Portsmouth News

First carrier strike group ship’s return

RFA Tidespring fuels excitement at HMS Queen Elizabeth’s near arrival

- By TOM COTTERILL Defence correspond­ent tom.cotterill@thenews.co.uk

THE first of the Royal Navy’s carrier strike group deployed to the Far East has returned to the UK – signalling the imminent arrival of HMS Queen Elizabeth to Portsmouth.

RFA Tidespring sailed back into her home in Portland having spent months keeping the Portsmouth-based carrier and her escort warships fuelled.

The ship is the first of the UK carrier strike group – touted by the navy as the most powerful naval force in Europe – to arrive home following seven months at sea.

Hopes are now high that the navy’s £3.2bn flagship, Queen Elizabeth, will make her triumphant return to Portsmouth before Christmas.

The Royal Navy has not yet confirmed when the mighty carrier will arrive in Portsmouth. However, the milestone event is expected to take place in a matter of weeks.

Tanker Tidespring, along with her Royal Fleet Auxiliary sister RFA Fort Victoria, kept the task group – nine ships, one submarine, 32 aircraft and more than 3700 personnel – supplied with everything from fuel to ammunition and food during their 49,000 nautical-mile mission.

Tidespring carried out an impressive 111 replenishm­ent at sea tasks – one every two days while away – supplying fuel and stores to ships from Canada, Denmark, France, India, Italy, Japan, the Netherland­s, New Zealand, South Korea and the United States in addition to the UK.

Captain Karl Woodfield said: ‘As Tidespring sights UK landfall for the first time in eight months the ship’s company are hugely proud of what they have achieved in supporting the first global deployment of the carrier strike group.

‘Tidespring has provided fuel and stores support from the Northwest of Scotland to the Pacific Ocean during the deployment completing 111 replenishm­ents of fuel and stores at sea. This has enabled the UK carrier strike group to operate at a range and scale from the UK not seen in a generation.

‘I am particular­ly proud of my ships company which includes RFA, Royal Marines and Royal Navy personnel who have worked tirelessly during a global pandemic to deliver operationa­l success.

‘We have been in the vanguard of ships which has made the inaugural carrier strike group global deployment a success.

‘A brilliant sustained effort by my ship’s company.’

Tidespring steamed 43,136 nautical miles during her mission, having departed from the UK in May.

She spent 176 days attached to the carrier strike group, spending 136 days at sea. She filled up ships with the equivalent of 23 Olympicsiz­ed swimming pools of fuel and fed more than 14 million litres of aviation fuel to keep the task group ticking.

 ?? ?? BRILLIANT RFA Tidespring returns from the Carrier Strike Group deployment
BRILLIANT RFA Tidespring returns from the Carrier Strike Group deployment

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