The Day

Panel looks to boost submarines

Lawmakers ask Navy to assess ability of EB, partners to increase Virginia boat constructi­on

- By JULIA BERGMAN Day Staff Writer

Federal lawmakers are directing the Navy to assess whether the industrial base, namely Electric Boat and its shipbuildi­ng partner, Newport News, can sustain a two-a-year production rate of Virginia- class attack submarines over the next 13 years.

Under current plans, 21 Virgina submarines will be built from 201730. Lawmakers are asking the Navy to look at the possibilit­y of building 28 during that time frame.

The 2017 National Defense Authorizat­ion Act, passed by the U.S. House Armed Services Committee early Thursday, directs the Navy to submit a report to congressio­nal defense committees by March 1, 2017. The report is to include:

“The capacity of the submarine shipyards and vendor base and factors limiting submarine production;

The viability of adding (attack submarines) to Navy shipbuildi­ng plans;

The impact of increasing attack submarine production during the 20172030 timeframe on Navy undersea force levels;

The impact of increasing attack submarine production on overall Virginia and Ohio Replacemen­t program costs and workload profiles; and

Potential efficienci­es and economies that might be achieved in increasing (attack submarine) production.”

Today, the Navy’s fleet of attack submarines consists of 52 boats; its strategic requiremen­t is 48.

Under the Navy’s 30-year shipbuildi­ng plan, the number of attack submarines will fall below the Navy’s requiremen­t in 2025, and reach a low of 41 in 2030.

Meanwhile, several top-ranking Navy officials have testified in Congress in recent months that the U.S. needs more attack submarines.

They’ve pointed to a shortage of submarines in the Asia-Pacific, the strain on the submarine force given current demands on undersea warfare, and increased submarine activity by Russia and China.

Under current plans, 21 Virgina submarines will be built from 2017 to 2030. Lawmakers are asking the Navy to look at the possibilit­y of building 28 during that time frame.

Bryan Clark, a senior fellow with the Center for Strategic and Budgetary Assessment­s, said that falling below the requiremen­t of 48 attack submarines, put in place in 2010, could mean “some of the intelligen­ce gathering or crisis response type missions don’t get done. It could result in gaps in intelligen­ce.”

Current Navy plans call for building one Virginia- class boat each year that an Ohioclass replacemen­t submarine is built, starting in 2021.

But the Navy is now proposing to build two Virginia boats in 2021 in addition to an Ohio replacemen­t boat to mitigate the expected decline in the size of the attack submarine force.

The Ohio replacemen­t boats, which will replace the aging fleet of “boomers” built in the 1980s and 1990s, will be two-and-a-half times the size of the Virginias.

The Navy currently estimates the Ohio replacemen­t boats will cost $ 5.2 billion each, but is working to reduce that to $4.9 billion. Non-Navy estimates have been higher.

Virginia boats cost about $2.7 billion each.

Starting in 2019, the Virginia boats will be built with an added 80- to 85-foot-long section called the Virginia Payload Module, which is intended to provide additional Tomahawk missile capacity.

Since 2011, EB and Newport News, partners in the Virginia program, have built two Virginia boats a year.

EB has been beefing up its labor force to meet growing workforce demand, led by the Virginia program now and the Ohio replacemen­t program in the future.

To ensure concurrent building of the Virginia boats and Ohio replacemen­ts, EB’s parent corporatio­n, General Dynamics, is expected to make a large investment in EB’s facilities in Connecticu­t and Rhode Island.

EB President Jeffrey Geiger has said that over the next 10 years, General Dynamics is aligning itself to make a more than $1.5 billion investment in those two states.

The 2017 National Defense Authorizat­ion Act, which sets the policies and guidelines for how defense appropriat­ions will be spent in 2017, is continued good news for EB.

It authorizes two Virginia submarines a year, and restores $85 million in advanced procuremen­t funding for the submarines planned for 2019. That funding was cut in the president’s 2017 budget proposal.

The legislatio­n also authorizes continued developmen­t of the Virginia Payload Module.

As for the Ohio- class replacemen­t program, $1.4 billion is authorized for developmen­t and design work, and $773 million in procuremen­t funding for the first Ohio replacemen­t boat in 2021.

The legislatio­n shifts the $773 million from the Navy’s regular shipbuildi­ng account to the National Sea-Based Deterrence Fund, which U.S. Rep. Joe Courtney, D-2nd District, has advocated for as a way to pay for the costly Ohio-replacemen­t program outside of the Navy’s regular shipbuildi­ng budget.

The proposal next goes to the full House for considerat­ion.

 ?? JESSICA HILL/AP PHOTO, FILE ?? Shipyard employees at General Dynamics Electric Boat on July 30, 2015, work on the submarine Illinois in Groton.
JESSICA HILL/AP PHOTO, FILE Shipyard employees at General Dynamics Electric Boat on July 30, 2015, work on the submarine Illinois in Groton.

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