The final Vahana workboats have been delivered to the Royal Navy.
The vessels are a part of a £48 million contract UK awarded to Dorset-based Atlas Elektronik (AEUK) to replace outdated vessels.
The handover of the last two boats, Merlin and Fantome, to the Fleet Hydrography and Meteorology Unit in Devonport marks the contract’s completion and signifies the full operating capability of all vessels.
The fleet used for diving, surveying, and training operations is now complete.
Constructed to a versatile, modular design, the new boats known as the ‘SEA class’ are based on a standardized hull that is interchangeable, allowing them to be adapted for different tasks.
With the ability to carry differing payloads and provide improved speed, operational range and navigation equipment, the 15m long Vahanas workboats play a vital role for the Royal Navy, according to the officials.
“We are very pleased to have worked with AEUK to deliver these 35 Vahana workboats over the past seven years,” Rosy Copping-Bull, Project Manager for DE&S Boats Team, said.
“These boats are an essential part of the Royal Navy’s military operations thanks to their improved capability. All 35 vessels will be vital to the security of our nation and will be instrumental in helping it prosper now, and in the future.”
“Having joined the team earlier in the year, I am very pleased to have seen the team work so well with AEUK to bring this programme together and successfully see the delivery of all 35 boats,” Pete Lagden, Team Leader for DE&S Boats, stated.
The new boats are operated from UK ports and Royal Navy surface vessels, and are used for several roles from logistics support, officer training, hydrographic survey, and passenger transport, to dive support and training.
The contract, known as Project Vahana, was first announced in September 2017, with the new vessels required to replace boats made in the early 1990s that had reached the end of their service lives.
“The acquisition of Vahana craft has played an important step in the modernisation of a range of operational and enabling capabilities across the UK Defence maritime operating environment and will provide an important platform upon which we can continue to build towards further integration of autonomous systems and delivery of effect in remote environments,” Royal Navy Commander Peter Ware, Fleet Navigating Officer, commented.
“We are immensely proud to have delivered a range of 35 SEA Class vessels including HMS Magpie, with interchangeable capability modules, allowing the Royal Navy to rapidly reconfigure them for different operational roles. Through this commonality, the training, spares and documentation burden for all systems has been significantly reduced,” Wesley Galliver, Head of Surface Ship Systems Division at AEUK, added.
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