Colin Parkinson
Army.ca Myth
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Face saving for the Japanese to blame a failure on China?
Utter drivel.S.M.A. said:China behind Australia's rejection of the Soryus?
DCNS Satisfied With Australia's Pick of Lockheed for Sub Project
By: Pierre Tran, September 30, 2016
PARIS — DCNS has warmly greeted Australia’s signing of a design contract with the French naval shipbuilder and choice of Lockheed Martin for its partner on the Barracuda Shortfin 1A, a planned ocean-going attack submarine.
“DCNS welcomes the signature of the first operational contract for the Australian Future Submarine Program and the selection of Lockheed Martin as the program combat system integrator,” the French company said in a statement Thursday.
(...SNIPPED)
Australian PM in France to launch 'most ambitious military project' in his country's history
Australian Prime Minister Malcolm Turnbull is in France on Sunday to announce work on a new fleet of French submarines that will form the centrepiece of Australia’s defence strategy for decades to come.
Australia selected French naval contractor DCNS, last month renamed Naval Group, in April 2016 to build a new fleet of 12 submarines. The French industrial group, which is 62 percent owned by the French state, beat out competitors in Japan and Germany, winning one of the world's most lucrative defence contracts.
"This is the largest and most ambitious military project in Australia’s history," Turnbull told reporters at a joint press briefing with French President Emmanuel Macron at the Elysée Palace in Paris on Saturday.
France said it was ready to do everything necessary to meet the requirements of the contract, the Sydney Morning Herald reported.
Naval Group was left fuming after details from more than 22,000 pages of documents relating to submarines it is building for India were published in The Australian newspaper, leading to concerns about its ability to protect sensitive data.
Australia's new submarine fleet is the focal point of its defence strategy unveiled in February 2016, which called for an increase in military spending of nearly AU$30 billion over the next 10 years to protect strategic and trade interests in the Asia-Pacific region.
The first submarines are expected to be ready by the early 2030s, with the the last ones finished by 2050 [emphasis added]. Following their conception in France, they will be principally constructed in Adelaide in southern Australia, which is home to Australia’s naval defence and the ASC shipbuilding organisation.
Building these submarines in Australia, along with the government's naval shipbuilding strategy, which begins with offshore patrol vessels and frigates, is estimated to create more than 5,000 jobs across Australia.
France and Australia formally signed the inter-governmental contract, worth A$50 billion, or €34 billion, last December [emphasis added].
The future submarines, called Shortfin Barracuda, are based on France’s Barrucuda submarines (99 metres long and weighing 4650 tons), which are nuclear attack subs. The Shortfin variant for the Australian Navy will see a conversion of the propulsion system to a conventional diesel electric bid equipped by Lockheed Martin, the combat systems integrator...
http://www.france24.com/en/20170709-australia-france-submarines-contract-defence
suffolkowner said:http://gentleseas.blogspot.ca/2017/07/ex-pm-abbott-doubts-wisdom-of.html
I think a lot of these issues will arise with any Victoria class replacement, but how picky are we?
Colin P said:Good link, this article on the pros and cons of various AIP systems is informative http://gentleseas.blogspot.ca/2014/08/air-independent-propulsion-aip.html
Colin P said:The reality is there are no existing subs that meet our needs, so we will be in the same boat, we might as well get involved with the Aussie deal so we have a shoulder to cry on and they have as well.
Australia, Naval Group [ex-DCNS, note French company now has English-only name] conclude sub negotiations
Australian Defence Minister Christopher Pyne confirmed that the Australian government has finally concluded negotiations for the formal signing of a strategic partnering agreement for 12 large conventionally-powered attack submarines from Naval Group.
Australia is acquiring the vessels under its $50 billion (U.S. $36.12 billion) Project Sea 1000 (Future Submarine) to replace its existing fleet of six Collins Submarines from the early 2030s. The subs will be the ‘Attack’ class with the lead vessel named HMAS Attack. They will be fabricated in Australia to a design previously known as the Shortfin Barracuda 1A.
Recent local media reports have suggested that negotiations between the parties had stalled, placing the government’s timeline for the Collins replacement in jeopardy, but Pyne said on Thursday the program was still on track.
“There’s been a lot of ill-informed mythmaking around the negotiations but I’m very happy to say today the negotiations are complete,” Pyne said during sod-turning event at the site of the Future Submarine Construction Yard at Osborne in South Australia. “The strategic planning agreement will be signed in February next year and we can continue to get on with the submarine project, which has been under the design and mobilization contract for the last two years.”
Declining to provide details of the intricacies of the agreement due to their commercial nature, Pyne said the negotiations were officially concluded at an Australian Government National Security Committee meeting in Melbourne on Dec. 10...
https://www.defensenews.com/global/asia-pacific/2018/12/14/australia-naval-group-conclude-sub-negotiations/
Dolphin_Hunter said:The Aussies certainly do jump on things quicker. However, every once in a while someone will come on here and tell us their procurement system has issues.
All I know is they seem to be kitted out quite nicely and usually in a timely manner. We can’t get our crap together at all. Then when we get something, like the AOPs or FWSAR we are supposed to jump up and down with excitement.
I personally think we will get out of the submarine game, there’s no political will to announce a that Canada is shopping for new boats. The only effective way to work under ice is with a SSN. That’s it. It’d be nice to piggy back on the Aussie program, but that won’t work because someone will say “it doesn’t meet our needs”. Just what exactly are “our needs?”
suffolkowner said:As far as jumping i kinda meant that they seem to commit to things before crossing their T's and dotting their I's whereas we spend so much time and money on the T's and I's that it becomes a significant part of the entire program. I remember reading some time ago (which I've probably mentioned here before) about a program where the lead up (definition etc..) cost over 10% of the proposed procurement that was in the end cancelled. How could that possibly be justified or defended? Canadian procurement is such a disaster and we are so far behind that short of sole sourcing a bunch of purchases and pushing them through I don't see how we can ever catch up.
If you look at the wikipedia pages for Australian Army and Air Force equipment
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_current_Royal_Australian_Air_Force_aircraft
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_equipment_of_the_Australian_Army
and compare it to Canada's I can't help but feel embarrassed
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_active_Canadian_military_aircraft
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_equipment_of_the_Canadian_Army
From my uneducated eyes the Australian fleets some much easier to rationalize but I am only an interested member of the public although I still have a few friends and family in the Army
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_equipment_of_the_Australian_Army
I am curious as to the nature of submarine operations in the Arctic as the archipelago would seem too shallow, narrow and congested at anytime of the year and the deeper basins too heavily ice covered in the winter at least
RDBZ said:Seems like there was a lot of "t crossing" and "i dotting" by some very experienced and independent people as part of the RAN future submarine selection process: http://www.defence.gov.au/casg/NewsMedia/News/DCNS_announced
Cloud Cover said:Somewhere in these threads is a recent link to a defence document that indicates there is no plan to replace the Vic’s, and without a plan, they will service life expire and so will that part of the RCN.