GAO highlights rise in estimated facilities cost for USCG OPC fleet

by Michael Fabey

It will cost more than planned to upgrade shoreside facilities, such as those in Kodiak, Alaska, to support the proposed US Coast Guard Offshore Patrol Cutters. (Michael Fabey)

The expected costs for new or upgraded facilities to accommodate the proposed US Coast Guard (USCG) Offshore Patrol Cutter (OPC) fleet has more than tripled over the last decade, according to a recently released US Government Accountability (GAO) Office report.

“[The] OPC's facilities acquisition cost estimate – including home ports and shore facilities – increased from USD431 million to USD1.4 billion from 2012 to 2022,” the GAO noted in its report Coast Guard Acquisitions: Offshore Patrol Cutter Program Needs to Mature Technology and Design, released on 20 June.

“Programme officials said that the 2012 estimate assumed that the coastguard could use existing MEC [medium endurance cutters] home ports and navy bases,” the GAO reported.

However, based on home port feasibility studies from 2018 and 2020, the USCG attributed the cost estimate increase to several issues, the GAO said.


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Special Report: China gears up third carrier for more enduring operations despite flight deck flaw

by Ridzwan Rahmat

Fujian , China's third aircraft carrier, seen here as it departs for its maiden sea trial on 1 May 2024. (VCG via Getty Images)

China has completed the maiden sea trials for its third aircraft carrier, which will be in service as CNS Fujian once it is commissioned. The vessel sailed off from the Jiangnan Shipyard in Shanghai on 1 May and the trials were completed eight days later.

The trials focused on testing the “reliability and stability of the aircraft carrier's propulsion and electrical systems”, read a report from state-owned Xinhua News Agency, which was published to announce the trials.

Fujian was launched by Jiangnan Shipyard in June 2022. While it is slated to be the People's Liberation Army Navy's (PLAN's) third aircraft carrier overall, it is the country's first vessel to be configured for catapult-assisted take-off but arrested recovery (CATOBAR) aircraft operations.

Satellite images that have been analysed by Janes since 2021 support postulations that Fujian is equipped with electromagnetic catapults, given the presence of distinctive features along the track of the aircraft launching system.


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UK Royal Navy Type 23 frigates Argyll and Westminster to retire

by Kate Tringham

Two more Royal Navy Type 23 frigates, HMS Westminster (pictured) and HMS Argyll , will be retired from service. (NAVYPIX/Richard Scott)

The Royal Navy's (RN's) Duke-class (Type 23) frigates HMS Argyll (F 231) and HMS Westminster (F 237) will be retired from service, the UK defence secretary has confirmed.

Speaking at the First Sea Lord's Sea Power Conference 2024 in London on 14 May, defence secretary Grant Shapps said that Argyll has been sold to BAE Systems and will be used to support apprentice training at the company's Clyde Shipbuilding Academy in Glasgow in line with the government's agenda on skills and shipbuilding capacity. Westminster , meanwhile, will be scrapped.

Westminster and Argyll are being retired after 30 and 33 years in service respectively. Westminster was laid down in January 1991, launched in February 1992, and commissioned in May 1994, while Argyll was laid down in March 1987, launched in April 1989, and commissioned in May 1991.


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US Navy seeks to replenish, bolster surface forces following successful Red Sea operations

by Michael Fabey

The US Navy is trying to develop directed energy systems like HELIOS to counter low-end threats. (Lockheed Martin)

While underscoring effective US Navy (USN) surface-fleet operations in the Red Sea since October, Rear Admiral Fred Pyle, USN surface warfare director, acknowledged a need to not only replenish weapons stocks but also to find additional options to defend forces against low-end threats.

Speaking on 14 May during a Center for Strategic and International Studies (CSIS) event on Red Sea surface warfare operations, Rear Adm Pyle said, “Should we find a more cost-effective way of downing drones? Absolutely.”

The scale of the operations has indeed exacted a cost for the USN, Rear Adm Pyle pointed out.

“What our forces are engaged in Red Sea now we've not seen since probably World War II,” he said. “We're operating in weapons-engagement zone.”

Referring to the air and missile defence demand signal for surface forces, he said, “I don't think it's ever been stronger.”

As a result, “we have spent a billion dollars in munitions since last October”, he said.

The USN now must replenish the missile inventory, he noted.


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The expected costs for new or upgraded facilities to accommodate the proposed US Coast Guard (USCG) ...

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