Chapter 2
Proposed acquisition of two replenishment ships
2.1
The current fleet of Royal Australian Navy (RAN) replenishment ships
consists of just two ships. One, HMAS Success, is smaller than most
contemporaries, and is approaching her 30th birthday. The other, HMAS Sirius,
is a converted civilian tanker but with limited capability.[1]
The two vessels form the Afloat Support Force, which services the rest of the
fleet by providing operational support in the form of fuel, stores, ammunition and
equipment. This assistance allows the RAN to extend its reach and endurance. With
Australia's maritime operations covering a vast area, it is essential that
Australian naval vessels can be refuelled and replenished at sea by afloat support
ships.[2]
The ships also provide logistics support to land operations.
2.2
In this chapter, the committee provides background to the government's decision
that the Navy needed to replace its existing replenishment vessels.
HMAS Sirius
2.3
In 2000, the government announced plans to replace HMAS Westralia,
a converted commercial tanker, when it was due to complete its service in 2009,
with a purpose built support ship. New maritime pollution rules and regulations
introduced in the early part of the last decade, however, meant that HMAS Westralia
would have to be decommissioned three years earlier than scheduled. The
regulatory changes were based on the principle that 'singled-hulled vessels
such as Westralia posed an unacceptable risk to the environment if their
single skin hulls were breached' and should therefore be replaced by
double-hulled tankers.[3]
The project brought forward
to replace HMAS Westralia was planned to start around 2004–05.[4]
2.4
Its replacement, HMAS Sirius, was built originally as a
double-hulled commercial product tanker, MV Delos, and purchased by the
Commonwealth Government on 3 June 2004 for A$52 million. The ship underwent
modification for underway replenishment and, in addition, had a flight deck
fitted for helicopter operations.[5]
The ship was commissioned in September 2006. The purchase and conversion of the
commercial oiler was, according to an ANAO report:
...a striking example of the efficiency that can be gained from
the purchase of 'off-the-shelf' products where that is appropriate for our
capability requirements.[6]
2.5
The conversion of the vessel also provided 'a good example of achieving
results in partnership with industry'.[7]
Although only eight years old and with the capacity to carry 37,000 tonnes of
cargo, the ship has limited capability.[8]
HMAS Success
2.6
The government also made known its intention in 2000 to replace the
second support ship, HMAS Success, when it reached the end of its
service life in 2015,
with another ship of the same class. HMAS Success is an Auxiliary Oiler
Replenishment (AOR) vessel of 18,000 tonne fully loaded and 157.2 metres in
length. Based on the French 'Durance' Class Ship, HMAS Success was built
in Australia by Cockatoo Dockyard Pty Ltd at Sydney, New South Wales.
2.7
The project to construct the ship ran into problems due to a protracted
dispute between the Commonwealth and the Vickers Cockatoo Dockyard Pty Ltd over
the drawings and specifications contained in the ‘Production Package’ (PP),
which resulted in cost and time overrun. There was evidence that the Department
of Defence significantly underestimated the extent of the differences between
the original building specifications and the French PP. A 1983 Auditor-General's
report criticised the department for failing to ensure that the French company
had the PP needed for an Australian build. The construction of HMAS Success
also suffered from industrial relations disputes and skills shortages.
2.8
HMAS Success was launched from its slipway on 3 March 1984 and
commissioned into the RAN on 23 April 1986. She is the largest ship built in
Australia for Navy and also the largest ever built in the port of Sydney.[9]
The vessel is capable of 'day and night Replenishment at Sea (RAS) to ships
alongside and concurrently by her embarked helicopter to other ships in company
via Vertical Replenishment (VERTREP)'. The ship is fitted with four main RAS
stations, two of which have dual functions and can be used to transfer either
fuel or solid cargo.[10]
According to Navy, HMAS Success:
...enables RAN fleet units to operate with a greater degree of
flexibility and independence from shore support than has previously been
possible from other RAN sources.[11]
2.9
In 2000, when the government announced plans to replace its then two
replenishment vessels, its strong preference was to build the replacement vessels
in Australia.[12]
Since 2000, no definite steps had been taken to replace HMAS Success until
recently.
Strategic needs and analysis stage
2.10
The Defence White Paper is a key strategic document that presents the
government's long-term strategic forecast and commitments for Defence including
its future capability. The most recent White Paper (2013) outlined the
capabilities that the ADF would need in the coming years to address strategic
challenges. It announced that, as part of government's commitment to delivering
core ADF capabilities,
the capability provided by the supply ships HMAS Sirius and HMAS Success
would be replaced at the first possible opportunity. The White Paper
noted:
Resupplying our deployed ships is an essential capability
given the size of the area over which our naval forces operate and the extended
periods they may be required to remain at sea.[13]
2.11
At that time, the Spanish Navy vessel Cantabria was assisting
Australia's afloat support requirements while HMAS Success was in refit.
According to the White Paper, this operational experience, together with
other information and activity, would contribute to Defence's understanding of
relevant capabilities as options for the replacement ships. Defence indicated
that it would examine options for local, hybrid and overseas build or the
leasing of an existing vessel.[14]
The White Paper explained:
The range of procurement options will be considered by
Government including the leasing of an existing vessel, the construction of an
existing design, either wholly built overseas in the parent shipyard, other
partial construction in both parent shipyard and Australia, as in the Landing
Helicopter Dock project, or a full Australian build. A combination of options
may be considered for the construction of the two vessels.[15]
2.12
The White Paper provided a broad picture of the capability Defence
intended to acquire from the purchase of the two vessels. This statement was
then translated into a more concrete proposal in the Defence Capability Plan
(DCP) 2012. The DCP is a 'classified and costed 10-year detailed development
plan for Australia's military capabilities (including workforce requirements)'.
The document:
...lists the rolling program of major capital investment
projects that meet the capability objectives and priorities that fall from the Defence
White Paper (or subsequent strategic updates) and the DPG [Defence Planning
Guidance].[16]
2.13
Government approval for entry of projects into the DCP provides 'the
foundation for subsequent capability work in Defence'.[17]
Defence also publishes
a public version of the DCP designed to:
...provide industry with a synopsis of the projects including:
confirmed scope; background; indicative schedule; Australian Industry
opportunities; cost banding; and points of contact. The format of this Public
DCP also introduces stakeholders to the concept of Program and Sub-Program
management.[18]
2.14
The 2012 DCP included a costed and scheduled plan for the acquisition of
the two replenishment ships, which entered the plan as project SEA 1654, Phase
3.
Project—SEA 1654, Phase 3
2.15
SEA 1654 is the project that is to replace the two existing RAN afloat
support capability. As noted earlier, this capability is necessary to sustain
deployed maritime forces at greater distances and for longer periods away from
the Australian operating base. There have been a number of phases to this
project, which include much earlier ones that have been completed or cancelled:
-
Phase 1 Project Definition Study (completed)
-
Phase 2A HMAS Westralia interim replacement by HMAS Sirius
(completed)
-
Phase 2B replacement of the interim capability originally
envisaged under Phase 2A, with a more permanent vessel (cancelled).
2.16
Phase 3 of this project is to replace both HMAS Success and HMAS Sirius
with a single class of Combat Support Ship to sustain deployed maritime forces.
According to the scope of the project:
The ships will be proven-design, double-hulled naval vessels
that are compliant with the International Maritime Organisation (IMO)
International Convention for the Prevention of Pollution from Ships (MARPOL).[19]
2.17
The 2012 Defence Capability Plan set out the following schedule for
Phase 3:
-
First Pass Approval FY 2012–13 to FY
2013–14
-
Year-of-Decision FY 2014–15 to FY
2017–18
-
Initial Materiel Release FY 2018–19 to FY
2020–21
-
Initial Operational Capability FY 2018–19 to FY 2022–23[20]
Australian Industry Capability
Considerations
2.18
An Australian Industry Capability Plan is required for each project
procurement where the estimated value of the procurement is equal to or greater
than $20 million or where the procurement will impact on a Priority Industry
Capability (PIC). The Capability Plan indicated that it was likely that Phase 3
would require Australian industry capability, priority industry capability,
strategic industry capability and global supply chain.[21]
Acquisition
2.19
The Capability Plan stated that Phase 3 industry requirements would be
guided 'by the information gained through the Risk Reduction Studies' and that
'market solicitation would commence following first pass to obtain estimated
cost, capability and schedule information'. It noted further that as the project
progresses,
the market solicitation 'may include the release of a request for proposal or
request for tender 'to obtain more robust information'.[22]
The DCP records the acquisition cost at between $1b and $2b.
2.20
According to the Defence Capability Development Handbook, each
capability system option proposed for first pass consideration 'must be
accompanied by a description of how the capability is to be acquired and its
support implemented'.[23] At this stage, the government allocates funds from the Capital Investment
Program
to enable the options that it has endorsed to be investigated in detail with an
emphasis on cost and risk analysis.[24]
2.21
On 6 June 2014, the government announced that it had given first pass
approval for Defence to conduct a limited competitive tender process for the
replacement of the two replenishment ships.[25]
The restricted tender competition would be between Navantia of Spain and Daewoo
Shipbuilding and Marine Engineering of South Korea. First pass approval means
that the government now has the opportunity to 'narrow the alternatives being
examined by Defence to meet an agreed capability gap'.[26]
2.22
At the time, the Minister noted the size of these ships and suggested
that currently Australia was not in a position to manufacture vessels 20,000
tonnes and above and hence the ships would be produced either in Spain or in
South Korea.[27]
2.23
In the following chapters, the committee considers the arguments for and
against the government's decision to undertake a limited tender and to confine
it
to two overseas shipyards.
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