Navy Develops New Class of Oilers
By Kris Osborn Posted in Naval
The U.S. Navy is surging through the
early stages of development to build a new class of replenishment oilers able
to replace the aging current fleet starting in 2020, service officials said.
Called TAO-X, the new fleet of
oilers will include a new ship design engineered to accommodate the
commercial-off-the-shelf technologies, said Frank McCarthey, program manager
for Support Ships, Boats and Craft.
“The oilers re-supply Navy ships
such as the combatants and the aircraft carriers. They provide jet fuel for the
carriers and fuel for the engines on destroyers, frigates, auxiliary ships as
well as the amphibious fleet,” said McCarthey. “Their job is to
refuel at sea so that the ships do not have to interrupt their mission. Oilers
have been part of the Navy since there were coal-fired ships.”
As a way to explore various design
possibilities and examine the technologies most likely to increase ship
performance, energy efficiency and integration, the Navy awarded three
six-to-10 month industry study-contracts.
This will be followed by a formal
request for proposal and full and open competition among bidders interested in
building the oilers, with construction on the first of 17 ships slated to begin
by 2016, said Lt. Kurt Larson, spokesman for Naval Sea Systems Command.
General Dynamics National Steel and
Shipbuilding Company, Huntington Ingalls and VT Halter Marine Incorporated
– were each awarded firm-fixed price $1.7 million contracts, according to
a Navy statement.
“We do have some flexibility to
tailor additional studies as we move along. The idea is that we take their
input after they conduct some trade studies. They may find things based on
their expertise that are not evident to us,” McCarthey said.
The awarded contracts also include
options for a ship integration study, inert gas system cost study, and the
potential for additional special studies, analyses and reviews, Navy officials
indicated.
The current procurement plan is for
a total of 17 ships, with the lead ship scheduled to deliver in 2020, he added.
Although the Navy’s Capabilities
Development Document is still pending approval from the Pentagon’s Joint
Requirements Oversight Council, the service is currently maturing its plans to
build a next-generation oiler equipped with state of the art capability,
McCarthey explained.
Some of this includes intended areas
of focus such as interest in incorporating environmentally sound engines
optimized to minimize fuel consumption, utilizing coating systems on the
outside of the hull to maximize corrosion resistance, and working with various
control systems to optimize the use of on-board electricity, he added.
“We will look at products that were
developed by the commercial marketplace to increase fuel efficiency, create a
more efficient transmission system and improve the electrical and mechanical
systems,” McCarthey said.
The Navy and the industry teams
conducting trade studies are also likely to explore efforts to move toward
electronic controls for the fueling systems which connect ships together,
McCarthey added.
“There is an underwater line that
runs from one ship to the next and cables and pulleys that suspend a fuel hose
from the oiler to the customer ship. We’re moving toward electronic controls
for the system that connects the two-ships together, instead of hydraulic
controls,” he explained.
The TAO-X effort will also examine
the possibility of variable speed electric drive for the ship, as well as
ventilation approaches, air condition and a full range of commercial technology
that is available today.
“Also, these ships will be
double-hulled to protect the cargo. From an environmental perspective, if they
were to suffer from a collision, they are much less likely to create an oil
spill,” he said.
The new oiler will transport as many
as 187,000 barrels of fuel, including jet fuel for the air wing on carriers and
diesel fuel marine for other ships such as destroyers and Amphibious Ready
Groups, McCarthey explained.
Plans for the new class of ships
call for the vessel to function as what the Navy calls a station ship, meaning
it will remain on-station with a Carrier Strike Group (CSG) or Amphibious
Readiness Group (ARG) to provide fuel as required, Navy officials said.
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