Australia launches first Air Warfare Destroyer
Xinhua, May 23, 2015 Adjust font size:
Australia has launched HMAS Hobart, the first of three destroyers, alongside the Port River wharf in Adelaide on Saturday, a milestone for the country's Air Warfare Destroyer (AWD) program, Australia's Department of Defense said in a statement.
"This is a key achievement for the program and a big step towards the delivery of three highly capable warships to the Royal Australian Navy," the statement said.
Defense Minister Kevin Andrews said Hobart is fully consolidated with substantial combat and platform systems.
He said that the second destroyer, Brisbane, is now in an advanced state of fit-out with more than half of the blocks already consolidated on the hardstand.
"Once fully operational, the warships will have a combination of great endurance, offensive and defensive weapons, flexibility and versatility," he said.
The AWD program is one of the largest and most complex defence projects ever undertaken in Australia and has been instrumental in building a strong shipbuilding capability in Australia.
"It is an example of how a skilled Australian workforce working hand-in-hand with international partners can ultimately deliver warships that will have a combination of great endurance, offensive and defensive weapons, flexibility and versatility," the minister said.
The Hobart project has involved an Australian workforce of some 3, 000 people. This includes the AWD Alliance made up of lead shipbuilder ASC, mission systems integrator Raytheon Australia and the Department of Defence, including the Royal Australian Navy.
The program has also been supported by the United States Navy, Navantia, Lockheed Martin, Forgacs, BAE Systems and MG Engineering.
With Hobart in the water, the second destroyer, Brisbane, can soon take its place on the hardstand to undergo final block consolidation, and the keel for the third destroyer, Sydney, will be laid.
The AWD Alliance can now focus on ship completion and system commissioning for Hobart, which will be followed by sea trials next year.
The government has finalized a forensic audit to quantify the level of cost and schedule overruns in the Air Warfare Destroyer Project. The most reliable estimates now suggest that the project will require an additional 1.2 billion AU dollars (939 million U.S. dollars) to be completed, which will have to be funded at the expense of other Defence acquisitions. Endi