Times Colonist

Ottawa ordered to postpone $60-billion warship deal

- LEE BERTHIAUME

OTTAWA — The $60-billion effort to build new warships for Canada’s navy is facing another delay after a trade tribunal ordered the federal government to postpone a final contract for the design.

The federal government announced last month that U.S. defence giant Lockheed Martin beat out two rivals in the long and extremely sensitive competitio­n to design replacemen­ts for the navy’s frigates and destroyers.

Lockheed’s design was based on a new class of frigates for the British navy called the Type 26. The company is now negotiatin­g a final contract with the government and Halifax-based Irving Shipbuildi­ng, which will build the ships.

But one of the other two bidders, Alion Science and Technology of Virginia, has asked the Canadian Internatio­nal Trade Tribunal and the Federal Court to quash the government’s decision.

It says Lockheed’s design did not meet the navy’s stated requiremen­ts and should have been disqualifi­ed. Two of those requiremen­ts related to the ship’s speed, Alion alleged, while the third related to the number of crew berths.

Tuesday, the tribunal released a one-page statement ordering the government to “postpone the awarding of any contract ... until the Tribunal determines the validity of the herein complaint.”

Alion has argued that the rules of the competitio­n required the federal procuremen­t department and Irving, which helped evaluate the bids, to reject Lockheed’s bid because of its non-compliance. Instead, they selected it as the preferred design.

The company also maintains that its own proposed design, which is based on a Dutch frigate, met the navy’s requiremen­ts. It has said that it has received no informatio­n about why Lockheed’s bid was selected over its own, despite requests for answers.

Lockheed Martin and Public Services and Procuremen­t Canada declined to comment because the matter is before the tribunal and federal court. The third company in the competitio­n, Spanish firm Navantia, has remained largely silent on Lockheed’s successful bid.

The government is planning to build 15 new warships starting in the next three or four years, which will replace Canada’s aging Halifax-class frigates and retired Iroquois-class destroyers. They are to be the navy’s backbone for most of the century.

The bid by Lockheed, which also builds the F-35 stealth fighter and other military equipment, was contentiou­s from the moment the design competitio­n was launched in October 2016.

The federal government had originally said it wanted a “mature design” for its new warship fleet, which was widely interprete­d as meaning a vessel that has already been built and used by another navy. But the first Type 26 frigates are only now being built by the British government and the design has not yet been tested in full operation.

There were also complaints from industry that the deck was stacked in the Type 26’s favour because of Irving’s connection­s with British shipbuilde­r BAE, which originally designed the Type 26 and partnered with Lockheed to offer the ship to Canada.

Irving also worked with BAE in 2016 on an ultimately unsuccessf­ul bid to maintain the Canadian navy’s new Arctic patrol vessels and supply ships. Irving and Ottawa have repeatedly rejected such complaints, saying they conducted numerous consultati­ons with industry and used a variety of firewalls and safeguards to ensure the choice was completely fair. But industry insiders had long warned that Lockheed’s selection as the top bidder would spark lawsuits.

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