I hate the wait, Just like the bloody movies get you really into it then you wait and wait and wait.. Ugh!
Mate, here you go!
So it seems we may need some blessing from our kiwi friends (for 2 extra frigates) to achieve the continuous build, WA took over the all submarine maintenance, Japanese export the Soryu, frigate works shared between Williamstown and Techport, and "corvettes" either from WA or NSW. Everything practically the same as the "Captain's pick"......
Cookies must be enabled. | The Australian
"Frigates for SA, Victoria may help rebuild fortunes
Tony Abbott will look this week to secure the future of the naval shipbuilding industry with a major announcement expected to include a $20 billion plan to build nine frigates in South Australia and Victoria.
The Prime Minister’s intention is to make naval shipbuilding sustainable by getting it on to a “continuous build” program and to shore up political support for the Coalition in South Australia.
Since it backed away from its pledge to build 12 submarines there, the government has faced a backlash that could see it losing up to four House of Representatives seats and two Senate seats in a state already battered by job losses in the motor vehicle industry.
Getting the fraught issue of shipbuilding jobs off the agenda would also give the government more room to move on where it will have the navy’s new submarines built.
The plan to build new frigates may mean retiring some of the navy’s eight Anzac-class frigates early. But even if an existing design is chosen, it is likely that the first “cutting of steel” for the new ships — to be fitted with a revolutionary Australian-designed air defence radar system — will be at least two years away.
In addition to the frigates, the “continuous build” process is *expected ultimately to be *extended to a dozen or more “offshore patrol vessels”, possibly to be rated as corvettes, which would be bigger than the navy’s current patrol boats but smaller than the frigates.
Frigates are considered the navy’s workhorses, with the existing fleet of eight Anzac warships having been on near-continuous operations in the Middle East and elsewhere for decades. The Anzac vessels, and two ships for New Zealand, were built in Australia from a German design in a successful project that was brought in on time and on budget.
It is expected that the government will call for expressions of interest from countries including Britain, Germany and France for existing warship designs. A frontrunner is the British
Type 26 Global Defence Ship. Two other European options are the very large German F125 and the French FREMM multi-mission frigate.
New Zealand has already shown an interest in buying the British Type 26 and, if the Anzac frigate example is followed, those vessels could ultimately be built in Australia.
Defence Minister Kevin Andrews has previously set strict conditions for any plan to build the frigates in Australia. He has said there must be a well-inte*grated designer, builder and supplier team and that mature designs of vessels would be considered ahead of designing a new class of vessel from scratch or making extensive modifications to existing designs.
In addition, the capability the navy needed must be thoroughly tested against more readily available warships, the number of design changes the navy could insist on must be limited and enough time must be spent planning at the start of the project to ensure it was going to run smoothly.
German industrial giant ThyssenKrupp Marine Systems and the French DCNS are both keen to build the submarines and frigates either in Australia or in their yards in Europe.
Another in a complex set of policy questions being dealt with by the National Security Committee of cabinet is the question of what happens to the government-owned, Adelaide-based shipbuilder ASC.
ASC could be split into two entities — one to maintain submarines and the other to build warships. If the government opts to sell part or all of ASC, it will be much more valuable if it has a major contract to make it viable.
The West Australian-based shipbuilder Austal has already said it would consider buying all or some of ASC, as have the Germans and Sweden’s SAAB Australia."