- Reaction score
- 8,198
- Points
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The 9000 tonne MRV shares some similarities with Norwegian Svalbard Icebreaker - similar size, similar concept of employment with the addition of a small transport capability but minus the heavy ice capability.
18 months from contract being signed to being in the water. 30 months from contract to delivery is anticipated. Currently on schedule. Vessel price (from other sources) approximately 100 MCAD.
Apparently not every capital project demands a 10 year delivery programme.
http://www.defense-aerospace.com/cgi-bin/client/modele.pl?session=dae.16882086.1133972074.Q5cKasOa9dUAAFC2ZcA&modele=jdc_34
18 months from contract being signed to being in the water. 30 months from contract to delivery is anticipated. Currently on schedule. Vessel price (from other sources) approximately 100 MCAD.
Apparently not every capital project demands a 10 year delivery programme.
First Ship for New Zealand’s Project Protector Launched
(Source: Tenix Defence; issued Feb. 13, 2006)
The Multi-Role Vessel being built for the New Zealand Ministry of Defence by Tenix Defence was launched on the weekend at the Merwede Shipyard near Rotterdam in the Netherlands.
Following the launch of the hull on Saturday (local time) the vessel was towed to Rotterdam, where the superstructure was lifted into place on Sunday. It will return to Merwede for fit-out.
It is the first of a total of seven ships, including two Offshore Patrol Vessels and four Inshore Patrol Vessels, to be launched under the NZ$500m Project Protector, on schedule, 18 months after contract award. The ships will be operated by the Royal New Zealand Navy.
Tenix Defence sub-contracted construction of the MRV to Merwede. The OPVs are being consolidated at Tenix’s yard at Williamstown in Victoria, and the IPVs are being constructed at Tenix’s yard at Whangarei in New Zealand, which is also building OPV modules.
Merwede CEO Ton Riedtijk welcomed the NZ Secretary of Defence, Graham Fortune, the New Zealand Ambassador to The Hague, David Payton, Commodore Jack Steer RNZN, Deputy Chief of Navy, Gary Collier, MoD Project Director, Gordon Hall, MoD Project Manager, and the CEO of Tenix Defence, Robert Salteri, to the ceremony.
Mrs Bronwyn Barton, of Melbourne, whose husband Blair is the MRV Ship Manager for Tenix Defence, launched the ship.
Robert Salteri congratulated Merwede on its achievement, saying the MRV construction demonstrated Merwede’s versatility and excellence, and maintained the leading record of the 100-year-old shipyard.
“The Project Protector team here in Rotterdam has set a cracking pace and a great example for the teams in Australia and New Zealand,” he said.
The MRV will start sea trials in June, and is scheduled for delivery to Tenix Defence in the Netherlands in July. It will come to Williamstown in September for final fit-out, and will be delivered to the Ministry of Defence before the end of the year.
The 131-metre MRV will displace approximately 9,000 tonnes and will be able to carry up to 250 troops and their equipment, a Sea Sprite helicopter, up to four additional utility helicopters as cargo, and a crew of more than 60, as well as additional trainees and Government employees. It carries two landing craft to ferry personnel and cargo to shore where there is no wharf, and is ice-strengthened.
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