Mr. Chair, thank you very much indeed. It's an honour to be able to address the committee. This is the first evidence I've given in front of a Canadian parliamentary committee. I've spoken many times to your equivalent in Australia, and it's a pleasure to be here.
I should apologize to some members of the committee. Like most Australians, I speak only English—some people would say badly—so forgive me if I make my presentation in English.
I'm speaking in my capacity as the executive director of the Australian Strategic Policy Institute. We are a non-partisan think tank in Canberra, set up about 15 years ago, to provide government independent and contestable advice on matters of defence and national security. We have been heavily involved in the public debate around Australia's plans for new naval platforms, such as the next-generation submarines and the plans for new surface combatants.
I understand Canada is planning to build a new class of up to 15 frigates to replace the Halifax and Iroquois classes. It makes a lot of sense, Mr. Chairman, for Australia and Canada to compare notes on our respective shipbuilding strategies and our common maritime environment, so I'm pleased to be able to contribute today to what I hope will be a continuing and closer discussion between two countries on the subject.
I will state for the record that the opinions I express here are my own and don't represent the positions of the Australian government.
Mr. Chair, as part of the Australian government's plans to modernize and expand the capabilities of the Australian Defence Force, the Australian navy is at the beginning of a very significant recapitalization. In the last few years the navy has commissioned two Canberra-class landing helicopter dock/amphibious assault ships. These are the largest vessels our navy has ever operated, at 27,000 tonnes. Later this year, the first of three new Aegis radar-equipped air warfare destroyers will enter service with the navy, with two more scheduled for delivery by 2020. The Australian government and the Department of Defence are now planning the next stage of the navy's recapitalization, which includes a new class of nine frigates with an anti-submarine focus,12 new offshore patrol vessels, and a new submarine fleet, which is doubled in size from the current six to 12. All of these platforms are now expected to be built in Australian shipyards.
In Australia we have had two broadly distinct but connected conversations regarding the next generation of naval vessels. The first is a debate about what kind of capabilities the navy needs to be an effective force in the coming decades, given our rapidly changing strategic environment. For example, the decision to double the size of our submarine fleet was made in 2009, in response to the proliferation of submarines in the Asia-Pacific and to maintain our capability to project power into contested areas, as we saw increasingly sophisticated sea-denial capabilities proliferate in the region.
It would be preferable if there were more focus in Australia on those driving strategic issues, because they are the things that should shape our future naval capabilities and also give us some sense about the urgency of the task, but our national attention focuses more on the second conversation, which is around how to establish a program for continuous and enduring naval shipbuilding within Australia. This marks a quite decisive departure from the boom-and-bust cycle of past years, in which the shipbuilding industry atrophied between major shipbuilding projects. Over the past century Australia has alternated between acquiring vessels from overseas suppliers and building them ourselves, but the mood at the moment in government and in the wider Australian community is for local build. Most if not all of the major decisions about improving the Australian Defence Force over the coming years have had bipartisan support in Australia's Parliament, which includes our plan for a strong domestic shipbuilding industry.
The strategic challenges we face and the industrial challenges we face are significant in and of themselves, but they're entwined in ways that can complicate planning. What I mean here is that the sense of strategic urgency we have in the Asia-Pacific region has increased significantly in the last 10 years, and that seems to be accelerating.
This is the urgency that informed decisions to expand our submarine and surface fleet. However, that has to compete with the desire to establish a stable shipbuilding industry against a delivery timetable that is well spaced in order to sustain production. The strategic urgency I'm suggesting, Mr. Chairman, is at odds with a shipbuilding program that, for example, expects to deliver our 12th submarine around the year 2050, which means that the crew of that boat are not even born yet.
There are also short-term challenges in standing up the industry program, which requires starting design and construction of three new ship classes in the next 10 years. The Australian government has planned to begin construction of new offshore patrol vessels of about 2,000 tonnes in 2018, and then to begin construction of the future frigates, of about 6,000 tonnes, in 2020. This is a very tight time frame, and it was intended to reduce the impact of reducing shipyard workforces in Adelaide, South Australia, following the end of the construction of our air warfare destroyers. The loss of shipyard jobs has acquired the politically unpalatable label of the “valley of death” in the Australian press.
The 2018 start date for patrol vessels, I'm afraid, is already slipping, because we have yet to select a design partner from any of the three contenders. The future frigate is also likely to suffer delays due to the significant engineering work required to confidently lock in the final design before construction commences.
The Australian government has said that it will develop a plan for a continuous or rolling production of naval vessels. A sustainable construction program for Australia's surface combatants would suggest a roughly two-year production rate and a 24-year service life for each vessel. The same could be true for the fleet of 12 submarines.
What that means, Mr. Chairman, is that these fleet sizes are probably the smallest numbers that we could maintain to be consistent with rolling continuous production, and then only marginally. With any fewer vessels, either the production rate would have to be inefficiently slowed or we would have to shorten the lifetimes of the vessels in service.
Because of the minimalist nature of this program, it's highly likely that one single shipyard will perform all of the shipbuilding work for major vessels, and that brings with it challenges associated with monopoly supply.
The Australian government currently owns its own ship and submarine yards in the form of ASC Pty Ltd. in South Australia, which it has recently split into three business entities. What it will do with these entities remains to be seen, but it has quite a lot of flexibility in terms of selling or retaining these various components.
My view, Mr. Chair, is that strategy should drive policy rather than industry policy driving strategy. On the strategic front, we're in a period of rapid change in development in the maritime domain that is particularly striking. Regional militaries are modernizing and expanding, and submarines are proliferating. These trends are especially visible in China. The Obama administration's pivot to Asia has only partially delivered, and the Trump administration's plans for engagement in Asia are not yet clear.
Like Canada, Australia has responsibility for a great deal of maritime territory. In order to augment our naval platforms over the coming years, defence is also receiving new air capabilities. It's worth mentioning that they include P-8A Poseidon anti-submarine warfare and maritime patrol aircraft. Our air force will also be the first service, other than the U.S. Navy, to operate the unmanned Triton drone, a high-altitude, long-endurance maritime patrol aircraft.
The air force capitalization is occurring on what is an appropriate time scale for our strategic circumstances, but then we're not building the aircraft in Australia; we're buying them from overseas. The committee may also be interested to note that we are acquiring at least 72 F-35 joint strike fighters for our air force, and we will soon take delivery of 12 Growler-equipped Super Hornet aircraft.
This is worth mentioning because of the significant joint and allied capability effect of employing all of these systems. However, one of defence's biggest challenges remains working out how to integrate these various platforms into a single fighting capability.
Mr. Chairman, I'll move through some of my other comments here, and end by saying to members of this committee that I've long thought Australia and Canada could only benefit by developing closer relations in terms of defence strategy, planning, acquisition, and sustainment.
We have the great benefit of organizing and running our defence forces in very similar ways. They are also of a comparable scale, which means that our acquisition problems and successes can offer useful lessons for each of us.
We have substantial defence ties, but these are actually mostly around military training and secondments. I think we could do better in terms of strengthening our engagement on strategic thinking and on sharing best practices around equipment acquisitions and industry engagement.
With that, I'll conclude my comments, Mr. Chair. I'm very happy to take questions.