The following is the text of a news release from Chantier Davie Canada:
(LEVIS, Quebec) — Davie Shipbuilding on Tuesday announced that it has completed the construction, commissioning and sea trials of the first Resolve-class naval support ship, Asterix. The ship was delivered on time, on budget and most importantly, at an internationally competitive cost. The ship departed Quebec City on Dec. 23 en route to Canadian Forces Base Halifax where it will enter service with the Royal Canadian Navy and be operated by Federal Fleet Services Inc.
Its crew of 36 Canadian merchant sailors together with Davie personnel and industry contractors sailed the 26,000-tonne ship on its maiden voyage. During the journey, they completed the testing of its propulsion, navigation and military systems. Upon arrival in Halifax, the ship will welcome aboard members of the Royal Canadian Navy to begin integration training during January prior to supporting Canadian naval operations from February for the next 10 years.
The delivery of Asterix represents the first new naval support ship to enter service with the Royal Canadian Navy in over 50 years. It is also the first large naval platform to be delivered from a Canadian shipyard in over 20 years and the first naval ship to be delivered since the launch of the National Shipbuilding Strategy.
“The delivery of this ship is an innovation showcase for Canadian industry and marks an important new era in Canadian maritime power, for it once again allows the Royal Canadian Navy to independently deploy globally for combat, peacekeeping and humanitarian operations. To see the Resolve class as just another naval ship is too simplistic. It is truly a force multiplier which will provide a globally deployable operating base for the Canadian forces,” said Spencer Fraser, CEO of Federal Fleet Services Inc.
The Resolve-class Asterix was designed by Rolls-Royce to meet the highest and most stringent of NATO and Lloyd's Register requirements to support military operations, specifically for its primary replenishment-at-sea functionality but also in terms of systems redundancy, damage control, ammunition storage and other systems on board.
“This is a proving point for Davie. When we began this program, we looked at what DND had been planning with the joint support ships since 2005 and we quickly realized that the 26-year-old German design could be improved upon. For example, having only two replenishment-at-sea stations would mean that it does not fully meet the latest NATO requirements, which crucially calls for four stations. So, we set out to build an innovative, modern design of a naval support ship with the latest, state-of-the-art systems that would be fully compliant to meet Canada’s international and NATO commitments yet also provide a purpose-built platform for responding to humanitarian crises. We wanted to deliver a ship which would rival or exceed the best of the world’s naval support ships. Working closely with our partners in the RCN, the Canadian government and Canadian industry from coast to coast, we can state categorically that we achieved our goals today,” said Alex Vicefield, chairman of Davie Shipbuilding.
Key facts
• The construction of Asterix was entirely privately financed; whereby for the first time in modern Canadian procurement history, all the technical and financial risk was borne by the companies involved – Davie and Federal Fleet Services. Unlike other current marine projects, the Canadian taxpayer has not been asked to pay a single cent until the ship is ready and able to meet the needs of the RCN.
• IHS Markit (Jane’s), the leading global naval and defense analysis firm, assessed the Resolve-class naval support ship to be, in all respects, on a par with the world’s best naval support ships.
• The Resolve-class naval support ship took 24 months to deliver and employed over 1,000 Canadian shipbuilders at Davie and provided contracts to 918 Canadian suppliers across the country.
• Following common practice, also adopted by Canada’s key allies including the U.S. Navy and Royal Navy, the vessel was converted using the hull from a modern, high quality and ice-strengthened containership. During the conversion, the ship was stripped down to its keel and rebuilt in a modular fashion, installing the same key Canadian military systems that will be installed on Canada’s future naval fleet such as OSI of Vancouver’s Integrated Tactical and Navigation System, L3 MAPPS of Montreal’s Integrated Platform Management System and Hepburn of Toronto’s Replenishment-At-Sea Systems.
• Other innovative features include an extensive intermodal handling area that is accessible at sea (a first within NATO), Canada’s first at-sea hospital facility (with a full operating theater) and an advanced aviation capability which is able to land all of the RCAF’s helicopters (including Chinooks).
• A fully redundant electrical power plant and propulsion system were also installed to preclude the possibility of a recurrence of a complete power plant failure that struck HMCS Protecteur in February 2014.
• Asterix will also be the Canadian government’s most “green ship” and features, among other environmental innovations, Terragon of Montreal’s MAGS 8 waste management system.
• Like the joint support ship, the ship is capable of being fitted with a range of active and passive self-defense systems, including three Raytheon Phalanx 20-mm close-in weapon systems.
• The ship will remain under the ownership of Federal Fleet Services and be operated by a mixed crew of Canadian merchant seafarers and Royal Canadian Navy personnel for at least the next 10 years. The ship has a service life of 40 years.
• Canada has the option to purchase the vessel at any time during or upon termination of the lease. At a value of $659 million today, Asterix’s price is a fraction of the cost of the currently planned joint support ships (2013 PBO estimate indicates a 50 percent probability that each JSS will cost over $2.1 billion each).
• While Asterix remains under the ownership of Federal Fleet Services, it will fly the company’s house ensign and be referred to as M/V Asterix.
• Davie and Federal Fleet Services fully support the government’s new defense policy – "Strong, secure, engaged" – which calls for at least two naval supply ships, though most naval experts would agree that Canada requires four such vessels to simultaneously ensure availability on both coasts, form international task groups and provide redundancy during maintenance periods. Due to program delays and limited shipbuilding capacity under the National Shipbuilding Strategy, the first joint support ship will likely not be delivered before 2026 at the earliest and possibly as late as 2028. As such, Davie has offered to build a second Resolve-class naval support ship for the Royal Canadian Navy in order to mitigate the need for Canada to rent supplementary ships from the Chilean and Spanish navies over the next decade.