Monsoon
Sr. Member
- Reaction score
- 10
- Points
- 230
The risk I see with that plan is the one that happened in Norway (can't find the link to this story now): the $400M subsidy was paid every year, but the Coast Guard's shipbuilding plan for Svalbard was delayed from 1994 to 2002 due to "lack of funds". Once the politicians get an industrial subsidy gravy boat set up, priorities for little things like defence fall to the wayside. By lumping the subsidy funds in with ship acquisition, the government is making sure that the subsidy expires if the shipbuilding stops.Kirkhill said:The thing is, if this is a national asset then it should be more broadly funded (ie funded with HRDC labour grants, IRAP grants, Industry Canada grants, DFAIT grants for export assistance). That would put the Canadian yards on par with the Euro yards.
The RCN would then get the vessels at production cost (just like the F-35s we're supposed to get) with the yards and the government carrying the overhead costs.
The other way of looking at it is that the subsidy is intended to enhance the yards' ability to provide Navy- and Coast Guard-specific support (there is a lot that we do differently from industry). If that's the case then it makes sense to see the money budgeted under National Defence and DFO, rather than Industry.