The Day

Navy awards $9.5 billion contract to Electric Boat for Columbia subs

EB plans to hire up to 18K over next 10 years

- By JULIA BERGMAN Day Staff Writer

The Navy announced Monday it has awarded a $9.5 billion contract to build the first two of 12 planned ballistic missile submarines, known as the Columbia class program, to Electric Boat — work that will take place over the next decade.

The Navy also announced that $869 million will be awarded immediatel­y for “continued design completion, engineerin­g work, and submarine industrial base expansion efforts.” That plus the $9.5 billion constructi­on contract represent a $10.3 billion modificati­on to the $5.1 billion design contract awarded to EB, the prime contractor for the Columbia program, in 2017.

“We stand ready to execute on this critical program and have made extensive preparatio­ns by hiring and training the next generation of skilled shipbuilde­rs, expanding and modernizin­g our facilities and strengthen­ing our supply base,” Kevin Graney, EB’s president, said in a statement Monday after the announceme­nt of the contract.

General Dynamics, EB’s parent company, is investing $1.8 billion in its facilities to support the constructi­on of the Columbia submarines, including a new 200,000-squarefoot building in the Groton shipyard where the submarines will be assembled.

EB plans to hire as many as 18,000 people over the next 10 years to work on the Columbia program and on the continued constructi­on of attack submarines. The company currently has more than 16,000 employees.

U.S. Rep Joe Courtney, D-2nd District, said the commitment by the Navy “sends a very powerful message” not just to EB and Newport News Shipbuildi­ng in Virginia, a sub

contractor for the Columbia program, but to the entire submarine supply chain that “this is locked in,” enabling them to feel confident about making investment­s in hiring and other aspects of their businesses.

“This is now in writing,” he said. “It’s not theoretica­l. It’s a legal commitment by the government.”

But Congress, which just started work on the fiscal year 2021 defense policy bill, still has to appropriat­e the funding for the constructi­on of the two submarines.

Courtney said the money will be appropriat­ed over several years and Congress also needs to authorize the ability for the program to be incrementa­lly funded. As chairman of the seapower subcommitt­ee of the House Armed Services Committee, which has oversight of Navy shipbuildi­ng programs, Courtney will be a major player in the discussion­s on the defense policy and spending bills for next fiscal year. The subcommite­e released its proposals for the fiscal year 2021 defense policy bill Monday and will debate the proposals today.

Courtney said he doesn’t foresee much of a fight in Congress over supporting the Columbia program. Three presidenti­al administra­tions, both Republican and Democrat, have committed to replacing the current, aging fleet of ballistic missile submarines with the new Columbia submarines and there’s been bipartisan support for every funding request in Congress for the Columbia program, he said. Ballistic missile submarines carry the majority of the country’s active nuclear arsenal.

Final assembly coming in ’24

Early constructi­on on the Columbia submarines began in 2017 at the EB’s facility in Quonset Point, R.I. Final assembly and test of the Columbia submarines will take place starting in 2024 at EB’s Groton shipyard.

In a statement, U.S. Sen. Richard Blumenthal, D-Conn., said Monday’s announceme­nt is “welcome news” and recognizes the “unmatched skills and dedication” of EB’s workforce.

“Our nation is counting on Electric Boat and its suppliers to produce the Columbia on time, and on budget, as they have done other sub classes. Our national defense depends on our sub makers’ time-honored excellence,” he said.

U.S. Sen. Chris Murphy, D-Conn., applauded the news in a statement saying the “Navy’s investment today in the future of Connecticu­t manufactur­ing will provide more highly skilled jobs for our state.”

“I’ll continue to use my seat on the Appropriat­ions Committee to keep these wins coming,” Murphy said.

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