Another interesting article from Richard Harman at Politik.co.nz
OUR "UNSUITABLE" DEFENCE EQUIPMENT PROBLEMS | Politik
The bit that intrigued me the most was this:
No explanation as to why given, but I would hazard a guess it would have more to do with proposed changes to the International Maritime Organisation's Polar Code (see recent changes section ,
here) than any sudden weight gain on the OPVs (which would compromise their ice-belt). Still, weight may be a minor factor: the OPVs have yet to deploy operationally with a Seasprite embarked (probably due to a lack of Seasprites more than anything else). I also recall an anecdote in Brown & Moore's Rebuilding the Royal Navy about a Leander class frigate that gained 45 tonnes just in paint alone (80 coats) over a decade. No wonder the Navy & people like Peter Greener (
here) are so keen on a third OPV.
OT: Gerry Brownlee seems to have the hate on for the NH90:
At this rate he is definitely going to be off the NHI Xmas card list! Which could be a problem if we decide we have to have more.
Of course, they were bought:
a) because they were what the Army (the force du jour at the time) wanted.
b) because they were what the Australians had bought.
Infact, I'm pretty sure Goff had to back to Cabinet and ask for more money specifically for them.
Perhaps Brownlee should direct his anger towards the two previous ministers of his own government who knew perfectly well about the deployment problems, yet failed to do anything about it. Labour aren't innocent though, they stuffed up big time by not ensuring the NH90s were operable at sea (as this press release from Ron Mark today notes (
here, useful for the note on the time required to fold & stow the NH90 onboard Canterbury).
To give Brownlee some credit, he did acknowledge that "NZ is a maritime nation". Well done.
Chis73