Certainly. Again, that's a very broad question. The bottom line, in terms of keeping the ships operating, is this. We refer to ship maintenance in three categories. There is regulatory maintenance, the things we have to do for Transport Canada to approve our ships for sailing. Then there are operational requirements that we have to address—think of a ship that can legally go to sea but doesn't have the crane on board that it needs to do the job it's going to do. That's an operational requirement.
The third is preventative maintenance, which is like changing the oil or the brake pads in your car before you crash, that kind of thing. We currently spend about one per cent of what we should spend on preventative maintenance. That means the reliability of our vessels is very much resting on our ability to do the urgent and the operational. That's not a sustainable model. As the ships age, that will present a greater and greater challenge.
Now, all of that, that whole scenario, has been looked at through the comprehensive review. I won't go further on that at the moment, because it is yet to be presented to cabinet, and I don't want to overstep in terms of what will be presented to cabinet.
So we have a maintenance issue, and then there is the history of procurement in the Coast Guard. Just to be clear, this spans every government; there is no political tone to this comment. Like other large procurements in government, it tends to happen in fits and starts, and it might be the case that over the last period of time the Coast Guard has not been in the public eye as much as it could have been. The last few years, we've had as much press as we can handle, but prior to that.... When you are in the background and procurement is happening in fits and starts, maybe you get more fits than starts through that process.
We would strongly advocate that the replacement of our fleet, through the national shipbuilding strategy, be put on a pace whereby ships will come out regularly to replace older ships. The average age of our fleet now is very high, as you've noted. It's going to get higher before we replace capacity, getting into the mid-20s and late 20s, as I was referring to earlier, but when we are at the mature state in the national shipbuilding strategy, with steady capital dollars, we'll be able to bring that average age down and then maintain it at a much more reasonable level than it's getting to right now.
So, we have to bring up the maintenance dollars and have a long-term procurement that is backed by long-term funding, not in massive amounts, but just at a good steady state.