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France wins 'momentous' $39 bn Australia sub contract
By Martin PARRY
Sydney (AFP) April 26, 2016


Australia submarine contract to create thousands of French jobs: minister
Paris (AFP) April 26, 2016 - French Defence Minister Jean-Yves Le Drian said Tuesday that a contract snagged by France to design and build Australia's next generation of submarines would create thousands of jobs in the country.

"It will mean thousands of jobs in France, it is a very long term contract. We have got married to Australia for 50 years," Le Drian told Europe 1 radio.

France fended off competition from Germany and Japan to win the 34 billion euro (US$39 billion) contract to build 12 new subs in Australia, as well as maintaining the equipment and forming crew.

"Part of this money will be invested in Australia, because Australia wishes -- and we understand this -- to ensure its security and industrial sovereignty. But there is also a significant portion which will return to France," Le Drian said.

The defence minister said he would visit Australia "soon to establish a roadmap" for the implementation of the contract.

Most French jobs to be created as a result of the contract would be in northwestern Cherbourg, where France builds submarines, as well as the cities of Brest, Lorient and Nantes.

French specialist naval defence contractor DCNS had been in competition for the contract with Germany's ThyssenKrupp Marine Systems (TKMS) and a Japanese consortium led by Mitsubishi Heavy Industries.

The contract is the latest boost to France's defence industry, after the country last year secured the first-ever export of its Rafale fighter jets to Egypt and Qatar.

India has also signed an agreement to buy 36 of the fighter jets after years of tortuous negotiations, but the two sides have yet to agree on a price.

France on Tuesday beat off competition from Germany and Japan to win a Aus$50 billion (US$39 billion) contract to design and build Australia's next generation of submarines, a decision Tokyo called "deeply regrettable".

The announcement by Prime Minister Malcolm Turnbull culminates years of planning to replace Australia's ageing diesel and electric-powered Collins Class submarines, which are due to leave service from around 2026.

Turnbull said the 12 new subs to be delivered by French contractor DCNS under Australia's biggest-ever defence contract "will be the most sophisticated naval vessels being built in the world".

"This is a momentous national endeavour," he said at an Adelaide shipyard where the submarines will be constructed.

The deal came as tensions grow between China and Australia's allies Japan and the United States. Beijing is flexing its muscles in the region by developing airstrips and other facilities on reclaimed reefs in the contested South China Sea.

French President Francois Hollande hailed the decision as historic.

"It marks a decisive advance in the strategic partnership between the two countries who will cooperate over 50 years," his office said in a statement.

A Japanese government-backed consortium led by Mitsubishi Heavy Industries, and German group ThyssenKrupp Marine Systems, were also in the running. But Canberra said DCNS was considered "best to meet all of our unique capability requirements".

Japan was the early favourite and last November Tokyo said handing it the contract would help bolster regional security. Some senior US officials, including former deputy secretary of state Richard Armitage, also backed a Japanese build.

For Australia, cooperating with Japan risked angering its biggest trading partner China. There were also reportedly concerns that Tokyo lacked experience in exporting such complex military hardware.

Japanese Defence Minister Gen Nakatani was quoted by a ministry official as telling reporters: "We did our best but the decision was deeply regrettable. We will ask the Australian side to explain."

Asked if the decision to go with France would upset key ally the United States, Turnbull said the choice of contractor was "a sovereign decision for Australia".

David Brewster, from the ANU Strategic and Defence Studies Centre in Canberra, said the choice of France was about "capability, cost and risk reduction over broader strategic factors which favoured the Japanese bid".

"That may give Australia the best submarines, but it also means that we need to give much more active focus to engaging with Japan as our key regional security partner in the Pacific," he added.

"In the long term that is probably of greater importance to us than the submarines."

- Technically complex -

Australian submarines operate across huge areas, from the cold Southern Ocean to the tropics, and so require range and endurance to cope with wide-ranging geographic and oceanographic conditions.

Besides matching the capabilities of the Collins Class, the new generation needed to offer superior sensor performance and stealth capabilities.

The government's preferred combat system and main armament is the heavyweight torpedo jointly developed by the United States and Australia.

DCNS has said it plans to build a 4,500-tonne conventionally-powered version of its 4,700 tonne Barracuda, to be named Shortfin Barracuda. It is described by the company as "the most technically complex artefact in Australia".

It said on its website that the new vessel would be "the recipient of France's most sensitive and protected submarine technology and will be the most lethal conventional submarine ever contemplated".

"Pump jet propulsion means the Shortfin Barracuda can move more quietly than submarines with obsolete propeller technology," DCNS said.

The tender process was also politically sensitive domestically, with Canberra keen to maximise Australian industry involvement and jobs amid fears an off-the-shelf purchase could kill off the domestic shipbuilding industry.

French Defence Minister Jean-Yves Le Drian added Tuesday the contract would also create thousands of jobs in his country.

Facts about Australia's next generation of submarines
Sydney (AFP) April 26, 2016 - Australia on Tuesday announced French naval shipbuilder DCNS as the winning bidder to design and build its next generation of submarines. Here are facts about the Aus$50 million (US$39 million) project:

Why does Australia need new subs?

The country's current fleet of Collins class diesel and electric-powered submarines, which date from the 1990s, are ageing and expensive to maintain. They are scheduled to leave service from 2026, by which time they will be up to 30 years old.

Who was in the running?

A proposal to replace the subs was first floated in 2009 but the tender was eventually narrowed down in February 2015 to three contenders who were invited to enter a competitive evaluation process. They were French defence shipbuilder DCNS, a Japanese government-backed consortium led by Mitsubishi Heavy Industries, and German group ThyssenKrupp Marine Systems.

What were the key requirements?

Australian submarines operate across huge areas, from the cold Southern Ocean to the tropics, and so require range and endurance to cope with the wide geographic and oceanographic conditions they encounter. The new subs needed to have similar capabilities, along with superior sensor performance and stealth, and a cutting-edge combat system. Canberra's preferred combat system and main armament is the heavyweight torpedo jointly developed between the United States and Australia.

What did the bidders propose?

DCNS plans to build a 4,500-tonne conventionally-powered version of its 4,700 tonne Barracuda, to be named Shortfin Barracuda Block 1A. It uses pump-jet propulsion instead of conventional propellers, making it very quiet. The Japanese consortium planned a version of its Soryu Class submarines, while ThyssenKrupp Marine Systems had proposed a submarine known as the Type 216.

Were politics involved?

Yes, there had been concerns the domestic shipbuilding industry would be fatally hurt by Canberra choosing off-the-shelf submarines from an international supplier. As such, it insisted most of the build was in Australia.


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Previous Report
FLOATING STEEL
Race for $39 bn Australian submarine contract hots up
Sydney (AFP) April 22, 2016
The international race between France, Germany and Japan to win a US$39-billion-dollar contract to build new submarines for Australia is reaching a climax with reports a decision could come next week and that Tokyo is all but out. The Australian cabinet's National Security Committee met this week to weigh up the options from France's shipbuilder DCNS, the Australian subsidiary of Germany's T ... read more


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