Canadian Military News, Reports, Data, etc.

Nov 4, 2016
as Canada Widens the Aperture in Search Of New Warships

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now Canada launches design competition for Canadian Surface Combatant fleet
The Canadian government has started one of the country’s largest and most complex procurement projects by announcing the start of a design competition for the Canadian Surface Combatant (CSC) fleet.

Irving Shipbuilding, the prime contractor for the project, released a Request for Proposal (RFP) for pre-qualified companies.

As it was announced earlier in the year, the future combatants will be based on an existing warship design which will result in an accelerated completion of the program.

The selected design team will work with the Canadian government and Irving Shipbuilding Inc. to design and construct the CSC ships.

According to the government, the design is expected to be selected by summer 2017.

“The Canadian Surface Combatant is the largest and most complex procurement project in recent history. This Request for Proposal was carefully developed in consultation with industry and highlights how our government is implementing innovative and proven procurement approaches to simplify the competitive process, increase job stability, and deliver the ships we need, sooner,” Canadian Minister of Public Services and Procurement Judy M. Foote said.

The Canadian Surface Combatant project will replace Canada’s aging Iroquois-class destroyers and Halifax-class frigates. Up to 15 ships are scheduled to be built after the Arctic and Offshore Patrol Ships are complete in the early 2020s.

The first CSC ship is anticipated to be delivered in the mid-2020s.
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TerraN_EmpirE

Tyrant King
Canadian Army successfully tests GPS anti-jamming system for its artillery
DAVID PUGLIESE, OTTAWA CITIZEN
More from David Pugliese, Ottawa Citizen
Published on: January 11, 2017 | Last Updated: January 11, 2017 11:54 AM EST

The Canadian Army says its artillery gunners have run successful live fire tests on a new device designed to protect Global Positioning Systems from jamming.

The tests of the GPS Anti-Jam Technology, created by NovAtel Inc. of Calgary, were conducted in late October at CFB Shilo.

The Army’s M777 howitzers use three GPS-based systems, the service noted. The NovAtel equipment – known as CAJT – was tested to see if could prevent jamming devices from interfering with those M777 GPS systems.

The Army had acquired 10 GAJTs but there are no plans to purchase more in the future.

In late November, NovAtel announced that GAJT was being trialed on the M777C1 Howitzer to demonstrate its robustness under the most demanding conditions. “GAJT protects GPS-based navigation and precise timing receivers from intentional jamming and accidental interference,” the company stated in a news release. “It is a null-forming antenna system which ensures satellite signals necessary to compute position and time are always available.”

CAJT is a Commercial Off-the-Shelf (COTS) product, and comes in versions suitable for land, sea, fixed installations and smaller platforms such as UAVs, the firm noted.
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Nov 23, 2016
also this: Canada to Buy Super Hornets as F-35 Hits Setbacks
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related:
Canada Wants Super Hornet Jets by 2019, But Cost Still Undecided
Canada is hoping to receive the first of its Super Hornet fighter jets by 2019 but still has to hammer out a price as well as industrial benefits, according to Canadian government officials.

Procurement Minister Judy Foote, of the Liberal Party, said negotiations are underway with the US government and Boeing for 18 Super Hornets, but details still have to be worked out. “We’re looking to get the best deal that we possibly can, looking at price, looking at capability, looking at economic benefits,” Foote, whose department is overseeing the purchase, told the House of Commons on Jan. 31.

Canadian Defence Minister Harjit Sajjan announced Nov. 22 that Canada would buy the planes in a sole-source deal. He noted the government had been forced to proceed with the urgent acquisition because a capability gap had emerged with the current fleet of CF-18 fighters. With those aging aircraft, Canada cannot meet its defense commitments to North American Aerospace Defense Command, NATO and others.

Conservative Party Member of Parliament Pierre Paul-Hus called on the federal government to reveal the true cost of the purchase, noting that a CBC News report put the cost at between CAN $5 billion and CAN $7 billion (US $3.8 billion and US $5.3 billion, respectively).

Foote declined, adding that it would be irresponsible to “negotiate in public” before the contract was finalized.

But Sajjan cast doubt on the figures. “There is no right-now price tag,” he told reporters Jan. 31. “Once we have gone through the right process, have all the necessary information, then we’ll have an actual price tag.”
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JudgeKing

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Canada’s multibillion-dollar project to buy a replacement for its frigates is so poorly structured that one of the world’s largest shipbuilders has warned the Liberal government it won’t bid unless changes are made.

A number of other ship designers are also considering backing out because of the problems plaguing the project to spend more than $26 billion on a new fleet of Canadian Surface Combatants.

Italian shipbuilder Fincantieri sent Procurement Minister Judy Foote a detailed outline of why the acquisition process is in trouble, warning that, “Canada is exposed to unnecessary cost uncertainty,” according to the Oct. 24, 2016, letter obtained by Postmedia.

There is also a belief in industry circles that the federal government is favouring a design from the British firm BAE, which is offering the Royal Canadian Navy the Type 26 warship.

Foote had previously said only proven warship designs would be considered to reduce the risk of problems. But the Liberal government retreated on that and will now accept a Type 26 bid, even though the vessel has not been built yet.

Preparing a bid for the Canadian Surface Combatant or CSC will cost companies between $10 million and $20 million. If they see their chances of winning a contract as slim, firms could decide not to enter the competition, further narrowing the choices for the Liberals on a new vessel for the navy.

In its letter to Foote, Fincantieri pointed out that the current structure of the procurement limits the role of the warship designers to simply providing engineering and design services to Irving, which will then build the vessels. In return for that small role, the companies are being asked to provide valuable intellectual property to their designs, access to their established supply chains and transfer technology to Irving and Canada.

In addition, the warship designers have to provide a warranty on the integration of technology into their designs, even though they are not responsible for buying that equipment.

The project as it is structured now leaves little incentive for warship designers and builders such as Fincantieri, which has designed and constructed ships for the navies of Italy, the United Arab Emirates, India, Iraq, Malta and Malaysia.

“If the current proposed procurement approach is retained, then it will be very difficult for Fincantieri to obtain approval to bid from its board,” the company warned Foote.

Fincantieri declined to comment on the letter.

The government announced Oct. 27, 2016, that Irving Shipbuilding, its prime contractor, had issued a request for bids from companies on the design of the new ships.

The firms have until April 27 to provide those bids, which must not only include the design but details of teaming arrangements with Canadian firms.

Fincantieri instead proposed to Foote that a fixed-price competition be held, with the winning shipyard building the first three warships, complete with Canadian systems, and delivering those to Irving. The ships would then be run through evaluations and after any technical issues were worked out, Irving would begin to build the remaining 12 vessels.

That way work on the new ships could get underway faster, the vessels will be fully tested, and the risk to the Canadian taxpayer significantly reduced. The “winning team can be held accountable for the overall performance of the finished ship,” Fincantieri added.

“Companies are also given incentive to make long-term investment in Canada because they can expect to get a fair return from the greater value of their work responsibility,” Foote was told.

The minister responded by suggesting Fincantieri approach Irving with its concerns. Foote’s response further worried the Italian shipbuilder as it had believed the Canadian government and its ministers were ultimately responsible for the program and the spending of billions of tax dollars.

Foote’s spokeswoman Annie Trépanier did not comment specifically on Fincantieri’s letter but repeated previous government comments about how industry was consulted extensively and those shaped the final documentation used to solicit bids. An independent fairness monitor is also involved in the process, she added.

Irving spokesman Sean Lewis said the contract for the CSC design will be awarded to an existing warship design that best fits the requirements of Canada’s navy. “I can assure you that the procurement process is being conducted in a way that ensures that all bidders are treated equally, with no unfair advantage given to any individual bidder, and under observation of an independent fairness monitor,” he added.

The surface combatants will be the backbone of the Royal Canadian Navy’s future fleet. The project has seen repeated delays, with the navy at one time expecting the ships by 2015. The first vessel is now planned for sometime in the early 2020s.

Initial cost estimates for the project were set at $26 billion. But that could potentially rise to more than $40 billion, depending on the number of ships constructed.
 

JudgeKing

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Why would this be a holdup?

Fincantieri could simply allow Irving to produce one of their existing designs on a license, or it could let its engineers be subcontracted to build a clean-sheet design.

Fincantieri's concerns about how this program is setup are actually rather legitimate.

Whichever company wins the CSC program has to essentially surrender all their proprietary design data to Irving while not getting any say in the systems integration or participating in anyway in the actual construction of the ships. However, the winning contractor will remain liable for all these things they have zero control over. Oh and if they're not happy about it they can take their concerns up with Irving who stands to profit from this arrangement.
 

SinoSoldier

Colonel
Fincantieri's concerns about how this program is setup are actually rather legitimate.

Whichever company wins the CSC program has to essentially surrender all their proprietary design data to Irving while not getting any say in the systems integration or participating in anyway in the actual construction of the ships. However, the winning contractor will remain liable for all these things they have zero control over. Oh and if they're not happy about it they can take their concerns up with Irving who stands to profit from this arrangement.

Sounds like the dealbreaker for Fincantieri was their obligation to insure the end-product even though they would not be actively participating in the construction of the vessels. I'm not sure if other shipbuilding firms have voiced similar concerns, but if they have, Irving would likely have to compromise.

A possible solution (as Fincantieri had suggested) is to have the first few units built by Fincantieri and then transfer the construction phase over to Irving; this would decrease the chance of any integration "failure".
 
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