force Base, California, is the contracting activity. DEFENSE LOGISTICS AGENCY National Industries for the Blind, Alexandria, Virginia, has been awarded a maximum $8,562,960 modification (P00005) exercising the first one-year option period of a one-year base contract (SPE1C1-19-D-B043) with four one-year option periods for moisture wicking T-shirts. This is an indefinite-delivery contract. Locations of performance are Virginia, North Carolina and Arkansas, with an Oct. 30, 2020, performance completion date. Using military service is Army. Type of appropriation is fiscal 2020 through 2021 defense working capital funds. The contracting activity is the Defense Logistics Agency Troop Support, Philadelphia, Pennsylvania. *Small Business https://www.defense.gov/Newsroom/Contracts/Contract/Article/1991710/source/GovDelivery/

  • Contract Awards by US Department of Defense - October 16, 2019

    October 17, 2019 | International, Aerospace, Naval, Land, C4ISR, Security, Other Defence

    Contract Awards by US Department of Defense - October 16, 2019

    NAVY The Boeing Co., Seattle, Washington, is awarded a $193,318,432 modification (P00003) to a previously awarded firm-fixed-price, time and material, indefinite-delivery/indefinite-quantity contract N00019-18-D-0113. This modification provides CFM56-7B27A/3 and CFM56-7B27AE engine depot maintenance and repair, field assessment, maintenance repair and overhaul engine repair, and technical assistance for removal and replacement of engines for the P-8A Poseidon aircraft in support of the Navy, the government of Australia and Foreign Military Sales customers. Work will be performed in Atlanta, Georgia (94%); and Seattle, Washington (6%), and is expected to be completed in October 2020. No funds will be obligated at time of award. Funds will be obligated on individual orders as they are issued. The Naval Air Systems Command, Patuxent River, Maryland, is the contracting activity. StandardAero Inc., San Antonio, Texas, is awarded a $174,743,115 modification (P00004) to a previously awarded firm-fixed-price, time and material, indefinite-delivery/indefinite-quantity contract N00019-18-D-0110. This modification provides CFM56-7B27A/3 and CFM56-7B27AE engine depot maintenance and repair, field assessment, maintenance repair and overhaul engine repair, and technical assistance for removal and replacement of engines for the P-8A Poseidon aircraft in support of the Navy, the government of Australia and Foreign Military Sales customers. Work will be performed in Winnipeg, Manitoba, Canada (93%); and San Antonio, Texas (7%), and is expected to be completed in October 2020. No funds will be obligated at time of award. Funds will be obligated on individual orders as they are issued. The Naval Air Systems Command, Patuxent River, Maryland, is the contracting activity. AAR Aircraft Services Inc., Indianapolis, Indiana, is awarded a $44,865,877 modification (P00005) to a previously awarded firm-fixed-price, time and material, indefinite-delivery/indefinite-quantity contract N00019-18-D-0111. This modification provides P-8A Poseidon aircraft depot scheduled and unscheduled maintenance, fulfillment of depot in-service repair/planner and estimator requirements, technical directive incorporation, airframe modifications, aircraft on ground support, and removal and replacement of engines in support of the Navy, the government of Australia and Foreign Military Sales customers. Work will be performed in Indianapolis, Indiana, and is expected to be completed in October 2020. No funds will be obligated at time of award. Funds will be obligated on individual orders as they are issued. The Naval Air Systems Command, Patuxent River, Maryland, is the contracting activity. AIR FORCE Lockheed Martin Corp., King of Prussia, Pennsylvania, has been awarded a $108,322,296 contract for the Mk21A Reentry Vehicle (RV) program. This contract is to conduct technology maturation and risk reduction to provide a low technical risk and affordable RV capable of delivering the W87-1 warhead from the Ground Based Strategic Deterrent Weapon System. Work will be performed at King of Prussia, Pennsylvania, and other various locations as needed, and is expected to be completed by October 2022. This award is the result of a competitive acquisition and one offer was received. Fiscal 2019 research, development, test and evaluation funds in the amount of $8,033,916 are being obligated at the time of award. The Air Force Nuclear Weapons Center, Hill Air Force Base, Utah, is the contracting activity (FA8219-20-C-0001). DEFENSE LOGISTICS AGENCY DRS Network & Imaging Systems LLC, Melbourne, Florida, has been awarded an $18,451,845 firm-fixed-price contract for wired housing assemblies. This was a sole source acquisition using justification 10 U.S. Code 2304 (c)(1), as stated in Federal Acquisition Regulation 6.302-1. This is a one year base contract with one one-year option period being exercised at the time of award. Location of performance is Florida, with a Nov. 27, 2021, performance completion date. Using military service is Army. Type of appropriation is fiscal 2019 Army working capital funds. The contracting activity is the Defense Logistics Agency Land and Maritime, Warren, Michigan (SPRDL1-20-C-0022). UPDATE: Textron GSE/TUG Technologies Inc., Kennesaw, Georgia (SPE8EC-20-D-0050), has been added as an awardee to the multiple award contract issued against solicitation SPE8EC-17-R-0002, announced Dec. 2, 2016. ARMY Bristol Construction Services LLC,* Anchorage, Alaska, was awarded a $10,086,761 modification (P00004) to contract W9126G-18-C-0066 for construction of open storage areas with fencing, lighting and limited security. Work will be performed in Texarkana, Texas, with an estimated completion date of Oct. 25, 2020. Fiscal 2018 military construction funds in the amount of $10,086,761 were obligated at the time of the award. U.S. Army Corps of Engineers, Fort Worth, Texas, is the contracting activity. *Small Business https://www.defense.gov/Newsroom/Contracts/Contract/Article/1990450/source/GovDelivery/

  • Irving Shipbuilding Hands Over HMCS Montreal to Royal Canadian Navy

    October 17, 2019 | Local, Naval

    Irving Shipbuilding Hands Over HMCS Montreal to Royal Canadian Navy

    Irving Shipbuilding Inc. handed over Halifax-class frigate HMCS Montréal (FFH 336) to the Royal Canadian Navy (RCN) following the completion of a 53-week docking work period on August 22. The vessel arrived at Halifax Shipyard on Aug. 13 last year for the docking work period (DWP). The DWP was completed on schedule and included preventive and corrective maintenance, ship system upgrades including new diesel generators and chillers to name a few, as well as installation of new equipment providing enhanced combat capabilities to ensure the longevity of HMCS Montreal. More than 400 of Halifax Shipyard's 2,000 employees worked on HMCS Montreal's docking work period, including many shipbuilders who are members of Unifor Local 1. Dozens of Nova Scotia-based suppliers worked with ISI on the Montreal, including Maritime Pressure Works, MacKinnon & Olding, CMS Steel Pro, and Pro-Insul, among others. Since 2010, all seven of the Navy's east coast Halifax-class frigates– HMCS Halifax, HMCS Fredericton, HMCS Montreal, HMCS Charlottetown, HMCS St. John's, HMCS Ville de Quebec, and HMCS Toronto – have been consecutively modernized and maintained at Halifax Shipyard. Halifax Shipyard is continuing its legacy as the Halifax-class In-Service Support Centre of Excellence, with HMCS Charlottetown currently in the graving dock for a docking work period. In addition to its Halifax-class ship maintenance work, Halifax Shipyard is building six Arctic and Offshore Patrol Ships (AOPS) and 15 Canadian Surface Combatants (CSC) over the next 25 years as part of Canada's National Shipbuilding Strategy (NSS). The Halifax class underwent a modernization program, known as the Halifax Class Modernization (HCM) program, in order to update the frigates' capabilities in combatting modern smaller, faster and more mobile threats. This involved upgrading the command and control, radar, communications, electronic warfare and armament systems. Further improvements, such as modifying the vessel to accommodate the new Sikorsky CH-148 Cyclone helicopter and satellite links will be done separately from the main Frigate Equipment Life Extension (FELEX) program. https://www.navyrecognition.com/index.php/news/defence-news/2019/october/7593-irving-shipbuilding-hands-over-hmcs-montreal-to-royal-canadian-navy.html

  • Défense : Merkel et Macron trouvent un accord pour renforcer leur coopération

    October 17, 2019 | International, Aerospace, Naval, Land, C4ISR, Security

    Défense : Merkel et Macron trouvent un accord pour renforcer leur coopération

    Les questions de défense ont dominé le conseil des ministres franco-allemand organisé à Toulouse. Un accord pour harmoniser les exportations d'armes a été annoncé. Face à l'accroissement des tensions dans le commerce international, les deux dirigeants ont aussi envoyé un message fort à Airbus. Par Grégoire Poussielgue Publié le 16 oct. 2019 à 19h15 Priorité à la défense. Le climat, les droits d'auteur et l'innovation ont, entre autres, été au menu du conseil des ministres franco-allemand qui s'est tenu mercredi à Toulouse, mais les questions de défense ont occupé une place prépondérante. Dans l'enceinte de la préfecture de Haute-Garonne, Emmanuel Macron et Angela Merkel ont pu lever les points de friction et aller plus loin dans leur politique commune de programmes d'armement. Les « blocages importants ont été levés » sur les programmes de développement du char et de l'avion de combat du futur, ont annoncé les deux dirigeants. La date de janvier 2020 a été retenue pour notifier les crédits tant attendus par les industriels de l'aéronautique qui visent la réalisation de prototypes à l'horizon 2025. La question sensible des exportations d'armes a aussi trouvé une issue. La France et l'Allemagne ont annoncé un accord « juridiquement contraignant sur les règles de contrôle d'exportations d'armement pour les programmes développés en commun ». Cet accord était indispensable pour mener à bien les programmes communs en matière d'armement. Un « résultat concret qui permettra davantage de sécurité », s'est félicitée la chancelière allemande. Un accord obtenu non sans mal car, depuis un an, les tensions sont fortes. Après l'assassinat, il y a tout juste un an, du journaliste saoudien Jamal Khashoggi, l'Allemagne a suspendu ses ventes d'armes vers l'Arabie Saoudite, ce que la France n'a pas fait. Avec l'invasion du Kurdistan syrien, les pays européens ont suspendu leurs exportations d'armes vers la Turquie. Symbole fort sur l'économie Entre Emmanuel Macron et Angela Merkel, il fallait aussi un geste symbolique fort pour marquer la solidité d'un couple franco-allemand « souvent mis à l'épreuve », comme le dit l'Elysée, et ce avant le Conseil européen de la fin de la semaine. Entre le dossier brûlant du Brexit et le rejet de la candidate française, Sylvie Goulard, à la Commission européenne , sans oublier les tensions commerciales croissantes avec les Etats-Unis, l'environnement européen traverse une zone de fortes turbulences. La relation franco-allemande n'y échappe pas. « J'entends parfois dire que la relation franco-allemande est difficile, c'est la situation du monde qui est difficile. S'il n'y avait que nous, les choses seraient plus simples et avanceraient plus vite », a dit le président français après le conseil. Pour le premier conseil des ministres franco-allemand depuis la signature, en janvier dernier, du traité d'Aix-la-Chapelle , qui renforce leur coopération, la chancelière allemande et le président français ont aussi manié le symbole. Avant les rencontres bilatérales et le conseil des ministres à la préfecture de Toulouse, les deux dirigeants ont longuement visité la chaîne de montage de l'A350 sur le site Airbus de Toulouse. Un symbole de « l'excellence européenne » selon le président français et un fer de lance de la coopération franco-allemande depuis un demi-siècle. Rassurer les salariés Après l'augmentation des droits de douane décidée par les Etats-Unis, il s'agissait aussi de rassurer les salariés français et allemands travaillant sur le site de Toulouse. « Nous tenions à venir aux côtés d'Airbus pour dire notre confiance dans l'entreprise et tout ce qui est devant elle. Vous allez construire le futur de cette entreprise. Il y a parfois des moments de doute et d'inquiétude mais c'est une entreprise formidablement solide », a déclaré Emmanuel Macron à l'occasion d'une rencontre avec les salariés. Angela Merkel y est aussi allée de son couplet. « Nous ferons tout pour garantir le succès de cette entreprise dans les années à venir », a-t-elle dit. https://www.lesechos.fr/monde/europe/defense-merkel-et-macron-trouvent-un-accord-pour-renforcer-leur-cooperation-1140681

  • Contract Awards by US Department of Defense - October 11, 2019

    October 15, 2019 | International, Aerospace, Naval, Land, C4ISR, Security

    Contract Awards by US Department of Defense - October 11, 2019

    NAVY Electric Boat Corp., Groton, Connecticut, is awarded a $434,370,635 contract for lead yard support and development studies and design efforts related to Virginia class submarines. Work will be performed in Groton, Connecticut (94.1%); Newport News, Virginia (4.8%); and Newport and Quonset, Rhode Island (combined 1.1%), and is expected to be complete by September 2020. The contract provides lead yard support for Virginia class submarines that will maintain, update and support the Virginia class design and related drawings and data for each Virginia class submarine, including technology insertion, throughout its construction and post-shakedown availability period. The contractor will also provide all engineering and related lead yard support necessary for direct maintenance and support of Virginia class ship specifications. In addition, the contract provides development studies and design efforts related to the Virginia class submarine design and design improvements; preliminary and detail component and system design; integration of system engineering, design engineering, test engineering, logistics engineering and production engineering. The contractor will continue development studies and design efforts related to components and systems to accomplish research and development tasks, and prototypes and engineering development models required to fully evaluate new technologies to be inserted in succeeding Virginia class submarines. Fiscal 2014, 2016, 2017, 2018 and 2019 shipbuilding and conversion (SCN) (Navy); and fiscal 2019 research, development, test and engineering (RDT&E) (Navy) funding in the amount of $68,321,021 will be obligated at time of award. Fiscal 2014 shipbuilding and conversion (Navy) funds in the amount of $4,050,000; and fiscal 2019 research, development, test and engineering (Navy) funds in the amount of $7,341,250 will expire at the end of the current fiscal year — fiscal 2018 SCN (38.8%); fiscal 2017 SCN (34.9%); fiscal 2019 RDT&E (10.7%); fiscal 2014 SCN (7.1%); fiscal 2019 SCN (5%); fiscal 2016 SCN (3.4%). This contract was not competitively procured in accordance with Federal Acquisition Regulation 6.302-1(a)(2)(iii) — only one responsible source and no other supplies or services will satisfy agency requirements. The Naval Sea Systems Command, Washington, District of Columbia, is the contracting activity (N00024-20-C-2120). Space Ground Systems Solutions LLC, West Melbourne, Florida, awarded a $17,082,880 cost-plus-fixed-fee contract modification to overall ceiling for previously awarded contract (N00173-15-D-2015) for spacecraft engineering, software, research and development services to the Naval Center for Space Technology (NCST). Specifically, the indefinite-delivery/indefinite-quantity (IDIQ) provides support for software engineering development, maintenance, enhancement and configuration management support for all components contained within the Neptune™ software suite under the direction of the NRL Configuration Control Board, and the VMOC™ software framework under the direction of the VMOC™ program management and software engineering teams. Funding will be obligated for each task order and no funds are obligated on the base IDIQ contract. Work will be performed in Washington, District of Columbia (50%); and West Melbourne, Florida (50%), and is expected to be completed by March 2020. The U.S. Naval Research Laboratory, Washington, District of Columbia, is the contracting activity. Rolls-Royce Corp., Indianapolis, Indiana, is awarded a $9,066,270 modification (P00013) to a previously awarded firm-fixed-price contract (N00019-17-C-0081). This modification exercises an option to procure three spare AE1107C engines in support of the V-22 Osprey program for the government of Japan. Work will be performed in Indianapolis, Indiana, and is expected to be completed in November 2020. Foreign military sales funds in the amount of $9,066,270 will be obligated at time of award, none of which will expire at the end of the current fiscal year. The Naval Air Systems Command, Patuxent River, Maryland, is the contracting activity. ARMY Northrop Grumman Systems Corp., Huntsville, Alabama, was awarded a $60,619,031 modification (P00185) to contract W31P4Q-08-C-0418 for engineering, logistics, integration, test and evaluation, and program management activities. Work will be performed in Huntsville, Alabama, with an estimated completion date of March 31, 2021. Fiscal 2020 research, development, test and evaluation funds in the amount of $5,000,000 were obligated at the time of the award. U.S. Army Contracting Command, Redstone Arsenal, Alabama, is the contracting activity. BAE Systems Ordnance Systems Inc., Radford, Virginia, was awarded an $8,309,050 cost-plus-fixed-fee contract to incorporate a requirement to stabilize the legacy nitroglycerin area facility at Radford Army Ammunition Plant. One bid was solicited with one bid received. Work will be performed in Radford, Virginia, with an estimated completion date of Dec. 31, 2021. Fiscal 2019 procurement of ammunition, Army funds in the amount of $8,309,050 were obligated at the time of the award. U.S. Army Contracting Command, Rock Island Arsenal, Illinois, is the contracting activity (W52P1J-20-F-0021). DEFENSE LOGISTICS AGENCY Northrop Grumman Systems Corp., El Segundo, California, has been awarded a maximum $24,299,972 firm-fixed-priced delivery order (SPRPA1-19-F-LT31) against a five-year basic ordering agreement (SPRPA1-15-G-001Z) for rudders in support of the F/A-18 aircraft platform. This was a sole-source acquisition using justification 10 U.S. Code 2304 (c)(1), as stated in Federal Acquisition Regulation 6.302-1. This is a seven-year contract with no option periods. Location of performance is California, with an Aug. 31, 2026, performance completion date. Using military service is Navy. Type of appropriation is fiscal 2020 through 2026 Navy working capital funds. The contracting activity is the Defense Logistics Agency Aviation, Philadelphia, Pennsylvania. Belleville Shoe Co.,* Belleville, Illinois, has been awarded a maximum $12,524,036 firm-fixed-price, indefinite-delivery/indefinite-quantity contract for Air Force temperate weather, Coyote boots. This was a competitive acquisition with two responses received. This is a one-year base contract with three one-year option periods. Location of performance is Illinois, with an Oct. 10, 2020, performance completion date. Using customer is Air Force. Type of appropriation is fiscal 2019 through 2020 defense working capital funds. The contracting agency is the Defense Logistics Agency Troop Support, Philadelphia, Pennsylvania (SPE1C1-20-D-1208). *Small Business https://www.defense.gov/Newsroom/Contracts/Contract/Article/1988088/source/GovDelivery/

  • Making the Army Stronger: NGC Showcases Multi-Mission Solutions at AUSA

    October 11, 2019 | International, Aerospace, Naval, Land, C4ISR, Security

    Making the Army Stronger: NGC Showcases Multi-Mission Solutions at AUSA

    Northrop Grumman Corporation (NYSE: NOC) will showcase a full range of solutions for U.S. Army missions at the Association of the United States Army (AUSA) Annual Meeting and Exposition, Oct. 14-16, at the Walter E. Washington Convention Center in Washington, D.C. The Northrop Grumman exhibit (booth #6328) will feature advanced, end-to-end capabilities in avionics, integrated air and missile defense, cyber security, training, multifunction mission systems, precision weapons and ammunition. “As a trusted, longtime supplier of equipment and services to the U.S. Army, Northrop Grumman is committed to delivering transformational capabilities in support of the service's modernization plans,” said Bo Dyess, vice president, Army programs, Northrop Grumman. “We're making the Army stronger with our extensive expertise and understanding of the multi-domain battle. Our solutions affordably and rapidly provide our customers with the decisive advantage needed for mission success.” The company supports a number of critical programs for the U.S. Army, including the Integrated Air and Missile Defense Battle Command System (IBCS); Maneuver Short Range Air Defense (M-SHORAD) and Common Infrared Countermeasures (CIRCM). Northrop Grumman will also highlight a mixed reality training simulation, the company's Bushmaster® family of Chain Guns® to include the XM913 50mm Chain Gun for the Army's Next Generation Combat Vehicle (NGCV), advanced medium and large caliber ammunition types and precision guidance capabilities for artillery system, and digital helicopter cockpit and integrated avionics solutions derived from the UH-60V Black Hawk program. http://www.asdnews.com/news/defense/2019/10/10/making-army-stronger-ngc-showcases-multimission-solutions-at-ausa

  • Lockheed Martin-Led Team Begins Construction On Navy Littoral Combat Ship, The Future USS Nantucket

    October 11, 2019 | International, Naval

    Lockheed Martin-Led Team Begins Construction On Navy Littoral Combat Ship, The Future USS Nantucket

    MARINETTE, Wis., October 9, 2019 /PRNewswire/ - Lockheed Martin (NYSE: LMT) and Fincantieri Marinette Marine marked the beginning of construction on Littoral Combat Ship (LCS) 27, the future USS Nantucket, with a ceremony in Marinette. As part of a ship-building tradition dating back centuries, a shipyard worker welded the initials of Polly Spencer, USS Nantucket ship sponsor and wife of U.S. Secretary of the Navy Richard Spencer, into the ship's keel plate. This plate will be affixed to the ship and travel with Nantucket throughout its commissioned life. "The USS Nantucket will confront many complex challenges," said Richard V. Spencer, the U.S. Secretary of the Navy. "It will confront humanitarian relief all the way to great power competition, drawing on the strength of every weld, every rivet applied by the great people here." Unique among combat ships, the focused-mission LCS is designed to support mine countermeasures, anti-submarine and surface warfare missions today and is easily adapted to serve future and evolving missions tomorrow. The Freedom-variant LCS is: Flexible — Forty percent of the hull is easily reconfigurable, able to integrate Longbow Hellfire Missiles, 30 mm guns, and manned and unmanned vehicles designed to meet today's and tomorrow's missions. Lethal — LCS is standard equipped with Rolling Airframe Missiles (RAM) and a Mark 110 gun, capable of firing 220 rounds per minute. Fast — LCS is capable of speeds in excess of 40 knots. Automated — LCS has the most efficient staffing of any combat ship. "LCS' built-in flexibility makes it unlike any other Navy ship in the water today," said Joe DePietro, vice president and general manager of Small Combatants and Ship Systems. "LCS can serve a multitude of missions to include surface, anti-submarine and mine countermeasure missions by quickly integrating mission equipment and deploying manned and unmanned aerial, surface or sub-surface vehicles." LCS 27 is the first Navy ship to be named after Nantucket, Massachusetts in more than 150 years. Nantucket has a deep connection to sailing and maritime traditions, serving as a whaling hub in the 1800s and as the home of generations of American sailors since the town's beginning. The previous USS Nantucket, the first to be named after the island, was commissioned in 1862 to serve during the American Civil War. "I have been given a very special honor in being the sponsor of the future USS Nantucket. I am happy she is being built here in Marinette, Wisconsin, which has an impressive history of shipbuilding," said Polly Spencer, LCS 27 sponsor. "Thank you to all the talented people who are bringing this ship to life... it is going to be an amazing journey that I am thrilled to be on." LCS 27 will be the 14th Freedom-variant LCS and will join a class of more than 30 ships. It is one of six ships in various stages of construction and test at the Fincantieri Marinette Marine shipyard. "We are very excited to begin construction of the future USS Nantucket," said Jan Allman, CEO of Fincantieri Marinette Marine. "Our men and women are proud to put their efforts into giving the Navy versatile ships to keep our country and its interests safe." Multimedia assets are available here: Social media video: https://vimeo.com/365396145 B-roll: https://vimeo.com/365406413 Speaker remarks: https://vimeo.com/365402844 Photos: https://www.flickr.com/photos/143371902@N04/albums/72157711268036447 For additional information, visit our website: www.lockheedmartin.com/lcs. About Lockheed Martin Headquartered in Bethesda, Maryland, Lockheed Martin is a global security and aerospace company that employs approximately 105,000 people worldwide and is principally engaged in the research, design, development, manufacture, integration and sustainment of advanced technology systems, products and services. About Fincantieri Marinette Marine Fincantieri is the leading western shipbuilder with a rich history dating back more than 230 years, and a track record of building more than 7,000 ships. Fincantieri Marine Group is the American subsidiary of Fincantieri, and operates three Great Lakes Shipyards: Fincantieri Marinette Marine, Fincantieri Bay Shipbuilding, and Fincantieri ACE Marine. Fincantieri Marine Group's more than 2,100 steelworkers, craftsman, engineers and technicians in the United States specialize in the design, construction and maintenance of merchant ships and government vessels, including for the United States Navy and Coast Guard. About Gibbs & Cox Gibbs & Cox, the nation's leading independent maritime solutions firm specializing in naval architecture, marine engineering and design, is headquartered in Arlington, Virginia. The company, founded in 1929, has provided designs for nearly 80 percent of the current U.S. Navy surface combatant fleet; approaching 7,000 naval and commercial ships have been built to Gibbs & Cox designs. SOURCE Lockheed Martin View source version on Lockheed Martin: https://news.lockheedmartin.com/2019-10-09-Lockheed-Martin-led-Team-Begins-Construction-on-Navys-Littoral-Combat-Ship-the-future-USS-Nantucket#assets_all

  • A quiet Hunter - Navy's Future Frigate

    October 11, 2019 | International, Naval

    A quiet Hunter - Navy's Future Frigate

    Valued at $35 billion over its program life, Navy's Future Frigate project, Sea 5000 Phase 1, is second only to Future Submarine in terms of cost to the Australian taxpayer. Navy will receive nine Hunter class frigates, built in South Australia to BAE System's Global Combat Ship (GCS) design and, although optimised for the Anti-Submarine Warfare (ASW) role, they are intended to be equally adept at Air Warfare and a number of other roles. A number of sovereign features will separate the Hunter variant of the GCS from the UK's City class ASW frigates (Type 26), including integration of CEA Technologies' new generation CEAFAR2 radar, Lockheed Martin's Aegis Combat System and an Australian tactical interface developed by Saab Australia. The program calls for steel to be cut on the first vessel in Osborne in late 2022 with the lead ship, HMAS Flinders, launched in the 2027-2028 timeframe and entering service between 2029 and 2031. The nine ships form part of the Commonwealth's Continuous Naval Shipbuilding Strategy and will be built in three flights of three vessels, to ensure the design keeps abreast of rapidly evolving technology. Completion of the last frigate is not due to occur until the early 2040s and the class will form the backbone of Navy's major surface combatant fleet for decades to come. The Hunter class will follow the Type 26 by around five years and will benefit from lessons learned during completion of at least the first two ships, before Flinders enters the water towards the end of the next decade. The GCS design has been touted as the world's most capable ASW ship and in Royal Navy service it will be the successor to the Duke class (Type 23) frigates, long regarded as the benchmark in the domain. BAE Systems has also sold the design to Canada, where it will be known as the Canadian Surface Combatant (CSC) and the family now includes no fewer than 32 ships across three of the world's leading navies, all members of the Five Eyes community. The good news for Australian taxpayers, at this early stage at least, is that Sea 5000 remains on schedule for the first steel to be cut at Osborne in 2022. Around 50 per cent of the first UK ship, HMS Glasgow, is now in production and steel was cut on the second, HMS Cardiff, in early August. Acquiring the Future Frigate The Future Frigate competition was fiercely fought by BAE Systems, with a version of the Global Combat Ship referred to within the company as GCS-A (Australia); Fincantieri, with a version of the ASW-optimised Fregata Europa Multi-Missione (FREMM) frigate in service with the Italian Navy; and Navantia, with an evolution of its F105 design (which forms the basis of Australia's Hobart class destroyers), known as the F-5000. Following the release of a Request For Tender (RFT) in March 2017 the three shipbuilders submitted bids in August 2017 and each design was then subjected to a rigorous Competitive Evaluation Process (CEP). At the RFT release, then Minister for Defence Industry Christopher Pyne made it clear that all nine frigates would be built in an Australian shipyard, using an Australian workforce. Furthermore, he stipulated each of the three shipbuilders would be required to demonstrate their ability and willingness to develop a local supply chain to support the shipbuilding enterprise. In addition, each was required to provide local industry with opportunities to bid into their existing global supply chains. From a capability standpoint, the Commonwealth mandated the CEAFAR2 radar, a next generation radar based upon the highly successful CEAFAR fitted to post Anti-Ship Missile Defence (ASMD) Anzac frigates. In October 2017 then Prime Minister Malcolm Turnbull also announced that Aegis, together with an Australian tactical interface, would be mandatory for all future major surface combatants. BAE System's GCS-A proposal was formally announced as the preferred tenderer on June 29, 2018, at which time it was also revealed the nine ships would henceforth be known as the Hunter class. The first three ships of the Hunter class will carry the names of three major Australian regions, all with strong historical maritime and naval ties. HMA Ships Flinders (II) (SA region named for explorer Captain Matthew Flinders - first circumnavigation of Australia and identified it as a continent); Hunter (NSW region named for Vice-Admiral John Hunter – first fleet Captain and 2nd Governor of NSW); and Tasman (state and sea named for explorer Abel Tasman – first known European explorer to reach Tasmania, NZ and Fiji). When announcing the GCS-A as the preferred design, then Defence Minister Marise Payne said the GCS-A design was selected because it represented the most capable ASW platform. “This is decision based entirely on capability; the best capability to equip Navy in Anti-Submarine Warfare, with range and endurance to operate either independently or as part of a task group,” she said. Payne also revealed that government-owned ASC Shipbuilding would become a subsidiary of BAE Systems during the Hunter class build program, with the Commonwealth owning a sovereign share in the entity but reverting to government ownership at the end of the project. “We were really pleased with that as an outcome, because ASC has great capability. We always wanted to use the workforce, but this allows us to join ASC and BAE together much earlier and we think that will be very positive,” explained BAE Systems' then Global Maritime Systems business development director, Nigel Stewart. “We cut steel for the first Type 26 in the UK in June 2017 and we'll cut steel for full production of the Hunter class in 2022.” On October 5, 2018, the Commonwealth signed an interim Advanced Work Arrangement (AWA), with BAE Systems Australia to enable the company to continue with workforce mobilisation activities. This contract also represented the initial step towards transitioning ASC Shipbuilding into BAE Systems for the duration of the Hunter project. The Head Contract between ASC Shipbuilding, as the prime contractor, and the Commonwealth was signed at Osborne on December 14, 2018, at which time the government estimated Sea 5000 would contribute around $17 billion to the national economy and have create over 6,300 jobs by the program's peak in 2028. Speaking in late August, Craig Lockhart, ASC Shipbuilding's managing director, said the build program is currently on track. “We're exactly where we thought we would be in the program, bang on schedule, after coming through the preferred tenderer announcement in June 2018, to achieve contract signature in December – something I believe is a gold standard in terms of negotiation between the Commonwealth and industry,” he said to ADM. “We signed the contract in December 2018 and we're really only eight months into the program, but we've mobilised very rapidly. We have over 400 people in the Hunter program right now and we have 50 people seconded to the UK Type 26 team in Glasgow, both managing the evolution of the design maturity and managing the transfer of technology from Glasgow over to ASC Shipbuilding.” Global Combat Ship heritage According to the Royal Navy, the Type 26 is designed “without compromise” to excel in the ASW role, as a successor to the Type 23 frigates. The UK Government announced in the 2015 Strategic Defence and Security Review (SDSR) that it would acquire eight ‘advanced ASW ships' and in 2017, BAE Systems was awarded a ₤3.7 billion contract for the construction of the first three ships. Plate steel for the appropriately named HMS Glasgow was cut at BAE's shipyard in Govan, on the banks of the River Clyde on July 20, 2017 and is due to enter the water in the 2019-2020 timeframe, prior to entering service in the middle of the decade. HMS Cardiff will enter the water about two years behind her sister ship and the first steel for her was cut at Govan on August 14. A UK Government decision on the second batch of five ships is expected around the time Glasgow is launched. The UK ships are 149 metres long, with a beam of 20.8 metres and displace around 6,900 tonnes. A standard crew will comprise 157 personnel, including an embarked aviation element, but the ship has enough accommodation space to embark up to 208 people. According to BAE Systems the frigate is ‘an advanced ASW warship designed for the critical protection of the Continuous At Sea Deterrent and Carrier Strike Group'. In simple terms, this translates to providing protection for the Royal Navy's nuclear submarine deterrent force (currently Vanguard and later Dreadnought class boats) and the two new 65,000-tonne Queen Elizabeth class aircraft carriers. With ASW as their primary role, signature management is a very important consideration and every component within the ship is designed with this philosophy in mind. Its primary ASW sensors will be an upgraded version of Thales' 2087 towed array low frequency active and passive sonar, which is the subject of ‘de-risking' activities aboard a Type 23 vessel, and a hull-mounted Ultra Electronics Type 2150 hull-mounted sonar system. In day to day submarine warfare operations, the ships' sonar will be combined with sensors aboard the Royal Navy's embarked AgustaWestland Merlin HMA.2 ASW helicopters. Each Type 26 ship can carry a single Merlin, but the flight deck on the stern is able to accommodate even larger helicopters, including the Boeing CH-47 Chinook heavy-lift helicopter. A large multi-purpose integrated mission bay forward of the helicopter hangar can be used for a number of roles, including carriage of small watercraft and unmanned aerial, surface or undersea vehicles. The UKs Type 26 ships will also come with a formidable air defence capability, for which the primary sensor is BAE Systems' Type 997 Artisan 3D medium-range air and surface surveillance radar. Principal effectors will be the MBDA Sea Ceptor missile defence system, launched from Mk.48 cannisters, and BAE Systems Mk.45 Mod.4 5-inch medium calibre gun, but the ships also have 24 Mk.41 Vertical Launch System (VLS) cells for other weapons. Propulsion is a combined diesel-electric or gas (CODLOG) system based around the Rolls-Royce MT30 Marine Gas Turbine. Brochure figures claim a maximum speed in excess of 27 knots and a range of more than 7,000 nautical miles in electric motor-drive. An Australian Hunter The changes to the Type 26 reference design which define the GCS-A or Hunter class are largely confined to the ship's weapons and sensor systems, including substitution of the Artisan air surveillance radar with CEAFAR2 and Aegis combat system. Other changes will include increasing the number of Mk.41 VLS cells, reconfiguration of the ship's aviation capabilities to allow embarkation of the Navy's Sikorsky MH-60R Seahawk helicopter, and the integration of Harris Corporation's Hawklink Ku-band data link, as used by US Navy major surface combatants. Australia's Hunter class ships will be easily identifiable by their unique mast configuration, which is being redesigned to take the CEAFAR radar into consideration, together with the integration of Hawklink and other sensors and communications systems. “The Artisan radar of the UK's Type 26 is different to that of Hunter, so the approach to positioning the masts with CEAFAR radar needs careful consideration. The CEAFAR radar is heavier and has a higher power requirement, so it will require a more considered integration,” explained ASC Shipbuilding's Craig Lockhart. “So, we're changing the mast structure and moving some UK-specific technology out in favour of Hawklink and other systems, which will allow Hunter to enjoy a much broader interoperability with partners and allies. “The communications masts are provided by Rohde and Schwartz and again are subject to trade studies to consider their interoperability with the Hunter configuration.” ASC Shipbuilding has created a mast working group within the integrated design team to study solutions, which may result in a different solution to mounting, structure and materials being used. Because the CEAFAR radar is significantly more powerful than Artisan, the Hunter design will also require modifications to the heating, ventilation and cooling (HVAC) and spatial management. “It produces more heat in certain modes, so it requires improved cooling management and at the same time it's heavier, so stability and displacement is being modelled,” Lockhart added. “It's well within our design parameters, but the biggest challenge will be making sure the dynamics of the ships' power system work as well as planned and we can supply enough capacity to all parts of the ship. “Whilst we're completely confident that the generating capacity is more than enough, we are making sure we model the system is such a way that we don't dilute the power supply to other parts of the platform – even when we need to operate the radar in conjunction with all the other platform and weapons systems.” Other topside changes to the basic design will include removal of the forward Sea Ceptor silo and an increase in the number of Mk.41 VLS cells from 24 to 32, which will accommodate the Raytheon RIM-162 Evolved Sea Sparrow Missile (ESSM) and Standard Missile 2 (SM-2) weapons currently used by the RAN and its US ally. Further aft, two four-cell missile launchers will be added for either the Navy's current anti-surface Boeing RGM-84 Block II weapon or, more likely, an advanced surface to surface missile which will be acquired in the future to replace the venerable Harpoon. Combat system As noted earlier, the announcement by government in October 2017 that it would mandate the Combat Management System enterprise across Navy's future major surface combatants, has resulted in Lockheed Martin being selected to supply its Aegis Combat System, with Saab Australia providing the sovereign tactical interface. Together with a common Co-operative Engagement (CEC) capability across the future fleet and standardised ESSM & SM-2 weapons, Hunter will enjoy close integration with US surface combatants. The ship's aviation facilities will also be modified to accommodate the MH-60R, which will be Navy's primary combat helicopter for many years to come. These changes include the reconfiguration of the hangar bay itself, an Aircraft Ship Integrated Secure and Traverse (ASIST) track-mounted helicopter recovery system, which is currently also being fitted to the Hobart class Air Warfare Destroyers, and changes to the ship's air weapons magazine to accommodate the MH-60Rs Mk.54 torpedo and Lockheed Martin AGM-114N Hellfire missiles. In RAN service, the standard ship's complement (with an embarked aviation element) will be 180 personnel, but the design still permits this number to grow to 208 if required. Other modifications may be required as the detailed design of the Hunter evolves to incorporate future capabilities. One example of this is the Unmanned Aerial System (UAS) being acquired under Navy's Sea 129 Phase 5 (Maritime Tactical UAS) program, which may select a fixed wing or a rotary wing platform, or maybe even both. “As we continue with the maturation of the final design process, part of our discussions with the Commonwealth – and with the various capability development groups in particular – is getting a detailed understanding of the through life upgrades they either have in the pipeline, or are considering as options,” Lockhart explained. “We are looking at what's being done in other Navy upgrade programs such as the ASMD configuration changes that have been made to the Anzac class frigates and the aviation upgrades we've just completed on the Hobart Class. All of those are being assessed against the Hunter design space and we're taking as much opportunity as we can to de-risk the build program by making sure we have enough people in the upgrade programs of other platforms that we can transfer that thinking, learning and skills across. “We're taking every opportunity to consider their relevance to Hunter, either as a design or build strategy, or as a through-life management consideration.” Build in Australia The planned drumbeat for shipbuilding at Osborne will see a little over three years between the start of work on HMAS Flinders in 2022 and that of the second ship (HMAS Hunter), reducing to two years between Hunter and the third ship (HMAS Tasman). This will progressively reduce throughout the build, resulting in an estimated gap of just 18 months between the eighth and ninth ship in the late 2030s or early 2040s. But before construction can begin, a new digitally-enabled shipyard at Osborne South has to be completed, having been built from the ground up to be (arguably) the world's most advanced naval shipbuilding facility. Construction of the new facility was announced as part of the government's continuous naval shipbuilding strategy, under a $535 million contract with Australian Naval Infrastructure (ANI) – see P44 for more on ANI. Progress on the facility is progressing to schedule and ASC Shipbuilding hopes to begin gaining access to the yard in March 2020. “I walked through the shipyard yesterday and it's coming along quickly, they were putting the last side section on the main, 50-metre high, final assembly building and then the roof structure goes on,” Lockhart said on August 28. “The key challenge is for us to get in early and integrate what I call the ‘shipyard production process' within the infrastructure. We'll get progressive access from March next year and we're on target for a successful handover in the middle of next year – and by then we'll have tested a large part of our digital production processes. “We are setting up a highly efficient, digitalised shipyard and when we get our hands on it – certainly over the next few years – we'll have the world's most advanced shipbuilding facilities.” Fully digital design The Global Combat Ship itself has now migrated to a fully digital design, which provides BAE Systems with the capability to embed all aspects of the design and supply chain, right down to single fasteners. This design is controlled from a single configuration, which is updated at midnight every night. However, this live design concept will prove a challenge in the future when the Hunter is itself a mature design and therefore achieves ‘separation' from the reference ship. This will be further exacerbated when the third variant (the Canadian Surface Combatant) reaches the threshold level of design maturity and the concept will require careful configuration management going forward. “That configuration management process is what our engineering teams are working on right now, so when something is changed on Type 26 that has a platform implication on Hunter (or CSC), how will it be updated in the parts of the design that are common and still managed that live 3D configuration?” Lockhart said. “But it's a huge step forward for design evolution (and) it's a huge step forward for BAE Systems also and I think our customers are already seeing the benefit of managing data on a real-time basis.” The Hunter design process has recently successfully achieved the Systems Readiness Requirements (SRR) milestone. Craig Lockhart said the review made 42 recommendations – fewer than the Type 26 design at a similar stage and reflecting the growing maturity of the GCS family design. “Each of the recommendation categories were things that we were already actively working on with the Commonwealth and they were all broadly related to the changes above the main deck,” he said. “Things like, how is the radar going to interface with the rest of the ship? It has a very high power consumption, so modelling the power dynamics is a key characteristic we have to get our heads around. Also, things like, how is Aegis being delivered through the Foreign Military Sales (FMS) agreement? How well will it integrate with parts of the CMS such as guns, sensors, sonar, coms etc?” The next major milestone will be a System Design Review (SDR), to be conducted in the fourth quarter of 2020 and which will be a major test of Hunter design maturity. 2020 cut steel From a manufacturing process standpoint, ASC Shipbuilding will begin the construction of five hull blocks in December 2020, as a prototyping exercise to both verify capability but, more importantly perhaps, to test the digital production process at the shipyard. The first block to be completed will be to the baseline Type 26 design which, thanks to the lead in fabrication by BAE Systems in Glasgow, can be readily quantified. The following blocks will be to the Hunter design and together they will be used to train the local workforce in South Australia, verify the skills balance and qualify the shipyard itself. “Prototyping is a reason to test the end to end process. People think that it is about just making sure we can cut steel and weld it together,” Lockhart said. “It's not. It's a test of the design itself; it's a test of the design in the supply chain, to make sure we have the materials available when we need them; It's a test that we have design guidance information that is relevant; It's a test of the ability to produce an accurate digital work order for the relevant trades; it's the ability to schedule at the right time. It really is the ability to test without the fear of it going wrong – I'd rather have it go wrong and have the ability to appraise, amend and improve through prototyping.” ASC Shipbuilding has already begun work on prototyping, long before steel is cut on the first hull block at the end of 2020 and is now actively engaged with local South Australian companies to work on the development of the digital work order process. AIC and the Australian supply chain Local industry was invited to bid for work in the prototyping phase of the Sea 5000 build program in late June, with an estimated $20 million in contracts up for grabs, but in the meantime Australian small to medium enterprises (SMEs) are already winning work supplying components and services to BAE System's GCS supply chain. On July 9 for example, Defence Minister Linda Reynolds used a visit to BAE System's Govan shipyard to announce that Adelaide-based Airspeed had become the latest Australian SME to win work on the GCS program. Airspeed will provide the Replenishment At Sea (RAS) ‘stump mast' for the Royal Navy's first three ships between now and 2023. Minister Reynolds noted that Airspeed was the second supplier from South Australia to join a number of Australian companies already working on the program, including CBG Systems (Moonraker), Electro Optic Systems, Liferaft Systems Australia, Mackay Consolidated Rubber, Rowlands Metalworks and prime, Thales Australia. BAE Systems has broken the supply chain down into four categories: Categories A & B are large subsystems, such as propulsion systems, drive train, shaft line etc; Category C covers the supply of smaller components such as pumps and valves, pipes and fittings; and Category D covers the supply of services, such as paint, scaffolding etc. “We have hard targets for Categories C & D to maximise what is delivered from the Australian supply chain component, but equally we are working with Category A & B suppliers to provide opportunities, with some notable successes,” Lockhart explained. “We're working with companies including Rolls-Royce, MTU, Penske Power Systems etc. to bring work onshore to Australia. We're working hard with Rolls-Royce in particular to transition to a fully onshore solution over the course of the program and we're working to bring even more auxiliary component supply onshore as well. “We're looking to use companies like Marand to supply into Rolls-Royce and to position Australian industry to sell into companies like Rolls-Royce, General Electric and Naval Group – these are all companies where we're well advanced in terms of their supply chain commitments, but also their commitment to help us deliver Australian Industry Content (AIC) and that's been well-received.” A further opportunity for local industry participation will come with the development of a ‘Cruiser in a Cornfield' land-based test facility to test the CEAFAR2 radar, Aegis combat system and other sensors in an integrated environment and which is part of the de-risking activity for the Hunter program. ADM understands that ASC Shipbuilding is currently working with the Commonwealth to develop proposals for the design and construction of the facility, which will also be used throughout the life of the ship in the development of future upgrades under the Ship Zero concept – see P36 for more on this. ASC Shipbuilding already has 900 local suppliers signed up through its Supply Chain Qualification Initiative, with around 450 in SA, 150 in WA and the remainder distributed throughout the country. The first Expressions of Interest – in support of the $20 million prototyping activity - are due to be released before the end of this year. Seven indigenous suppliers are already on the company's books and have benefited from mentoring to ensure they are ready to supply into the defence contracting environment, but the biggest challenge faced by the prospective supply chain, according to Lockhart, is cybersecurity. “I think that's an unsighted challenge within the supply chain and one that will come with some cost and effort,” he said. “As BAE Systems and ASC Shipbuilding, we have to provide the customer with an assurance that when this platform comes together, the whole platform is cyber-accredited - and that inevitably flows through the supply chains. That's probably the challenge that will test us hardest.” CSC and future sales The Canadian Government originally selected the GCS design as the basis for its future Canadian Surface Combatant vessel in October 2018 and upheld its selection February this year, following a lawsuit brought on by one of the losing bidders. Canada will acquire 15 ships, to be built locally by Irving Shipbuilding at its yard in Halifax, Nova Scotia under a C$45 billion deal to replace the Royal Canadian Navy's current fleet of 12 Halifax class and three Iroquois class destroyers. The prime contractor will be Lockheed Martin Canada, in partnership with BAE Systems, CAE, L3 technologies, MDA and Ultra Electronics and the first steel is expected to be cut in the early 2020s. This brings the GCS order book to 32 units (eight for the UK, nine for Australia and 15 for Canada) across three variants and the mass of the combined order provides additional supply chain opportunities within the three countries. BAE Systems has already formed a GCS user group community with the three governments and three navies involved to look at a range of common issues, including supply chain management. “BAE Systems negotiating with a supplier with a 32-ship proposition perspective is a much more advantageous position to be in, rather than individual customers ordering in small batches,” Lockhart said. “The other thing is that it really gives the supply chain some long-term certainty and the ability to make investments.” The prospect of increasing the GCS family further is also promising in the near term, with countries like Japan embarking on ASW frigate replacement programs. The Royal NZ Navy will also need to begin replacing its two Anzac frigates in the mid-2030s, despite their current upgrade program. ADM is also watching the US FFG(X) program closely, with the possibility that it will be rescoped and rescheduled in the future. The Hunter class ship, with its pedigree of ASW capability, together with its state-of-the-art CEAFAR radar, US Aegis combat system, Hawklink datalink, CEC capability and US weapons, would arguably make a compelling reference design, should the US Navy seek alternatives to FFG(X) in its current form. “This ship will be the most modern advanced ASW frigate in the water. The reason it won against its competitors was the unique capabilities it offered the UK, Australia and Canada for the roles that they require,” Craig Lockhart said. “Hunter has the ability to operate as part of a global task force and it will have an interoperability with the US that is an advance of Type 26 and, as far as the CEAFAR radar is concerned, this is a very capable radar that is drawing the attention of the world's superpowers.” https://www.australiandefence.com.au/news/a-quiet-hunter-navy-s-future-frigate

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