The most lethal warship in Australia’s history would be built to greatly boost the navy’s firepower in response to a rising China, under a proposal being examined by the Albanese government.
The plan by BAE Systems Australia would spark a major shake-up in the navy’s future fleet, where BAE would build both heavily armed destroyers as well as anti-submarine frigates at its Osborne facility near Adelaide.
The proposed new air warfare destroyers would carry between 100 and 150 missile cells, making them one of the world’s most heavily armed warships, with more than twice the firepower of Australia’s existing three air warfare destroyers.
BAE has briefed senior navy officials and the government on its proposal, which is aimed at answering the government push for more firepower at a time of growing strategic tensions with China.
However, BAE’s plan has only been formulated in recent months and is not part of the Defence Strategic Review which has recently been delivered to Defence Minister Richard Marles.
Even so, the BAE proposal will be closely examined by Mr Marles as part of a series of naval options that includes a rival $6bn bid by Spanish company Navantia to build more of its Hobart-class AWDs for the navy.
Under existing plans, BAE is building nine anti-submarine Hunter-class frigates at Osborne as part of a $45bn program that would deliver the first ship in 2031 and the final ship in 2045.
Under BAE’s new proposal, it would build the first three Hunter-class frigates and then, in 2035, it would build its first air warfare destroyer.
The company would then build, alternately every two years, another frigate and then another destroyer until nine ships in total were built – six frigates and three destroyers – although final numbers and configuration would be up to the government.
BAE has told the navy that both the frigates and the destroyers would use the same hull design and therefore more than 80 per cent of the two ships would be a common design.
This would allow them to be built by the same workforce and at the same Osborne shipyard at a similar budget and schedule to the original $45bn plan for nine Hunter frigates.
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The yet-to-be-built Hunter-class frigates, based on the British Type 26 Global Combat Ship, were chosen by the Turnbull government in 2018 to specialise in anti-submarine warfare at a time when China’s submarine fleet is expanding rapidly. But the Hunter-class frigates are relatively lightly armed with only 32 missile cells, compared with 48 on the navy’s existing AWDs and 96 cells on the US Navy’s Arleigh Burke-class destroyers.
Some experts, including former navy chief vice-admiral David Shackleton, have argued that nine Hunter-Class frigates would leave the navy too lightly armed for future conflicts.
Vice Admiral Shackleton warned last week that the navy had had a 43 per cent drop in firepower since 1995. An AWD armed with up to 150 cells would represent a quantum leap in naval firepower, more than most other major surface combatants around the world, including most Chinese naval ships.
The Albanese government faces the biggest defence decisions in a generation next month when it responds to both the defence strategic review – authored by former defence Minister Stephen Smith and former defence chief Angus Houston – as well as the report by the nuclear powered submarine taskforce.
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Mr Marles has already flagged that he wants a future defence force that can deliver a more “impactful projection” and can “hold an adversary at risk much further from our shores”.
The Hunter-class frigate program has had a troubled start, but the Albanese government has said it remains committed to it. In August last year, the navy and BAE Systems agreed to an 18-month delay to the start of the project partly because of the immature design of the parent ship, Britain’s Type-26 frigate. Designers also struggled with the fact that the Australian boat was heavier than expected after navy-requested modifications were incorporated, including the US combat system and Australian-made radar.
BAE Systems Australia managing director Craig Lockhart said in December he expected the shipbuilder could quickly claw back the 18-month delay on the project, possibly by as early as June.
Spanish shipbuilder Navantia has told the government that it could build three new Hobart-class AWDs, in addition to the three currently in service, for a total of $6bn and deliver them by 2030, before the first Hunter frigate is built