Feds pick off-the-shelf design for military resupply ships - Action News
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British Columbia

Feds pick off-the-shelf design for military resupply ships

A design by ThyssenKrupp Marine Systems Canada has been selected for the Navy's new support ships being built by Vancouver Shipyards Co. Ltd.

Conservative goverment says going with existing German models will help keep costs down

The Canadian Government announced Sunday it has selected ThyssenKrupp's design for new military resupply ships to be built in Vancouver. This type 702 Berlin Class fleet auxiliary vessel is currently in service with the German navy. (navaltechnology.com)

A design by ThyssenKrupp Marine Systems Canada has been selected for the Navy's new support ships being built by Vancouver Shipyards Co. Ltd.

ThyssenKrupp,which has built similar ships for the German navy, will supply the design for two or three Royal Canadian Navy supply ships, winning out over BMT Fleet Technology.

The federal government said it picked an existing design for the replacement of the decrepit ships, rather than going with a from-scratch model that it says would have cost more.

Canada's two existing supply ships are nearly 45 years old, and urgently need to be replaced. The vessels are mainly used to supply warships with supplies to allow them to remain at sea longer.

The original plan from the navy was to have the new ships act as a floating supply base for both the navy and the army, acting as an offshore command post and hospital for humanitarian missions.

But the project got whittled down over time because of budgetary considerations.

In its description of the new design, National Defence and the Canadian Forces said Sunday that the ships would "provide a home base for maintenance and operation of helicopters, a limited sealift capability, and support to forces deployed ashore."

Vice-Admiral Paul Maddison, the commander of the Royal Canadian Navy, told a defence industry conference in Ottawa last weekthat the design had been selected "following a thorough, third-party-validated process, during which two designs were compared in depth based on capability, cost and risk."

Resupply ships long-awaited

The Conservatives had put the supply ship replacement on hold in 2008, saying the bids on the table at the time were not compliant and were also too expensive.

Since then, the navy's design concept has been scaled back, causing some military observers to wonder whether the forces are getting the right ship.

But the delay is also expected to cost the government millions, potentially putting it back into the same price range as it was before they put things on hold.

Theparliamentary budget officer warned earlier this yearthat the $2.6 billion set aside for two or three supply ships was too little, and the budget for the project should be $4.13 billion.

The Conservative government has refuted that estimate, saying it will be able to execute the replacements within its budget. It also emphasized Sunday that going with the existing German model of vessel will allow them to develop the ships with greater budgetary certainty.

Maddison said last week that thenext step is to decide which type of ship will be built first in Vancouver the new Joint Support Shipdesignor the Coast Guard's polar ice breaker.

with files from CBC News