Navy eyeing alternative way to beef up fleet.

AuthorHarper, Jon
PositionBudget Matters

The Navy is considering a wide-ranging effort to extend the service life of its surface ships. Doing so could ultimately save money and enable the service to reach its goal of a 355-ship fleet more quickly, experts said.

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The current force stands at around 275 ships and submarines. Keeping existing platforms in the fleet longer would enable the Navy to beef up much faster than it would be able to if it relied solely on bringing new ships online, said Vice Adm. Tom Moore, commander of Naval Sea Systems Command.

"One of the key components I think of getting out to the size of the fleet that we need is going to be looking at taking...[the ships] we have today and actually extending the service life," he said at a conference in Washington, D.C., hosted by the Center for Strategic and International Studies.

Most of them are expected to remain in the fleet for 30 to 35 years, he noted.

"We're taking a pretty close look at what would it take to get them out another five, another 10 years," he said. Additionally, new platforms should be designed to last longer, the NAVSEA chief asserted. "We ought to go to planned service lives of 40-plus years for all of our ships."

Recent force structure assessments project that the Navy wouldn't reach 355 ships until the mid 2030s or 2040s. But the service could move that timeline to the left 10 or 15 years with service life extensions, Moore said.

The Congressional Budget Office estimated that reaching the new force structure target over a 30-year period would cost the service an average of $26.6 billion in 2017 dollars per year for ship construction--more than 60 percent above the average amount Congress has appropriated for that purpose over the past 30 years, and 40 percent more than the amount appropriated for 2016.

However, the CBO assumed that all of the additional ships in the larger Navy would come from new construction, noted Bryan Clark, a naval analyst at the Center for Strategic and Budgetary Assessments.

"That combination of [service life extensions] and then new construction could mean that you could get to a larger fleet sooner and then with a little less cost," he said. "But you're still going to have probably...an approximately 20...

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