Internationale ontwikkelingen maritiem

Gestart door Parera, 17/04/2018 | 18:32 uur

Huzaar1

Citaat van: Lynxian op 05/03/2024 | 10:05 uurGoede bewapening voor een patrouilleschip.

We moeten nog maar gaan zien hoe dat loopt. Lees laatste alinea van artikel.
"Going to war without France is like going deer hunting without your accordion" US secmindef - Jed Babbin"

Umbert

Citaat van: Parera op 05/03/2024 | 10:11 uur+1

Het is niet de meest moderne / top of line bewapening maar voor een OPV is het goed bewapend. Ook de op gebied van sensoren ontbreekt er nog het een en ander, zo is er helemaal geen geleiding voor de SAM's.
M.a.w. als deze bewapening op onze opv zou zitten zou het ineens een meer waardevol schip voor ons zijn, want wij hebben een meer dan normale sensor capaciteit op de onze zitten als ik het goed begrepen heb uit de draadjes op dit forum.

Parera

#2639
Citaat van: Enforcer op 05/03/2024 | 10:52 uurOmdat het voor Pakistan is?

Het zijn prima systemen, maar het is niet het aller modernste van het modernste maar dat is geen probleem.

De SMART-S mk2 is al flink oud, de Albatros NG SAM een export variant van de CAMM ER maar met een bereik van 40 km een prima verdedigingsmiddel.

Begrijp me niet verkeerd, het is een prachtig capabele OPV. Al noemt men het in Pakistand korvetten.

Enforcer

Citaat van: Parera op 05/03/2024 | 10:11 uur+1

Het is niet de meest moderne / top of line bewapening maar voor een OPV is het goed bewapend. Ook de op gebied van sensoren ontbreekt er nog het een en ander, zo is er helemaal geen geleiding voor de SAM's.

Omdat het voor Pakistan is?

Parera

Citaat van: Lynxian op 05/03/2024 | 10:05 uurGoede bewapening voor een patrouilleschip.

+1

Het is niet de meest moderne / top of line bewapening maar voor een OPV is het goed bewapend. Ook de op gebied van sensoren ontbreekt er nog het een en ander, zo is er helemaal geen geleiding voor de SAM's.

Lynxian

Goede bewapening voor een patrouilleschip.

Harald

Damen Showcases OPV 2600 Model Tailored For The Pakistan Navy

Dutch shipbuilder Damen unveiled a scale model of the Offshore Patrol Vessel (OPV) 2600 at the DIMDEX 2024 exhibition in Doha, Qatar. The model shows a design specifically customized to meet the requirements of the Pakistan Navy.



Damen is constructing two OPV 2600 vessels in Romania for the Pakistan Navy, as a continuation of the existing Yarmook-class OPVs currently in service. It ceremonially laid the keel of the first multi-purpose patrol vessel OPV 2600 for the Pakistan Navy in October 2022. At the same ceremony, the first steel plates were cut for the construction of the second OPV 2600.

These new OPVs will be slightly larger and heavier than the Yarmook-class vessels. The scale model presented at the DIMDEX 2024 exhibition indicates a more heavily armed vessel, featuring 2×2 anti-ship missile canisters, likely equipped with Harbah missiles, Aselsan-made Smash 30 mm gun, Gökdeniz close-in weapon system (CIWS), and two STAMP remote weapon stations. Additionally, the ship is armed with a 6-cell VLS (Vertical Launch System) that incorporates surface-to-air missiles.

Although the specific type of missiles hasn't been disclosed by officials, it's likely the Albatros NG, as the Pakistani Navy is the inaugural export customer for these missiles.

However, company officials emphasized that the vessel will be delivered with "fitted-but-not-with" armament . While Damen is responsible for constructing and delivering the hull, the outfitting is the customer's responsibility, as highlighted by a Damen official at the booth.

.../...

https://www.navalnews.com/event-news/dimdex-2024/2024/03/damen-showcases-opv-2600-model-tailored-for-the-pakistan-navy/

Parera

Sad news, Aircraft carrier C551 'Giuseppe Garibaldi' from the 1st of October 2024, will be taken out of service to be disarmed. It has been serving Italy since the 1980's and took part in Operation Enduring Freedom  and also was present during the conflicts in Libya and Kosovo.



https://twitter.com/NichoConcu/status/1762846410343424448

Parera

Britain's cash-strapped Navy 'may be forced to sell off its £3.5 billion aircraft carrier the HMS Prince of Wales' amid funding issues

The future of Britain's second aircraft carrier is under threat due to funding issues, naval sources have claimed.

Senior figures have spoken out after it emerged next week's Budget will not include any significant rise in defence spending.

They fear HMS Prince of Wales, which cost £3.5billion to build, could be mothballed or sold for a knockdown price to a friendly nation, over the fleet's flagship HMS Queen Elizabeth.

The possible move – branded an 'HS2 moment' for the Royal Navy – would probably be divisive.

But the decision could be forced upon commanders as soon as 2028 if the state of defence finances does not improve.

https://www.dailymail.co.uk/news/article-13138221/Britains-cash-strapped-Navy-forced-sell-aircraft-carrier-HMS-Prince-Wales.html

Harald

Italian MoD Looking To Charter Civilian Oil Tanker

The Italian MoD's Naval Armament Directorate (NAVARM) has issued a European Union restricted procedure tender for an exclusive year-long chartering with a civilian crew of a crude oil tanker for the services of storage and distribution of F76 naval fuel at the Italian Navy's naval bases and the subsequent procurement of the same platform by the service.

The accelerated tender for a total value of €7.4 million "was launched for the temporary unavailability of fixed installations for the storage and distribution of air-naval fuels in the naval bases of the Italian Navy," the tender documentation explains. This "is leading to various critical issues of capacitive nature in the specific sector, in particular in the bases of La Spezia and Brindisi."

The strategy developed to compensate for this capacity gap, according to NAVARM, "involves the procurement of a tanker available on the market capable of providing the necessary services, subject to an initial chartering period of one year aimed at ensuring in the shortest possible timeline the storage and distribution of naval fuel, and the necessary training activity for the operational, technical and logistical management of the platform by Italian Navy personnel," once the ship will be transferred to the service after the year-long charter.

The parties interested in the tender have to make questions and respond to them by 11 March 2024. The tender is divided into two phases: Phase 1 regards the exclusive year-long (365 days) chartering service with a civilian crew of the selected oil tanker, which remains in the ownership of the provider. The contract operations should start by the beginning of July 2024.  Once the year-long chartering service is completed, the provider has to conduct all the necessary maintenance and dock activities and obtain the confirmation/renewal of the Condition Assessment Programme level 1 (CAP1) certificate by the ship classification society in 60 days. Once obtaining it, the ownership transfer will be completed in 30 days with the delivery of the naval platform at La Spezia Naval Base. The contract covers a warranty period for the maintenance activities of one year after delivery.

According to the tender documentation, the offered naval platform should be registered under the Italian or one European Union (EU) member state's Fleet Register and the owner/management company should have a registered office in Italy or an EU member state. During the charter period, as part of the offered service, the ship should be manned by a civilian crew with proven experience in bunkering activities in Italian ports, and the personnel should have an EU passport and speak fluently Italian, while the provider will have to respect all the EU labor and safety regulations.

The naval platform should have the C-OIL Tanker class notation by a ship classification society belonging to the International Association of Classification Societies (IACS) and to be inspected to be certified according to the latest Oil Companies International Marine Forum (OCIMF) Harmonized Vessel Particulars Questionnaire. It should feature an overall max length of 80 meters, a max beam, and draught of respectively 15 and 6 meters, a propulsion system based on two diesel engines on two shaft lines capable of ensuring a speed at full load of circa 10 knots with Sea State 3. The platform should have an autonomy of 3 days and fuel to ensure at least 2,000 nm endurance. It should have a 4-to-6-meter tender RHIB.

The crude oil tanker, which should have been built in the last 20 years, should comply with the prescriptions of the RINA classification (or equivalent) rules in terms of ship stability, maneuverability, and sea keeping, but not have a combat system as it should not be part of naval groups and won't be deployed in scenarios characterized by threats.

The ship should have bow and stern mooring areas and be capable of being moored with ships on each side. The platform should have one or plus bow thrusters and a propulsion control station on the bridge wings. It should have accommodations and services for at least 10 persons (of which at least two are dedicated to Italian Navy personnel) with a medical first aid premise, galley, and mess.

It should have a cargo capacity of not less than 2,300 m³ of F76 naval gasoil divided in at least 8 storage tanks (in addition to the fuel for the ship operations), with two primary and secondary pumps and fuel embarkation/delivery stations amidships and all the equipment for intra-storage tanks fuel transfer and measurement. With the fuel provided by the Italian Navy, the ship will receive and deliver it at naval platforms, barges, and vehicle tankers of the Italian Navy. These services should be provided with a minimum notice of 6 hours, mainly at the La Spezia naval base (with sailing up to the nearby coastal depot) without excluding the possibility to provide the same services in the Brindisi naval base. The tender also indicates the potential services request in other national ports after consultation with the service provider. 

The chartering service is based on an average of 10 refueling operations (min 3, max 30) of 10 to 2,000 m³ each per month and respectively 1,300 m³ (min 100 and max 3,600 m³) and 15,000 m³ of fuel transferred monthly and yearly. The harbor piloting, tugs, mooring services, and taxes are paid or provided by the Italian Navy at naval bases and national ports.

The new platform should further comply with a series of international conventions in terms of safety, environmental respect, crew security, and welfare including the EU regulation n. 471/2002 regarding the double hull adoption or the equivalent technology for the single hull crude oil tanker as modified by the EU regulation n. 1726/2003, SOLAS 1974 as subsequently amended, LOAD LINE 1966 and TONNAGE 1969 as amended, MARPOL 1973/1978 and follow-on amendments, COLREG 72, maritime labor convention certificate 2006, CO2 emission monitoring, communication and verification, renewable fuels and low emissions in addition to insurance regulations. 

During the chartering period, the Italian Navy will train its personnel on board the ship to be ready to delivery in the contract's Phase 2. After the above-mentioned 60-day maintenance and docking activities, the ship should be transferred to the Italian Navy for her manning and operations. 

For the record, the Japanese Ministry of Defense (MoD) ordered two 4,900 tons Yard Oiler Tankers (YOT) in May 2020 for similar roles.

https://www.navalnews.com/naval-news/2024/02/italian-mod-looking-to-charter-civilian-oil-tanker/

Harald

#2631
US Navy orders Swiftships to stop work on its landing craft program  ( extra info)

The U.S. Navy has ordered the builder of its Landing Craft Utility 1700 program to stop work and moved to terminate the contract, the shipbuilder Swiftships told Defense News, following years of challenges and disagreements on the program.

The yard has laid off nearly 100 workers related to the LCU program since January and is considering actions to dispute the Navy's termination of the contract, hoping to get back into a settlement process.

Louisiana-based small business Swiftships won the LCU competition in March 2018, with the Navy awarding a contract for $18 million for the detail design and the construction of the first craft. The yard also received follow-on contracts, one in 2019 worth $26.7 million for the next two craft, and another in 2020 worth $50.1 million for four more.

These craft haul Marines as well as their ground equipment and weapons from amphibious ships to the shore and back again. They are the slower but heavier-lift connectors, compared to the Ship to Shore Connectors that travel at higher speeds but carry less weight.

Swiftships' contract called for options to build as many as 32 — the total number of craft needed to replace the Navy's Vietnam-era LCU inventory.

In September 2023, the Navy awarded another LCU contract to Alabama-based Austal USA. The contract called for building three craft for $91.5 million — a significantly higher per-unit cost than Swiftships' contract — and options for another nine.

According to interviews with and documentation provided by Swiftships, Naval Sea Systems Command on Nov. 9 raised the possibility of terminating the program.

NAVSEA wrote that the shipyard was not making progress on LCU production and offered to reach a settlement that would include Swiftships turning over parts and material delivered by its vendors. On Jan. 24, NAVSEA issued a stop-work order on the program, according to documentation provided by Swiftships, and on Feb. 20 the command formally notified the yard of its decision to terminate the contract.

In its notification to Swiftships, NAVSEA wrote the first three craft were supposed to be delivered by June, September and December 2023, but are still incomplete. NAVSEA declined to comment to Defense News.

Years of challenges
Swiftships' chief executive, Shehraze Shah, told Defense News there had long been turbulence in the program. Indeed, he said, the Navy and Swiftships had not agreed on a final design two years into the program, and a third-party design agent was brought in to complete the design but continued to make changes. Shah pointed to these issues as reasons the construction could not move forward on time.

Jeff Leleux, the president of the yard, said the Navy and Swiftships took nearly a year to settle a request for equitable adjustment — needed to realign the cost and schedule associated with the contract due to the delays — during which Swiftships and its vendors went months without payment.

After the new timeline was set, said John Messinger, Swiftships' director of proposals and contracts, the yard realized one of the design changes made by the third-party design agent would require the company to rip out the engine-cooling system and reinstall some piping on the craft, for example.

The executives said they are behind schedule, but contend the Navy has not negotiated with them in good faith amid design and supply chain challenges.

The issue caught the attention of lawmakers far earlier. In September 2022, Republican Reps. Clay Higgins of Louisiana and Neal Dunn of Florida wrote a letter to the secretaries of the Navy and the Department of Homeland Security to discuss their concerns about work being taken from smaller yards and given to Austal USA.

"In addition to delays caused by the COVID-19 pandemic," the letter read, "SwiftShips notified Congress regarding unnecessary complications with the Navy's handling of the LCU-1700 contract. These complications include four program manager transitions since the signing of the contract, needless stop work orders, delayed payments to SwiftShips and material vendors, and serious design delays. SwiftShips has continuously struggled with the acquisition of materials due to the Navy ceding its contractual obligation to pay material vendors."

The letter stated the Navy notified Congress in April 2022 of its intention to award Austal the LCU work without formally re-competing the program, even though Austal at that time had not yet opened its steel ship production line. The Alabama yard had previously only constructed aluminum ships, but began establishing a steel construction line following a $50 million Defense Production Act grant in 2020.

https://www.defensenews.com/naval/2024/02/23/us-navy-orders-swiftships-to-stop-work-on-its-landing-craft-program/

Harald

De Amerikaanse marine annuleert het bouwprogramma voor amfibische aanvalsschepen



De Amerikaanse marine had gepland dat tot 32 schepen zouden worden aangeschaft in het kader van het Landing Craft Utility (LCU) 1700 kleine landingsvaartuigprogramma, ter vervanging van een gelijk aantal schepen van de klasse 1610 die 50 jaar dienst hebben bereikt of overschreden, omdat ze tot de 1610-klasse behoren. Vietnam-tijdperk.

Deze schepen zijn klein, open, met een topsnelheid van 11 knopen, een waterverplaatsing van ongeveer 200 ton leeg en tot 400 geladen, die werden gebruikt om troepen en voertuigen van de grote landingsvaartuigen naar de kust te vervoeren. Hun lading, die werd bediend door een landingshelling aan de voorkant en toegangsdeuren aan de achterkant, was b.v. 2 tanks, of enkele jeeps en vrachtwagens, of maximaal 350 soldaten met hun uitrusting.

Gisteren ging de Amerikaanse marine echter over tot het annuleren van het contract dat zij had met betrekking tot de nieuwe schepen met de Swiftships- scheepswerf in Louisiana , die de overeenkomstige wedstrijd in 2018 had gewonnen. De scheepswerf had al bijna 90 miljoen dollar ontvangen om de nieuwe landing te ontwerpen en om begonnen met de productie van de eerste drie, maar er waren zoveel meningsverschillen met de Amerikaanse marine en zoveel constante veranderingen dat dit leidde tot een kloof tussen de twee partijen.

Vorig jaar werd echter een tweede contract gegund aan de Austal-scheepswerf in Alabama, voor soortgelijke schepen. De Amerikaanse marine zal het programma daar dus waarschijnlijk voortzetten, nadat ze teleurgesteld was door de oorspronkelijke aannemer.

https://navaldefence.gr/us-navy-cancels-lcu-1700-from-swiftships/

Master Mack

Ik denk dat het NLD concept de snelheid om beschikbaar te krijgen en multifunctionaliteit ten goede zal komen.

Parera

#2628
Wat meer info over de Amerikaanse / Australische plannen rondom deze onbemande schepen. Ook voor NL interessant om deze ontwikkelingen te volgen. Het lijkt er op dat de Amerikanen en Australiërs meer kijken naar een speciaal gebouwd schip met VLS cellen i.p.v. de Nederlandse plannen voor een omgebouwd civiele offshore support ship. Persoonlijk kan ik me wel vinden in deze andere concepten. Voor Nederland zou dit betekenen ontwerpen op Stan Patrol of SIGMA basis.





Australia To Bet Big On Heavily Armed, Optionally Crewed Warships
https://www.twz.com/sea/australia-to-bet-big-on-heavily-armed-optionally-crewed-warships



An Austal graphic showing a number of different tiers of uncrewed surface vessels, including a "High Speed Missile Launch Vessel" concept, along with a Hunter class frigate configured to act as a crewed control ship. Austal

Parera

#BREAKING: The council of Ministers has approved a 10-year Maritime Security Agreement with #Turkiye, granting Turkiye full authority over Somalia's territorial waters. Under the terms, #Turkey will oversee maritime security operations, receiving 30% of resources from the Blue Water Economic Zone to support rebuilding the Somali navy and combat illegal fishing. This agreement follows recent developments including #Ethiopia's deal with #Somaliland admin for a port and military base in Lughaya, Awdal region of #Somalia. President @HassanSMohamud will address Parliament today on the significance of this agreement.

https://twitter.com/TheDailySomalia/status/1760225392994963877