There is no way that dollar figure isn't an incredible low ball; $250k wouldn't even cover the steel for a 10,000 tonne ship, let alone the labour (even at a cheaper rate) or anything inside the steel hull.
Our cost reports are nuts because of all the things they include, but most governments costs don't report a fraction of real costs anyone would reasonably expect to be included in the ticket price.
I think Davie will do okay, but people are smoking dope if they don't expect similar schedule delays (which will increase costs) if they are going to try and do major yard upgrades, huge growth, a lot of buying and all the design work while not impacting ongoing and very substantial CPF DWPs, which are now exceeding 1M labour hours in repairs (for context the final ATH DWP was around 450k total hours, even with some required rework after the tow)
OOOOPS - 250 MCAD - NOT 250 KCAD. - But I am going to leave the commentary in place. Our pricing is still out of whack.
People keep telling me that.
They told me that after Svalbard was built. - 6375 tonnes, 575,000,000 NOK, 2000
They told me that again after the pair of Absalons were built. - 6300 tonnes, 2,500,000,000 DKK for the pair without weapons modules, 2004
They told me that again after the three Ivar Huitfeldts were built - 6645 tonnes, 325,000,000 USD per ship 2008
They told me that again after the three Knud Rasmussens were built. - 1720 tonnes, 513,000,000 DKK for the last ship, 2008
Now I am being told that after the Kronprins Haakon - 8000 tonnes, 1,400,000,000 NOK in 2013
And after the three current Jan Mayens - 9800 tonnes, 7,200,000,000 NOK for three in 2022
The vessel (Kronprins Haakon), with a price-tag of 1.4 billion Norwegian kroner (€156 million, or about $167 million), is financed by the government.
The 8,000-ton and 100-meter-long vessel has accommodation for up to 17 crew and 35 scientists.
A milestone was set this week for what will be the most advanced high-tech research vessel ever breaking the ice on the top of the globe, when the Kronprins Haakon was launched into a floating dock at the yard in Genoa, Italy. The remaining work that couldn’t be done inside the ship-hall due to...
www.arctictoday.com
Jan Mayen is the first of three new coastguard vessels being built by the shipbuilder Vard under a contract worth NOK7.2 billion (USD721 million), awarded in 2018.
With a length of 136 meters and a beam of 22 meters, ...
First-of-class offshore patrol vessel (OPV) on order for the Norwegian Coast Guard Jan Mayen is progressing through its builder's trials and is expected to be
militaryleak.com
The Jan Mayen-class (P6615 Project) vessels are being built by VARD Langsten shipyard in Norway for the Norwegian Coast Guard (Kystvakten).
www.naval-technology.com
Either Canada doesn't know how to cost the ships we are not building,
Or the Scandinavians don't know how to cost the ships they are building.
A suspicious mind might think that Canada wants to be seen to be eating up as much of their budget for as little output as possible
While the Scandinavians seem to be wanting to be seen as producing as much output for the smallest amount of their budget as possible.
A good buddy of mine, a scientist of international repute and often cited, once said "Tell me what number you want. We can prove it."