It think it was 6B AUD for 15 years the original estimate from memoryIt's hardly excessive when you consider the RAAF SH deal for the first 24 aircraft was for $6B AU 10 years ago.
Fast air done properly isn't cheap.
Not 15 years it was for 10 years.It think it was 6B AUD for 15 years the original estimate from memory
Yes FX rates do have an impact and the Canadian dollar is not as strong as I thought compared to the USD which has surprised me. As value proposition one wonders if they are cutting off their nose to spite their face with respect to the alternative. I am assuming the costings model used by the CDN is similar to the 'all up' WoL ownership costings OZ style.The 5-7 billion must be CDN so roughly that is 3.7 to 5 billion US. Like you, the numbers baffle me and DND is hardly a fountain of information. Even assuming a F-35 price for these interim SH of 100m US, that is still only 1.8 billion US so the spares and support cost appear to be around 2-3 billion on top of the 1.8 billion buy price. No idea as to what the spares and support consist of.
Yes you would have to think that the Canadian Govt has probably based the cost in a similar way to how it was costed here in Oz for the RAAF's interim Super Hornets.Yes FX rates do have an impact and the Canadian dollar is not as strong as I thought compared to the USD which has surprised me. As value proposition one wonders if they are cutting off their nose to spite their face with respect to the alternative. I am assuming the costings model used by the CDN is similar to the 'all up' WoL ownership costings OZ style.
It appears that even the shallow thinkers in junior's cabinet are beginning to figure that out!That C$5B-C$7B would go a very long way in procuring a good chunk of those 65 F-35A's for the RCAF!!!
Is this better measured against the Kuwait deal? 40 aircraft (32 x E, 8 x F) at USD10.1B. No operations costs in that package - planes, spare and training only as quoted from DSCA FMS announcement. Flyaway might be USD 100m per aircraft but check the specification list on what you don't get and actually need to make it a combat aircraft. The Canadian taxpayers should prepare themselves for something more than USD 2B up front.Still, 2-3 billion for operations, spares, and maintenance seems pretty excessive for 18 jets that many think will be obsolete in 10-15 years, then again junior's idea of "interim" may mean using them for 20-30 years. After all, he won't be the one flying one of these jets into harms way 20 years from now.
Rather than measuring against the Kuwait deal, I think it is better to measure and compare against the RAAF's acquisition of the 24 'interim' Super Hornets.Is this better measured against the Kuwait deal? 40 aircraft (32 x E, 8 x F) at USD10.1B. No operations costs in that package - planes, spare and training only as quoted from DSCA FMS announcement. Flyaway might be USD 100m per aircraft but check the specification list on what you don't get and actually need to make it a combat aircraft. The Canadian taxpayers should prepare themselves for something more than USD 2B up front.
Thanks John. That is very helpful. I cannot remember whether or not if the RAAF buy included weapon stocks - someone here would obviously know.Rather than measuring against the Kuwait deal, I think it is better to measure and compare against the RAAF's acquisition of the 24 'interim' Super Hornets.
To repeat what I posted earlier, the then Australian Def Min announced in 2007 that the 24 Super Hornets would be in service from 2010 to 2020. The cost would be A$6.1B (average cost A$610m per year over ten years).
Roll forward to today, the Canadian Government is planning to procure 18 interim Super Hornets (and I've seen reports for either 10 or 15 years), which means they would be in service from approx. 2020 to 2030 or 2035, with a cost of C$5b-C$7b). Possibly the C$5b is ten years and the C$7 is for fifteen years.
And to make this a bit more relevant, both the A$ and the C$ are at parity.
On a 'yearly' basis over 10 years, the RAAF figure for 24 Super Hornets was an average total cost of ownership of A$610m per year, for the RCAF, 18 Super Hornets over 10 years would appear to be approx. C$500m per year (we also have to remember that the RAAF's cost were for 2010-2020, the RCAF's costs would be for 2020-2030), appears to be pretty comparable to me.
Anyway, just my opinion of course too!
At the start there is a hard cost that has to be paid to FMS. The sale has to be notified to Congress with a total program cost. What's your thoughts on that actual cost?Rather than measuring against the Kuwait deal, I think it is better to measure and compare against the RAAF's acquisition of the 24 'interim' Super Hornets.
To repeat what I posted earlier, the then Australian Def Min announced in 2007 that the 24 Super Hornets would be in service from 2010 to 2020. The cost would be A$6.1B (average cost A$610m per year over ten years).
Roll forward to today, the Canadian Government is planning to procure 18 interim Super Hornets (and I've seen reports for either 10 or 15 years), which means they would be in service from approx. 2020 to 2030 or 2035, with a cost of C$5b-C$7b). Possibly the C$5b is ten years and the C$7 is for fifteen years.
And to make this a bit more relevant, both the A$ and the C$ are at parity.
On a 'yearly' basis over 10 years, the RAAF figure for 24 Super Hornets was an average total cost of ownership of A$610m per year, for the RCAF, 18 Super Hornets over 10 years would appear to be approx. C$500m per year (we also have to remember that the RAAF's cost were for 2010-2020, the RCAF's costs would be for 2020-2030), appears to be pretty comparable to me.
Anyway, just my opinion of course too!
Mr C, the RAAF acquisition was 10 years ago, so the memory is getting a bit foggy, but I seem to remember that there was also an 'initial' weapons buy (not 100% sure though?) that may have also been included in that A$6.1b figure quoted by the then Def Min.Thanks John. That is very helpful. I cannot remember whether or not if the RAAF buy included weapon stocks - someone here would obviously know.
Beside's a billion isn't really what it used to be.
Yes of course there is an 'upfront' cost for the airframes, initial spares holdings, possibly initial weapons, targeting pods, etc.At the start there is a hard cost that has to be paid to FMS. The sale has to be notified to Congress with a total program cost. What's your thoughts on that actual cost?
Thanks. This may be a "mute" point considering Canada's current relationship with Boeing. I will take a punt on $3B and another bet that the purchase doesn't happen.Yes of course there is an 'upfront' cost for the airframes, initial spares holdings, possibly initial weapons, targeting pods, etc.
From memory (and again this was 10 years ago), when the Australian Def Min of the time, who quoted the A$6.1b cost for ten years of complete 'ownership' for the 24 Super Hornets, also said that a bit under 'half' of that 'total' amount was the cost for the airframes and initial spares, it may (or may not) have also included an amount for initial weapons stock and there were also basing infrastructure upgrades too.
For Canada, with the proposed 18 Super Hornets, the initial upfront cost could easily be between $2b-$3b, depending what is initially requested.
But it also depends on what the FMS request is for, is for the bare minimum (and other requests follow), or is it the whole hog, including a full stock of spares, weapons, simulators, etc, who knows what the Canadian FMS request will contain, each country does things differently to the other.
Be very expensive and although the Argus was good, IMHO they should have stayed with the turboprops instead of going to compound radials. If Airbus decide to revisit the A319-MPA then Bombardier would have a very limited run with a lot of competition on the international market. At present there is the Boeing P-8 and the MHI P-1 with the P-8 well and truly dominating the market. Bombardier (and the Canadian Govt) would need export orders to really make it worthwhile. Then there are the SAAB and Elta conversions of bizjets to account for as well, some of which are Bombardier bizjets. So you could end up with a G5 or 6000 with Elta gear instead of the C series.I note that a replacement for the CP 140 Aurura fleet is planned for 2030 with the Canadian Multi Mission aircraft. I said it before that we won't see P8 and I postulated a Bombardier C series option as most likely. With this statement in the defence review my money is on this happening.
This combined with the want to partner more with Canadian industry on defence procurement this would be a great project impacting industry across the country. An ARGUS II.
Thinking about it Australia is looking to acquire the remaining P-8's post 2025 when it is likely the P-8 would be out of FRP, If Canada can movethere purchase up a few years and perform a single large joint production with Oz it may allow both to reduce the purchase price of there respective aircraft. Food for thought.Agree, a C-Series MPA will be much too expensive and all the export potential has already gone to the P8. The defence review promises an Aurora replacement sometime after 2030. Like a lot of other stuff in the report, plenty of time to allow these commitments to fade away. This defence plan (1.4% of GDP with 20% of this number for equipment purchases by 2026) is a budget to appease Trump. If Trump doesn't run or loses the 2020 election, junior will cancel his plan in a NY minute.