Navy Cancels DDG-1000 Destroyer Program

July 25, 2008

The Secretary of the Navy informed members of the Senate and House of its plans to cancel the $29b DDG-1000 program after completion of the first two ships, one of which is scheduled to be completed at Bath Iron Works. Assembly work on the guided-missile destroyers was to have been divided between the 124-year-old shipyard, owned by General Dynamics Corp., and a yard in .

Cancellation of the 14,000-ton, Zumwalt-class destroyer after just two ships were funded, was made public by Maine's two Republican senators, Olympia J. Snowe and Susan M. Collins, and US Representative Thomas H. Allen, a Democrat whose district includes the Bath shipyard. The lawmakers said they were informed by top Navy officials that with costs rising 50 percent, to $3b per ship, the program has become too expensive and would make it impossible for the Navy to meet its overall goal of a 313-ship fleet. The service currently has about 280 ships.

The Navy canceled DDG-1000 program .
The Navy canceled DDG-1000 program .

The lawmakers said they were also told that the Navy had concluded the destroyer's design was not well suited to combating the evolving threat of long-range missiles.

Cancellation of the Zumwalt-class destroyer potentially could have a greater impact on Raytheon than on General Dynamics, some analysts said.

Last year the Navy was forced to restructure the Littoral Combat Ship, a next-generation fleet of small, fast attack vessels, opting to acquire just two ships rather than six after engineering problems.

Senator Collins, who is a Member of the Senate Armed Services Committee, worked to include in the Senate version of the Defense Authorization bill the $2.6 billion the Navy had requested to build a third DDG-1000, which also was scheduled to be built at Bath Iron Works.  The House version of the authorization does not include any funding for the DDG-1000 program or for Bath Iron Works.

Senator Collins said, “ The Navy’s decision to curtail the DDG-1000 program is a blow to Bath Iron Works.  It was triggered by the decision of the House Armed Services Committee to eliminate funding for the DDG-1000 program, which prompted a review within the Department of Defense on the future of the new destroyer program. “

Reports are surfacing that the Navy would order eight older-model DDG-51 destroyers instead.

Sen. Collins, who first disclosed the news this week, and 11 other senators sent a letter asking Defense Secretary Robert Gates to rescind the decision until a thorough analysis is conducted, and Congress has had time to study the plan. Collins said Navy officials told her they would order nine more DDG-51 destroyers.

Source:  Reuters

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