Tuesday, December 30, 2025
ADVT 
National

Canada to pay $4.1B for Navy support ships in latest cost increase

Darpan News Desk The Canadian Press, 15 Jun, 2020 09:21 PM
  • Canada to pay $4.1B for Navy support ships in latest cost increase

Canada's national shipbuilding plan was rocked by yet another cost increase on Monday as the federal government revealed it will pay $4.1 billion for two long-overdue support ships for the navy — an increase of $1.5 billion from initial estimates.

The revelation came as Ottawa officially awarded a contract for the full construction of the two new Protecteur-class joint support ships to Vancouver's Seaspan shipyards, which has already started work on the first of the vessels.

Seaspan was first tapped to build the two ships and several coast guard vessels in 2011, at which point the supply ships were expected to cost $2.6 billion. The figure was later revised to $3.4 billion before another $700 million was added Monday.

The first of the support ships was to have been delivered by 2019. The government says it now doesn't expect the first ship before 2023, with the second due in 2025. Seaspan has been under contract to work on some parts of the first ship since June 2018.

The Royal Canadian Navy has been without a full-time support ship since 2014 and is currently relying on a converted civilian vessel that is being leased from Quebec's Chantier Davie shipyard to fill the gap.

That ship, the MV Asterix, was at the heart of the failed prosecution of retired vice-admiral Mark Norman.

The Liberal government was playing down the cost increase to the support ships on Monday, with senior ministers touting the importance of the vessels to the Royal Canadian Navy and the jobs that the project is creating in Vancouver and elsewhere.

"These new ships will provide a necessary capability for our Royal Canadian Navy, while providing significant economic benefits and jobs to Canadians, including thousands of jobs created or sustained," Defence Minister Harjit Sajjan said in a statement.

Yet the cost increase is the latest to hit the shipbuilding plan, which has been plagued by delays and budget increases for years. The plan is intended to recapitalize the majority of Canada's naval and coast guard fleets.

The entire plan to buy new warships to replace the navy's frigates and destroyers, several Arctic patrol vessels, a polar icebreaker and four science vessels for the Canadian Coast Guard in addition to the two support ships was pegged in 2011 at $35 billion.

The warships alone are now expected to cost at least $65 billion while the rest of the projects have either seen similar budget increases or their budgets are under review. The delivery schedules for the projects have also been pushed back numerous times.

Defence analyst David Perry of the Canadian Global Affairs Institute noted the new cost for the support ships is almost exactly how much Parliament's budget watchdog estimated following an analysis in 2013.

The Conservative government at the time refuted the parliamentary budget officer's estimate, with then-public works minister Rona Ambrose saying appropriate safeguards had been put into place to protect taxpayers.

"There's not a lot of detail in this today so it's hard to do a line by line," Perry said. "But superficially at least, the PBO's report from 2013 — which I recall being pooh-poohed pretty extensively — has held up pretty well."

Ottawa has in recent years produced update cost estimates for most of the vessels being built through the federal shipbuilding plan. However, budgets for the polar icebreaker and an offshore science vessel for the coast guard are still under review.

MORE National ARTICLES

B.C. RCMP And Coroner Seek Information About Man One Year After Body Found

B.C. RCMP And Coroner Seek Information About Man One Year After Body Found
The body was found on the Lower Mainland in a forested area of north Burnaby on March 11, 2019, but it's estimated he disappeared in 2013.

B.C. RCMP And Coroner Seek Information About Man One Year After Body Found

Trudeau Announces $1 Billion Package To Respond To COVID-19

The federal government is rolling out a $1-billion funding package to help the country's health-care system cope with the increasing number of new coronavirus cases and to help Canadian workers 

Trudeau Announces $1 Billion Package To Respond To COVID-19

Chilliwack Physiotherapist SANJAY AMRUTKAR Charged With Additional Sex Offences As Police Continue To Seek Information

Chilliwack Physiotherapist SANJAY AMRUTKAR Charged With Additional Sex Offences As Police Continue To Seek Information
Sanjay Amrutkar, 38, of Chilliwack, was arrested without incident, for offences dating from August and September 2019, which are alleged to have occurred while working as a physiotherapist. Mr. Amrutkar was initially charged with two counts of sexual assault.  

Chilliwack Physiotherapist SANJAY AMRUTKAR Charged With Additional Sex Offences As Police Continue To Seek Information

Rig Impounded After Surrey Semi-Truck Driver Caught Impaired Behind The Wheel

On the heels of a commercial vehicle enforcement blitz, Surrey RCMP have taken a commercial vehicle driver off the road after he was found driving while impaired.    

Rig Impounded After Surrey Semi-Truck Driver Caught Impaired Behind The Wheel

Kelowna RCMP Seek Suspect Who Spat On Woman's Face

The suspect was described to police as a clean cut middle-aged man, seen wearing brown cowboy boots, blue jeans and a grey hoody while dragging a purple suitcase.

Kelowna RCMP Seek Suspect Who Spat On Woman's Face

RCMP Urge Nanaimo Homeowners To Be Wary Of Door-To-Door Scam Artists

RCMP Urge Nanaimo Homeowners To Be Wary Of Door-To-Door Scam Artists
In the past week, the Nanaimo RCMP have received several reports of individuals going door to door offering to sell and install home water heaters and home purification systems.  

RCMP Urge Nanaimo Homeowners To Be Wary Of Door-To-Door Scam Artists