I believe that there is more specification of the expected range of the missiles:
Royal Australian Navy vessels are set to be fitted with advanced anti-ship missiles as part of a new $1 billion investment announced by Defence Minister Linda Reynolds. The Commonwealth Government ha
www.defenceconnect.com.au
The anti-ship missiles launched from surface combatants are required to have a range of about 370Km or about 200nm. From what I read:
NSM Naval Strike Missile (NSM)
www.kongsberg.com
that probably eliminates the Kongsberg NSM which has been selected by the USN for its LCS and its new FREMM based frigates and possibly the new SAAB RBS-15 Gungnir:
The RBS15 missile family offers the industry-leading abilities that make sure your forces are ready and able to address any conflict scenario, giving you the edge to stay ahead.
www.saab.com
This is what I posted at the time of the announcement (about three pages back):
* Continued investment in ESSM Blk2
* SM-2MR Blk IIIC - 150km range
* SM-6 Blk I - 240km range
* Anti Ship Missile - 370km range (LRASM?)
* Maritime Land Attack Missile - 1500km range (Tomahawk?)
It’s pretty reasonable to assume the 370km range missile is LRASM, it fits the reported range profile (LRASM also to be used by the RAAF).
I wouldn’t rule out NSM for selection in a future phase of the Maritime Guided Weapons project.
The RAN will operate three different types of SAMs, ESSM, SM-2 and SM-6, horses for courses.
It’s not unreasonable to assume they will also operate different types of AShM, VLS launched LRASM for long range heavy targets, and box launched NSM for shorter range lighter targets (NSM is probably more of a Harpoon replacement).
Cheers,