{"id":39442,"date":"2018-05-21T14:30:19","date_gmt":"2018-05-21T04:30:19","guid":{"rendered":"https:\/\/www.aspistrategist.ru\/?p=39442"},"modified":"2018-05-21T15:27:54","modified_gmt":"2018-05-21T05:27:54","slug":"getting-the-right-frigate-and-getting-the-industry-strategy-right-for-making-it","status":"publish","type":"post","link":"https:\/\/www.aspistrategist.ru\/getting-the-right-frigate-and-getting-the-industry-strategy-right-for-making-it\/","title":{"rendered":"Getting the right frigate AND getting the industry strategy right for making it"},"content":{"rendered":"
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The Australian government is close to deciding which of the three big foreign companies wins the $35\u00a0billion contract to build nine antisubmarine warfare frigates for the Navy. We examine the SEA\u00a05000 Future Frigate program\u2019s three objectives in our new ASPI Strategic Insights paper,\u00a0The next big grey thing\u2014choosing Australia\u2019s future frigate<\/em><\/a>, written with James Mugg.<\/p>\n

We should care about the future frigate decision for two reasons. It\u2019s important that the Navy gets the best capability to deal with the proliferating number of quiet, lethal, modern submarines in our region. But as important in a different way, who wins the project and how they work with Australian firms will define our shipbuilding industry for decades.<\/p>\n

Defence projects have always been big, but in recent years they\u2019ve moved from being elephant-sized to whale-sized megafauna. If the future submarines program (some $50\u00a0billion in acquisition and maybe another $115\u00a0billion or so in sustainment) is the blue whale of the pack, then the future frigate program is the next biggest\u2014the lesser-known but huge finback whale. It\u2019s acquisition cost is some $35\u00a0billion and so its sustainment is likely to be in the order of $80\u00a0billion (according to indicative cost proportions in the government\u2019s naval shipbuilding plan).<\/p>\n

Like megafauna, they\u2019re also slow moving. The first frigate is expected to enter service sometime in the late 2020s\u2014after being delivered to Defence sometime around\u00a02027 or\u00a02028\u2014and the last of the nine ships will probably finish production in the early\u00a02040s.<\/p>\n

It\u2019s a slow program partly because 6,000\u20137,000\u2011tonne warships are complex integrated electro-mechanical devices that take time to build, but also because slow production is what the government\u2019s new continuous build strategy proposes, so that there\u2019s a continuous flow of work\u2014not starts and stops that might disturb the Australian workforce. This is what a sovereign shipbuilding capability as proposed means\u2014you get ships at the rate that keeps industry happy, not the rate that the Navy might need them to turn up.<\/p>\n

So, which ship is best, and who might provide the government with the best industrial strategy for delivering frigates on time and on budget while creating a sustainable long-term Australian shipbuilding industry?<\/p>\n

The bad news is that we can\u2019t tell you who will win. The good news is that there are good reasons we can\u2019t tell you. \u00a0Defence has kept its evaluation of the three tenderers between it and government (as it\u2019s meant to). Furthermore, from the information ASPI has about the three ships, all three do what the Navy wants pretty well, so there\u2019s probably no clear winner just on capability.<\/p>\n

BAE may well have read the wind on Aussie industry matters and so have places in their plan for the two Aussie icons\u2014ASC and Austal. More importantly, though, when it comes to not paying the 30\u201340%\u00a0premium that the RAND Corporation said Australian governments traditionally pay for building ships here, the Australian government has the opportunity to use its $35\u00a0billion leverage to get the Brits to give Australian firms a hefty share of all Type\u00a026 production globally. This includes the Royal Navy\u2019s eight\u2011ship program and the Canadian 15\u2011ship program if BAE wins that. The\u00a0UK needs sales and partnerships like this one in its post-Brexit world, so the government could drive a hard bargain on intellectual property and international production.<\/p>\n

Navantia, wholly owned by the Spanish government, is building military vessels for Australia, Spain, NATO\u00a0clients and potentially the Canadians\u2014perhaps even the US\u00a0Navy (if Navantia wins the 20\u2011ship FFG(X) program in partnership with Bath Iron Works). As with BAE, the Australian government has a major opportunity to open up Navantia\u2019s global design and production supply chain to Australian firms. Australia\u2019s decision comes ahead of both Canada\u2019s and the US\u00a0Navy\u2019s, so a win by Navantia here would give them momentum they need.<\/p>\n

Fincantieri hasn\u2019t built a ship here in Australia, so Australian industry and government would have to get to know that organisation and its practices. On the plus side, Fincantieri is a truly global shipbuilder, with a wide commercial and military ship market and production chain. Its frigate is in the US\u00a0Navy FFG(X) competition. The Australian government could expect to be able to drive a deal in intellectual property and supply chain participation that sees Australian firms contributing to Fincantieri ships, whether commercial or military, across its 20\u2011country footprint and international market.<\/p>\n

Which will the government choose? Emotionally, the Brit option might just feel right in this nasty post-globalisation world where allies and partners who mean it are hard to come by. Its glossy brochure design is also brand new, so there\u2019s nothing to dislike about its performance. But the entire history of complex projects shows that there are reasons to be wary of signing up to a new design with all the wrinkles, twists and problems they have. If that\u2019s too daunting, and the government prefers low project risk and the best chance of getting a ship on budget built here in Australia, they might go with Navantia. It might also be able to drive the lowest price too.<\/p>\n

But if the government is thinking strategically about naval shipbuilding as an enterprise over decades, and thinking about what $35\u00a0billion of leverage might achieve, then they may take Fincantieri. It\u2019s offering a hugely capable modern ship, and it also provides the widest opportunities for Australian firms to be export partners with a successful global commercial and military shipbuilding firm. If the government is ruthless in its negotiations, it might well be worth the growing pains of getting to know Fincantieri.<\/p>\n

Regardless of which ship is chosen, the members of the National Security Committee of Cabinet need to avoid treating this decision like any other defence project decision. Big project decisions in defence have historically evaluated offers against capability, schedule and cost, with the risks in each of those buckets being compared. That has to happen this time as well, but there\u2019s also a bigger picture.<\/p>\n

The unique and difficult part of this decision comes from the unique opportunity that Australia has in spending $35\u00a0billion on nine frigates. In a world of declining Western naval fleets, that\u2019s a huge business opportunity for the firm that wins it (and for its home country\u2019s government).<\/p>\n

That unique leverage is the way that the Australian government can use the frigate program to create a sustainable Australian shipbuilding industry. Not by insisting on local incumbents getting a workshare. Not by focusing on Australian industry targets within the contracts. The real new opportunity here for Defence and government is to get Australian firms large chunks of the winning company\u2019s international supply and production chains\u2014for all the ships they build around the world. But it\u2019s a balancing act\u2014compromising too much on Australia\u2019s future naval capability for a possible future industry return isn\u2019t the smartest thing to do in troubled times.<\/p>\n

BAE Systems, Navantia and Fincantieri haven\u2019t become successful ship exporters because they give away production work and share intellectual property beyond narrow projects. They\u2019ll be perfectly comfortable with a decision that focuses just on the Australian ships and who the local partners are. They\u2019ll be happy with airy words about knowledge transfer so that, in a distant future that may never eventuate, Australian builders sell whole ships internationally.<\/p>\n

They\u2019ll be happy because all that will miss the bigger industrial opportunity Australia has to insist that Australian firms get business in the winning company\u2019s entire international production order book starting now.<\/p>\n

Success for Australia will take ruthless leadership from ministers and equally ruthless commercial negotiation with whichever firm wins the contract.<\/p>\n","protected":false},"excerpt":{"rendered":"

The Australian government is close to deciding which of the three big foreign companies wins the $35\u00a0billion contract to build nine antisubmarine warfare frigates for the Navy. We examine the SEA\u00a05000 Future Frigate program\u2019s three …<\/p>\n","protected":false},"author":6,"featured_media":39444,"comment_status":"closed","ping_status":"closed","sticky":false,"template":"","format":"standard","meta":{"_mi_skip_tracking":false,"footnotes":""},"categories":[1],"tags":[126,1429],"class_list":["post-39442","post","type-post","status-publish","format-standard","has-post-thumbnail","hentry","category-general","tag-defence-industry","tag-future-frigate"],"acf":[],"yoast_head":"\nGetting the right frigate AND getting the industry strategy right for making it | The Strategist<\/title>\n<meta name=\"robots\" content=\"index, follow, max-snippet:-1, max-image-preview:large, max-video-preview:-1\" \/>\n<link rel=\"canonical\" href=\"https:\/\/www.aspistrategist.ru\/getting-the-right-frigate-and-getting-the-industry-strategy-right-for-making-it\/\" \/>\n<meta property=\"og:locale\" content=\"en_US\" \/>\n<meta property=\"og:type\" content=\"article\" \/>\n<meta property=\"og:title\" content=\"Getting the right frigate AND getting the industry strategy right for making it | The Strategist\" \/>\n<meta property=\"og:description\" content=\"The Australian government is close to deciding which of the three big foreign companies wins the $35\u00a0billion contract to build nine antisubmarine warfare frigates for the Navy. 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