New schedule will shave months off construction of navy support vessel: Shipyard
OTTAWA — The Vancouver shipyard building the navy’s new support ships says the decision to push one of those vessels to the front of the construction queue will shave months, rather than years, off its expected delivery date.
The federal government revealed this week that Seaspan Marine will finish work on the first of two support ships before turning to a new oceanographic-science vessel for the coast guard, which was originally slated to be built first.
That design work on the coast guard ship is taking longer than expected and changing the schedule will save money and time in the long run, Seaspan’s vice-president of government relations Tim Page said Wednesday.
But anyone expecting the support ship to be delivered overnight will be disappointed as Page says the shipyard’s new schedule has it hitting the water in 2022, and it will still need to undergo testing at sea.