Really looks like they should consider an ESSM-ER, by adding a booster to it.
Really looks like they should consider an ESSM-ER, by adding a booster to it.
I can't help but notice that all our local production is focused on strike missiles. If however we run out of the defence missiles, particularly ESSM, then we can't put any ships to sea. I don't know what our inventory is, but I suspect it's not more than a couple of refills, say 500 above that at sea (I could be wrong and maybe we have a massive warehouse full of them). If Ukraine has taught us anything, wars aren't won in three days, and instead quickly become one of attrition. I would view that without our own ESSM manufacturing capability, we might find ourselves exhausted within a few weeks, and then our ships are stuck in port.
To be fair, your idea was rather more barely guided flak rocket than cheap 'n' cheerful SAM.I did suggest something very similar a long time ago, but in the context of more point defence local produced VLS silo filler... anyway it was universally dismissed as a dumb idea, and we are in a period of production re-arming & maybe recently announced local domestic missile manufacture might mitigate this somewhat anyway??
Well...Now is the time to launch projects in this space...
Ahem. The M1919 Browning MG came to my mind immediately, as did the slightly earlier M1917 Browning MG. For certain things, a piece of kit that is an old design can still be perfectly adequate and/or relevant, it largely depends upon the situation.The problem is in ukraine, they are firing most weapons designed/made in pre 2010. In a different era. Imagine using 1920's weapons in late WW2 1945.. The countermeasures are now orders of magnitude better, processing is multiple orders of magnitude better. It doesn't mean that tech doesn't have a place, but being outmatched makes it very hard.
Unfortunately it's behind a paywall.From the Australian Financial review.
Questions surface over fast-tracked $10b warships
Shipbuilders have been given just three weeks to outline their opening pitch to build new frigates for the navy.www.afr.com
-5 builders have 3 weeks to outline pitch for RANs new GPF, including how soon and how much.
Sorry about that but it wasn’t before.Unfortunately it's behind a paywall.
Thanks ReptiliaSorry about that but it wasn’t before.
-“approach to market” requesting information for the general purpose frigate was sent to five foreign shipbuilders on Friday, asking them to provide details of how soon they could build the new warships, where they would build them and what they would cost. Shipbuilders have been given three weeks to outline their opening pitch.
-Five shipbuilders, Mitsubishi Heavy Industries (Japan), Navantia (Spain), TKMS (Germany) and Koreans Hanwha Ocean and Hyundai. Government has vowed to choose the winning design next year, start construction in 2026, receive the first boat by 2029 and have it in service in 2030.
-Separate request covering how the companies plan to transfer technology to Australia and grow a supply chain to build the remaining ships in Perth will be released later.
-The need for a speedy acquisition, the government has ruled out making wholesale changes to the design. This means the cutting-edge CEA radars are not expected to be used on the new frigates. The bidders have been told to offer baseline versions of warships that are most closely in service with other countries, with the only changes that will be entertained are those required because of obsolete equipment.
These things, plus the very significant time crunch involved, leads me to think that this whole thing will end up falling over. Basically this is very much looking to me like a programme that gov't is putting together to fail. I suspect one (or more) of the following will happen.Sorry about that but it wasn’t before.
-“approach to market” requesting information for the general purpose frigate was sent to five foreign shipbuilders on Friday, asking them to provide details of how soon they could build the new warships, where they would build them and what they would cost. Shipbuilders have been given three weeks to outline their opening pitch.
-Five shipbuilders, Mitsubishi Heavy Industries (Japan), Navantia (Spain), TKMS (Germany) and Koreans Hanwha Ocean and Hyundai. Government has vowed to choose the winning design next year, start construction in 2026, receive the first boat by 2029 and have it in service in 2030.
-Separate request covering how the companies plan to transfer technology to Australia and grow a supply chain to build the remaining ships in Perth will be released later.
-The need for a speedy acquisition, the government has ruled out making wholesale changes to the design. This means the cutting-edge CEA radars are not expected to be used on the new frigates. The bidders have been told to offer baseline versions of warships that are most closely in service with other countries, with the only changes that will be entertained are those required because of obsolete equipment.
These things, plus the very significant time crunch involved, leads me to think that this whole thing will end up falling over. Basically this is very much looking to me like a programme that gov't is putting together to fail. I suspect one (or more) of the following will happen.
Keep in mind we are talking about a build programme which is to select one of the four (or five) possible designs on offer from either Germany, Japan, Spain or S. Korea. AFAIK none of these designs utilize many of the systems and interfaces used by the RAN, and it is even distinctly possible that standard shipbuilding codes (size of ladders, piping, wiring, fire suppression systems, etc.) might not be compliant with Australian standards. Further, if Austal is going to be the entity in Australia which builds ~eight of the frigates, does Austal currently have (or have access to) the facilities and infrastructure which would be required to build the chosen class of vessels? Does Austal have the workforce in place, with the proper training and skills, to actually build modern warships? Or would Austal need to build or expand facilities to have a yard for the build, and/or raise and train a workforce to run whatever build yard Austal uses in WA?
- The original/overseas builder will be unable to get the first batch of vessels completed in the planned times.
- The intended Australian builder & yard will be unable to get their builds started and/or completed in their planned times.
- The vessels once built will not be able to enter RAN service in a timely fashion because of systems not currently supported by the RAN.
- The completed vessels will not be able to be taken into RAN service until regulatory compliance issues are resolved with the vessels.
- The selected design itself, and/or its fitout, will prove to be inadequate for the RAN's service needs
Aside from this looking like even more of a cluster, I am reminded of the saying that, "haste makes waste."
So we are just going to look at baseline designs that require minimum changes.Sorry about that but it wasn’t before.
-“approach to market” requesting information for the general purpose frigate was sent to five foreign shipbuilders on Friday, asking them to provide details of how soon they could build the new warships, where they would build them and what they would cost. Shipbuilders have been given three weeks to outline their opening pitch.
-Five shipbuilders, Mitsubishi Heavy Industries (Japan), Navantia (Spain), TKMS (Germany) and Koreans Hanwha Ocean and Hyundai. Government has vowed to choose the winning design next year, start construction in 2026, receive the first boat by 2029 and have it in service in 2030.
-Separate request covering how the companies plan to transfer technology to Australia and grow a supply chain to build the remaining ships in Perth will be released later.
-The need for a speedy acquisition, the government has ruled out making wholesale changes to the design. This means the cutting-edge CEA radars are not expected to be used on the new frigates. The bidders have been told to offer baseline versions of warships that are most closely in service with other countries, with the only changes that will be entertained are those required because of obsolete equipment.
As I understand it, Civmec already has enough work to stay busy meeting the needs for oil & gas exploration vessels and following how the Arafura-class OPV build has been going, is going to focus on commercial and not pursue defence work. If the Civmec facilities and workforce are occupied building exploration or support vessels and platforms, then they would not really be available to build parts of the XYZ-class frigates and either way, neither Civmec or Austal (in Australia) has experience installing and integrating complex weapon, sensor and combat management systems in naval vessels.Civmec may be involved? The government continually say ‘built at the Henderson precinct’.
Civmec and the GPF designer working together post Arafura and Austal with the fit out? Similar to the Tasman proposal I’m guessing.
Another 150m Hall near Austal or where Silveryachts is located would take a very long time to get up and running with a new workforce.
So we are just going to look at baseline designs that require minimum changes.
Surely you would have to eliminate the ALFA3000 straight away as it doesn't actually exist. Neither does the Daegu class FFX Batch III. So we are down to three contenders. In fact you could probably knock out the remaining Asian contenders because they have entirely different combat systems and other gear used by the Australian navy.
So there you go, MEKO A-200 wins by default.
Actually scratch that. Just get the Type 31 and build it in Poland.
Civmec owns the Foragacs yard in Newcastle, they will claim to history they can build anything. However, CIVMEC seems very focused on Henderson. The Civmec Foragacs yard might have some work picking up with the Raymond terrace bypass coming up. There is still quite the infrastructure build going on in Perth and elsewhere. The Arfuras are 9LV, Saab Australia usually do most of the tricky stuff anyway. CIVMEC could away fly people in from Perth, and acquire local talent by raiding Thales who has most the maintenance contracts on frigates and destroyers at Co dock. But do they want to do that? Not really. I think CIVMEC is very cautious about taking on future defence work, its too erratic, too high risk for them to bid.Civmec or Austal (in Australia) has experience installing and integrating complex weapon, sensor and combat management systems in naval vessels.
I don't think a 57mm main gun is going to cut the mustard with the RAN. For commonality it needs to be a 127mm.So we are just going to look at baseline designs that require minimum changes.
Surely you would have to eliminate the ALFA3000 straight away as it doesn't actually exist. Neither does the Daegu class FFX Batch III. So we are down to three contenders. In fact you could probably knock out the remaining Asian contenders because they have entirely different combat systems and other gear used by the Australian navy.
So there you go, MEKO A-200 wins by default.
Actually scratch that. Just get the Type 31 and build it in Poland.
TBH I am not particularly concerned about which design is selected, because from my POV other aspects of the programme make it rather high risk, no matter which design is ultimately selected or who the overseas builder ends up being.Civmec owns the Foragacs yard in Newcastle, they will claim to history they can build anything. However, CIVMEC seems very focused on Henderson. The Civmec Foragacs yard might have some work picking up with the Raymond terrace bypass coming up. There is still quite the infrastructure build going on in Perth and elsewhere. The Arfuras are 9LV, Saab Australia usually do most of the tricky stuff anyway. CIVMEC could away fly people in from Perth, and acquire local talent by raiding Thales who has most the maintenance contracts on frigates and destroyers at Co dock. But do they want to do that? Not really. I think CIVMEC is very cautious about taking on future defence work, its too erratic, too high risk for them to bid.
What you need is a large local entity or local division of an international to run it. Japan has a larger footprint in Australia. Mitsubishi could fly over 100 workers, house, office, pay them, until locals can be trained or recruited. I think Korea is hungrier to strike a deal.
I'm not sure Germany or Korea or Spain could do that at this stage. Maybe. They have 3 weeks to put together a plan..
The idea that this project is contingent on the actual design is absurd. Its the project that will be assessed, not the design as an isolated artifact. How much industrial capacity can be thrown at the project as fast as possible.
We aren't selecting a design, and building it all by our selves in isolation. We are selecting a project, that someone else will likely build whole ships externally, and then try to frantically kick start local production and lead and manage it, not just of the ship but of the whole eco system to build and support it. Someone who can swallow the risks of the projects, who isn't driven by profit, who understands the context and the imperative.
By that standard, the Koreans and the Japanese have a lot of skin in the game. If they fail, they face existential risk. If this an other projects go south, failure to deter China will result in very, very bad outcomes, likely loosing thousands, perhaps millions of citizens in conflict. The Spanish, while not facing the same risk, are totally economically desperate and politically motivated. Failure to secure multiple large international contracts over the next 5 years may help fuel and see the breakup of Spain and collapse of state funded enterprises. Spain which has an unemployment rate still over ~12%.. They have been making noise.
3 weeks guys. Please feel free to discuss the options, but realize picking a winner via crystal ball is a fools errand. Until the 3 weeks is up, we and they themselves don't even know if the contenders will even submit a proposal or what that might look like.