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Germany triples submarine order to six boats in joint buy with Norway
Dec 19, 2024, 04:16 PM
Picture: ThyssenKruppMarine SystemsPARIS — Germany will buy four more submarines
from ThyssenKrupp Marine Systems to increase the number of boats to six, part
of a joint purchase with Norway that may also see the Nordic country increase
its order, according to the German defense ministry.
Norway
plans to
buy an additional two submarines on top of four already ordered, the Bundeswehr
procurement office said in a statement on
Thursday. The two countries in
2021 had announced plans to jointly buy six 212 Common
Design submarines from ThyssenKrupp in a deal worth about €5.5 billion (US$5.7
billion).
Germany announced the
submarine contract extension as part of €21 billion in defense spending
approved by the Bundestag, the country’s parliament, on Wednesday. Other
approvals including the go-ahead for the F127 anti-air warfare frigate, Elbit
Systems’ PULS rocket artillery, missiles for the Patriot air-defense system,
reactive armor for the Puma infantry fighting vehicle and the development of
sea-to-air missiles.
“The cooperation with our
Norwegian partner will provide our two armed forces with new opportunities for
deployment in the context of national and alliance defense, particularly on
NATO’s northern flank,” Annette Lehnigk-Emden, the head of the Bundeswehr procurement
office, said in the statement.
The 212CD submarines for
Germany and Norway are on schedule, ThyssenKrupp said in a separate
statement. The yard started production in September 2023, and the six
vessels for the German Navy will be delivered starting in 2032, with one boat
every year through 2037. The Norwegian Navy is scheduled to receive its first
submarine in the new class as early as 2029.
The 212CD submarine will
have a length of about 74 meters and a beam of 10 meters, and displace around
2,500 tons when surfaced. The vessel is based on the 212A submarine in service
with the German Navy, which has a length of around 58 meters and a displacement
of 1,500 tons.
Advance payments related
to the order expansion will have a positive impact on cash flow in the current
financial year, ThyssenKrupp said.
The company says it
invested more than €250 million at its location in Kiel, Germany, to add
production capacity for the submarine program with the construction of a new
shipbuilding hall. ThyssenKrupp also acquired additional shipyard capacity at
the former site of MV Werften in Wismar to build submarines and surface
vessels.
“With the expansion of
the 212CD order, other countries could join this project in the near future,”
ThyssenKrupp Marine Systems CEO Oliver Burkhard said in a statement. “Our
strong position has now become even stronger.”
The close cooperation
with Norway will allow for synergy in operations, logistics and maintenance,
which should boost operational availability and reduce costs, according to the
defense ministry’s procurement office.
ThyssenKrupp had offered
an expeditionary variant of the 212CD, with an increased length of more than 80
meters and displacement of more than 3,000 tons, as its candidate for a
submarine tender by the Netherlands. The Dutch in March awarded the contract to
France’s Naval Group, which was offering a smaller, conventionally-powered
version of its Barracuda submarine, with a surface displacement of 3,300 tons
and a length of 82 meters.
As part of the spending
approved by the Bundestag, Rheinmetall together with partner blackned GmbH won
an order for IT-system integration worth about €1.2 billion over 10 years, the
company said in a separate
statement. The order is part of a Bundeswehr program to digitalize
land-based operations, with Rheinmetall accounting for around €730 million of
the contract volume, and the remaining €470 million for blackned.
As part of the same
program, a project company set up by Rheinmetall and KNDS Deutschland won a
six-year contract worth roughly €2 billion to equip around 10,000 Bundeswehr
vehicles with digital radio equipment. Each company will account for half of
the order value, with the work to start in mid-2025 and the equipment
conversion complete by the end of 2030, KNDS said in a statement.
“The new technology will
increase the command-and-control capability of the army units fundamentally,
and improve the interoperability within the Bundeswehr and with NATO allies,”
Rheinmetall CEO Armin Papperger said in the statement.
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