PLAN Fleet supply vessels

FORBIN

Lieutenant General
Registered Member
Type 903 and 904 are different, i think important mention it :

Type 904 (and its successor Type 904A) are frequently but erroneously referred by many as underway replenishment ships. However, this is incorrect because these ships are designed as general stores issue ships, and they lack the gentries and transfer stations, and thus are not capable of performing any underway replenishment duties.

Type 904 and Type 904A are intended to supply garrisons on offshore islands without any port facilities.
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Ofc Type 903/A are true replenishment ships.
 
Last edited:

Blitzo

Lieutenant General
Staff member
Super Moderator
Registered Member
It is worth noting that 904/A, while unable to resupply ships conventionally like AORs, they can do limited refuelling of ships via "trailing line" method, but only one at a time.

They can of course also do VERTREP
 

lcloo

Captain
Any one has any idea why the latest type 904B is numbered with prefix of 9 (961) while the rest of the replenishment/ supply ships are numbered with prefix 8, including sister ship type 904 which is numbered 888.

The impression that I have is that the prefix 9 is for amphibious operation ships. Could the role of 961 is now redefined differently from ship No. 888?
 

Jeff Head

General
Registered Member
Type 904B ship
So, there are now two Type 904s, one Type 904A, and then now this Type 904B.

Seems like the biggest improvement of the Type 904B is the addition of the helicopter hanger. Though I note that they also replaced the twin gun mountss with the newer H/PJ15 30mm gun mounts.

Aren't there two more 904Bs under construction? I wonder how many of them they will build?
 

FORBIN

Lieutenant General
Registered Member
China’s navy expands its replenishment-at-sea capability

China's navy, from its founding in 1949 to the 1996 Taiwan Strait crisis, was focused on preventing Taiwan from becoming formally independent. This goal did not require long-distance operations that would require an at-sea resupply capability. Now, however, Beijing has declared its status as a global maritime power.
Amateurs, it is said, talk about tactics, but professionals study logistics. The leaders of China's navy, the People's Liberation Army Navy (PLAN), apparently have finally understood the vital role played by logistics in any effective military force. The PLAN's current modernisation program may be dated to the mid-1990s, but until recently it failed to include expanding replenishment-at-sea (RAS) capabilities.

Before the turn of the century, the PLAN included just one Soviet-built oiler and two relatively limited Fuqing-class oilers for its entire fleet. The ex-Soviet Komandarm Fedko-class replenishment ship began construction in the Ukraine in 1989, was purchased by China in 1992, and joined the PLAN in 1996 as the Qinghai-Hu (AO 885). It is a large ship, displacing 37,000 tonnes, making it almost as big as the most numerous US oilers currently operating. The Qinghai-Hu has four replenishment stations and China added a small flight deck and hangar capable of operating one Z-8 transport helicopter. The ship is reportedly underpowered, with an engineering plant based on just one diesel engine, but has supported ships deploying to Guam and on Gulf of Aden counter-piracy operations.
The two Fuqing-class ships that joined the PLAN in 1980-1982 displace just 21,000 tonnes. They are equipped with four refueling stations, but have minimal stores replenishment capability. These ships have a small flight deck but no hangar, severely limiting their ability to operate helicopters.
China's lack of emphasis on underway refueling capability before 2005 is highlighted by the fact that Beijing actually built four Fuqing-class ships in the 1980s, but sold one of them to Pakistan in 1988, while assigning the fourth to commercial service.
But additional oilers joined the PLAN in 2005, when two Fuchi-class ships were commissioned. The Fuchi oilers are the first modern RAS ships in China's navy; two improved versions of this class joined the fleet in 2014. This has meant that the PLAN counter-piracy task groups deployed to the Gulf of Aden and beyond have depended almost entirely on the first two Fuchi-class oilers; they were for the most part tasked with 'port and starboard' deployments, assigned away from homeport six of every 12 months.
The improved Fuchi-class vessels now in the PLAN have four refueling and two stores transfer stations, providing the capability to deliver significant quantities of dry goods and ordnance at sea. They thus should be classified as a replenishment oilier or 'AOR,' rather than the standard 'AO'. This is the class of RAS ship required to support long-range operations, although their relatively small size – 22,000 tonnes – means that they require frequent replenishment from relay tankers.
The PLAN in 2015 includes seven RAS ships. At least one additional Fuchi-class AOR is preparing to join the fleet and the PLAN should be expected to budget for additional ships of this class, or an improved version.
PLAN RAS ships have proven their capability at both astern and alongside refueling. Additionally, they all have flight decks capable of helicopter operations, though only the Qinghai-Hu and the Fuchi-class ships are equipped with the hangars necessary to embark Z-8 logistics support helicopters.
The Chinese navy's experiences in long-range deployments has increased significantly since December 2008, when the first counter-piracy task group departed for the Gulf of Aden. The past seven years of 'far seas' operations have brought home to Beijing the fleet's need to be logistically self-supporting if it is to be an effective tool of statecraft and able to support China's national security priorities at sea. These include disputes in the East and South China Seas, of course, but extend to defending the global trade routes on which China's economic well-being depends.
China's recognition of the importance of logistics support for the PLAN's far seas operations is also recognised in its move to establish a relatively permanent
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. Establishing an overseas logistics system will support, rather than take the place, of RAS ships.
The increasing number of RAS ships entering China's fleet will also allow greater employment of the PLAN's aircraft carriers, the first of which, Liaoning, will within the next decade be joined by at least the first indigenously built Chinese flattop. Carrier operations require the near-constant presence of RAS ships, primarily to replenish aircraft fuel and ordnance, as well as being on-hand to refuel escorting destroyers and frigates.
The PLAN in 2015 has an adequate RAS force to support continuous far seas operations. Increased defence funding and support illustrate Beijing's recognition of the need for improved RAS capability. Additional replenishment ships will be built to better support both those operations as well as future aircraft carrier operations.

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asif iqbal

Lieutenant General
The numbers of tankers has reached double digits

I don't doubt that China can now easily mange two flotilla escort missions simultaneously on a permanent presence like they have had over the last 7 years in the Gulf of Aden

They have the FFG, DDG and the tankers
 
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