Daniel Sing, Royal Canadian Navy

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Transcript Daniel Sing, Royal Canadian Navy

Royal Canadian Navy
(RCN)
Fleet Renewal
Presented to the Queen’s Conference on
New Paradigms for Defence Procurement
and Industrial Policy
Panel 1 “Understanding NSPS – Ship Designs and Contracts”
By Director General Maritime Force Development
Monday 27 February 2012
1
Purpose and Outline
• Purpose
• Requested to discuss:
• “ships to be built in relation to Canada’s strategic needs in the overall
framework of NSPS”
• “designs of the first batches of ships to be built”
• “progress made so far on surface combatants and joint support ships in
terms of time frames, designs and anticipated costs”
• Outline
•
•
•
•
purpose and nature of a Navy
how big and what kind of a Navy
RCN Force Development Strategy
RCN
• pre- and post- Canada First Defence Strategy (CFDS)
• RCN Fleet Renewal
• On Ship Designs and Canadian Innovation
• next steps
2
On the Purpose and Nature of a Navy
•“A navy is a state’s main instrument of maritime force.
What it should do, what doctrine it holds, what ships it
deploys, and how it fights are determined by practical
political and military choices in relation to national
needs. Choices are made according to the state’s
goals, perceived threat, maritime opportunity,
technological capabilities, practical experience, and,
not least, the way in which the state defines itself and
its way of war.”
• George Baer, One Hundred Years of Sea Power The US
Navy, 1890-1990 (Stanford: Stanford University Press, 1993)
3
How Big and What Kind of a Navy?
• number of ships and crews (quantity) and their characteristics
(quality) is primarily a function of:
• (1) threat or risk to nation’s defence, security, and economic
prosperity, as affected by country’ s size, geography, climate,
ocean estate, trade dependencies, adversaries and allies
• (2) maritime defence and security output desired by Government
(aka level of ambition or level of effort). There are two elements in
this regard:
• non-routine output (surge) in times of tension, crisis or war
• how much of an insurance policy is desired?
• routine output in times of relative peace
• Ready Duty Ship; Surveillance; Sovereignty Patrols; Support to
Other Government Departments (fishery patrols; drug
interdictions; illegal migrant interceptions); Global Engagement
• (3) maintenance requirements of ships
• (4) personnel tempo (or Quality of Life) considerations of their
crews
• (5) available resources (both for acquisition and through-life support
of maritime capabilities)
4
RCN Force Development Strategy
• it is difficult to accurately predict the future
• this leads to a strategy of acquiring and maintaining
balanced, multi-purpose, combat-capable maritime
forces
• there is continuing requirement, within available
resources, to achieve and maintain balance, as much as
possible, in quantity and quality between:
•
maritime combat capabilities:
• on, below and above the ocean surfaces, and
• on and above the near shore
• maritime combat and constabulary capabilities for:
• defence and security of North America and Canada
• international peace and security
• this Strategy is not new...
5
RCN (pre-CFDS)
• surface combatant
• four IROQUOIS Class Area Air Defence and Task Group Command and
Control destroyers
• twelve HALIFAX Class general-purpose frigates
• sub-surface combatant
• three OBERON Class diesel-electric submarines
• combat support
• three underway replenishment ships
• above-surface combatant
• as acquired by the air component of the CF
• CF-188 Hornets
• CH-124 Sea King Maritime Helicopters
• CP-140 Aurora Maritime Patrol Aircraft
• coastal and mine warfare defence
• twelve KINGSTON Class Maritime Coastal Defence Vessels
• two Fleet Diving Units
• Outcome:
• a globally-deployable sea-control navy:
• capable of decisive action at sea
• residual capacity to contribute to operations ashore
6
RCN Way Ahead (as per CFDS 2008)
•
surface combatant
• three Area Air Defence and Task Group Command and Control destroyers; first three
Canadian Surface Combatants (CSC), with capabilities to support joint action ashore
including air defence of forces ashore and Naval Fire Support
• [up to] twelve general-purpose frigates; remaining CSCs; with capabilities to support
joint action ashore including Naval Fire Support
•
sub-surface combatant
• four VICTORIA Class diesel-electric submarines
•
combat support
• two (to three) Joint Support Ships
•
above-surface combatant
• as acquired by the air component of the CF
• sixty-five F-35 Joint Strike Fighters
• twenty-eight CH-148 Cyclone Maritime Helicopters
• ten to twelve Canadian Multi-mission Aircraft
•
coastal and mine warfare defence / coastal patrol
• six (to eight) Arctic/ Offshore Patrol Ships
• twelve KINGSTON Class Maritime Coastal Defence Vessels
• two Fleet Diving Units
•
Outcome
• a globally-deployable sea-control navy:
• capable of decisive action at sea
• enhanced capacity to contribute to operations ashore
7
RCN Fleet Renewal
2012
2015
(not to scale)
2020
2030
AOPS
AOR
JSS
VICTORIA
Class
IROQUOIS
Class
HCM
(4 TG C2 Enhanced)
CSC
MCDV
CH 148
Cyclone
CP 140 Aurora
(AIMP Block III)
Multi-mission
Aircraft
By 2035, CFDS 2008 fully attained with enhanced
capabilities/capacities across 6 CFDS missions
2040
On Ship Designs and Canadian Innovation
• RCN articulates the operational requirement
• DND/ Materiel Group, in collaboration with PWGSC and IC, and
working with industry, develop ship designs that satisfy the
operational requirement
• Canada, the RCN and the Naval Engineering Branch has a
history of:
• domestic naval ship design and construction
• see Engineering Excellence in the RCN, by Michael Young, Canadian
Naval Review, Vol 6, Number 1 (Spring 2010), pp. 34-40
• naval innovation
• HMCS LABRADOR, St-Laurent and Restigouche class destroyers,
helicopter Beartrap, hydrofoil BRAS D’OR, first all gas turbine ship
(IROQUOIS), Canadian Electronic Warfare System (CANEWS),
Shipboard Integrated Processing and Information Display System
(SHINPADS), Shipboard Integrated Communications (SHINCOM),
Shipboard Integrated Machinery Control (SHINMAC), IMCS (Integrated
Machinery Control System)
9
10
Next Steps
• beyond the recent National Shipbuilding Procurement
Strategy (NSPS) shipyard announcement lie:
• individual naval Project (AOPS, JSS and CSC) shipbuilding
contract negotiations
• ramping up naval (1) ship design, (2) Combat System
Integration, (3) platform integration and (4) shipbuilding
capabilities
• ramping up associated domestic supply chain
• the NSPS is premised on load-levelled shipbuilding
over time; ship-related projects, current and future,
need to be approved and implemented in a staggered
fashion
11