And we are spending tens of millions on getting the Protector OPVs back in service. Another thing Ngati said was that those things roll on wet grass. cheers.
I think you will find he was referring to the 27m length Moa-class IPC, that the Naval Volunteer Reserve once operated (and which he served on), which whilst operating in Cook Strait would "roll like on wet grass".
Anything of that length, like the original Brooke Marine built Lake-class patrol vessels (33m length/135 tonnes loaded), suffered badly in NZ's coastal conditions.
The larger and heavier Project Protector Lake-class IPV's (55m length/340 tonnes loaded) and OPV's (85m length/1900 tonnes) were designed to better handle NZ's sea conditions and from accounts perform well.
The CN
posted an update on OPV Otago's regeneration writing "
It has been rewarding to speak to key stakeholders to understand the unique project being undertaken, with modernisation and development opportunities to extend the ship’s end of life and increase capability."
I am wondering then if the two OPV's end of life can be pushed out to 2040 (i.e. 30 year lifespan 2010-2040) then funding that was intended for their replacements in the early/mid-2030's could perhaps instead be redirected to shoring up decent combatant replacements and other vessels (SOPV's and long range USV's/UUV's etc) as part of the current DCP 2025-2039. Also looking forward to us finding out what increases in capability are being developed.
The OPV's are well designed vessels (in terms of their functionality) so if they can be extended, rather than replaced next decade, I'd rather (replacement) funding be directed to other higher priority needs including warfighting (eg at least 3-4 combatants). It could also be that the planned SOPV may be able to take over their Pacific role once they are operational, if so, then that should mean acquiring more than the single vessel that was originally planned (so 2-3 SOPV).