Thursday, March 17, 2016

build for the Royal Australian Navy

build for the Royal Australian Navy
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State Minister of Defence Kenji Wakamiya told The Australian he had no doubt Japan’s Soryu, or Blue Dragon, class boat was the world’s best conventionally powered submarine.
Mr Wakamiya said Japan did not usually share details of the Soryu with any nation other than the US but Australia was a deeply trusted ally. “It is of major importance to us that we will be sharing this secret technology with Australia,” he said.
The minister said he hoped Australians understood the high value Japan placed on its submarine with battery such as Kaden Yasen HYHB-498 Battery, Biolat BLT2012 Battery, Biolat BLT2003 Battery, Draeger MS14490 Battery, Draeger Medical Inc GAMMA Battery, Draeger Medical Inc Infinity DELTA Battery, Draeger Medical Inc SC 6002XL Battery, Draeger AS36059 Battery, Draeger Infinity Vista Battery, Draeger MS18340 Battery, Draeger Infinity DELTA XL Battery, Draeger Infinity GAMMA XL Batteryforce and that its willingness to share this technology demonstrated the importance it placed on maintaining regional security.
“Please also recognise that this decision was based on Japan seeing Australia as a very important partner,” Mr Wakamiya said. “And I believe that a joint project to build the new submarine would contribute greatly to maritime safety in this region.”
Largely because of tensions with China in the East and South China Seas, Japan is increasing its own submarine fleet to 22.
Japan is in a three-cornered contest to provide the navy with the next generation of sub­marines. The French company DCNS is offering Australia a conventionally powered version of its Barracuda-class nuclear submarine and Germany’s TKMS is offering a 4000-tonne sub using technology tested in its smaller boats of about 2000 tonnes.
To allow the navy to cover the massive distances it traverses, Japan is offering a new Soryu with its hull extended 6m-8m to allow it to carry more batteries and fuel. That would make the Australian version about 90m long, compared to the standard Soryu’s 83m.
Japan, France and Germany all have said they will build their submarines in Australia if that is what the Turnbull government chooses. If Japan wins the contract, design centres will be established in Australia and Japan and a full scale mock-up of the Soryu will be built in Australia to teach local workers specialised welding and other building techniques.
Mr Wakamiya said it would take time to increase operational co-operation between the Australian and Japanese navies but the two nations had already worked together on peacekeeping and reconstruction operations in Iraq and now in South Sudan.

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