HMNZS Canterbury (L421)
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HMNZS Canterbury at Lyttelton. |
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Career (New Zealand) | |
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Namesake: | HMNZS Canterbury (F-421) |
Owner: | Ministry of Defense |
Builder: | Merwede Shipyards, Netherlands; fitted out by Tenix Pty Ltd |
Cost: | NZ$130 million |
Laid down: | 6 September 2005 |
Launched: | 11 February 2006 |
Completed: | 31 May 2007 |
Commissioned: | 12 June 2007 |
In service: | Yes |
Homeport: | Ceremonially: Lyttelton Operationally: Devonport[1] |
Fate: | Active |
General characteristics | |
Class and type: | Multirole Vessel |
Displacement: | 9000 tonnes (full load) |
Length: | 131 metres |
Beam: | 23.4 metres |
Draft: | 5.4 metres |
Propulsion: | CODADE (Combined Diesel and Diesel Electric) consisting of 2 Wartsila Engines @ 4.5MW, 3 x Auxiliary diesels, 2 x Bow Thrusters |
Speed: |
Baseline speed 19.60 knots |
Range: | 8000Nm at 16 knots |
Boats and landing craft carried: |
2 x medium landing Craft (23 m) Displacement: 55 tonnes (empty) 100 tonnes (full load),[2] Crew: 3 |
Complement: |
360[4] |
Sensors and processing systems: |
Fire Control: Vistar Electro-Optical |
Armament: | 1 x Remote Controlled MSI DS25 Stabilized Naval Gun with 25mm M242 Bushmaster cannon 2 x .50 calibre machine guns Small arms |
Aircraft carried: | 1 x SH-2G Seasprite helicopter. Can be armed with a combination of homing torpedoes, depth charges, Maverick Air to Surface missiles, M60 Machine Gun. 4 x NH90 helicopters can also be carried as cargo.[2] |
Aviation facilities: | Helicopter deck (stern) |
HMNZS Canterbury is a multi-role vessel (MRV) of the Royal New Zealand Navy. She was commissioned in June 2007, and is the second ship of the Royal New Zealand Navy to carry the name, the first ship having been a Leander class frigate. She is also New Zealand's first ever strategic sealift ship.[5]
Contents |
[edit] History
[edit] Background
As early as 1988 the Royal New Zealand Navy had identified the need for some form of sealift in the South Pacific. In 1995 this led to the commissioning of HMNZS Charles Upham. The subsequent failure of successive governments to fund the required refits resulted in Charles Upham being sold in 2001.
At the same time the newly elected Labour Government directed the navy to exclude the option of a 3rd frigate from the Maritime Forces Review, while the sea lift requirement was also part of a wider capability mix desired.[6]
[edit] Construction
The construction of the MRV was sub contracted-out to Merwede Shipyards in the Netherlands by Tenix Shipyards in Williamstown, Melbourne, with the design based on the commercial RoRo ship Ben-My-Chree.[5]
The keel was laid on September 6, 2005 and the MRV was launched successfully on February 11, 2006. The ship completed initial sea trials in the Netherlands and arrived in Australia in late August 2006 for fit-out with military equipment. Final acceptance was delayed due to alterations to the ships hospital and late delivery of documentation. The MRV was accepted by the New Zealand Government on 31 May 2007 and commissioned on 12 June 2007 in Port Melbourne, Australia by the Prime Minister of New Zealand, Helen Clark.[7] The ship cost NZ$ 130 million to construct.[8]
She was constructed with an ice-strengthened hull to allow her to operate in the subantarctic waters, where New Zealand claims several islands, and where Canterbury is to assist scientific expeditions.[9]
[edit] Service
After commissioning, the ship sailed to its home port of Lyttelton arriving 28 June 2007. After several days of inaugural events, it departed again on 2 July. Following a courtesy visit to Timaru and after a month-long set of trials and exercises in the Auckland area, where she is operationally based at Devonport Naval Base,[10] she is to head to New Zealand's subantarctic waters carrying DOC conservation officers.[8]
In September 2007 Canterbury embarked 250 troops and 50 vehicles, including 20 NZLAV armoured vehicles, to test embarkation and disembarkation procedures.[11]
In November 2007 Lieutenant General Jerry Mateparae said that certain issues were being discussed with the shipbuilder including the location of the RHIB on the quarterdeck from which it was torn off during the storm in July, a possible fatigue problem with the landing craft fittings, and that the propellers come out of the water when the ship pitches in rough sea - there have been no problems, but there is concern this may affect the ship's machinery.[12]
- RHIB issues
The Canterbury weathered her first strong storm during 10th July 2007 well, though she lost one of her RHIBs (and almost lost the other) to waves swamping her open boat bays while near Tauranga on the way to Auckland.[10] The RHIB was found a week later washed ashore on Great Barrier Island, 200 km to the north, and recovered by a farmer. The heavily damaged boat was to be returned to the navy, though it is unclear whether it can be repaired.[13][3].
The court of inquiry into the loss of the Port RHIB and near loss of the starboard RHIB, found that loss was due to a known design flaw identified in tank testing. The flaw resulted in the loss of the RHIB and water entering the cargo deck after the doors were opened by the sea. As a result of this the doors were tied shut. The court of inquiry also reported slamming of the bow and propellers leaving the water. Options to resolve the design problems on the ship include closing the alcoves in which the ships boats had been stowed. At the time the RHIB was lost, the ship's log records the weather conditions as being a wind strength of 60 knots, gusting to 73, a swell of six metres (sea state six), and a completely overcast, very dark night. The alcoves are 3.3 metres above the waterline and were swamped by the waves and because the ship was experiencing severe motion, rolling up to 28 degrees to port, at a roll frequency of 11.5 seconds. The ships anti-roll system will not function when the period of the ships roll is less than 11.9 seconds. Work to relocate the boats in a less vulnerable location is underway.[14]
In October 2007 a crewmember was killed in a tragic accident when an RHIB capsized whilst being lowered into the sea. The Navy immediately began an inquiry into what caused the accident.[15] Defence Minister Phil Goff later reported that this was caused by the failure of a quick release shackle, which was now being replaced on all naval vessels.[16]
[edit] Capabilities
[edit] Armaments
As a sealift ship, the Canterbury is not intended to enter combat, or conduct opposed landings under fire. The ship's armament is therefore relatively limited, and intended for self-defense against other smaller craft, and for ocean patrol duties (for example the intercepting of suspicious civilian craft) during a naval blockade.[17]
[edit] Facilities
- Cargo
The ship has cargo space of 1,451 m², which can be unloaded via two ramps, either from the starboard side or the stern. The ship also carries two 55 ton LCM (Landing Craft, Medium), with a load capability of 45 tons each, remotely similar to the Normandy beaching craft of World War II. With the LCM, the ship can unload cargo onto beaches or into small harbours when facilities capable of serving Canterbury are locally unavailable.[17]
The indicative cargo would encompass (as one possible loadout): 14 Pinzgauer Light Operational Vehicles, 16 NZLAV light armoured vehicles, 7 Unimog trucks, 2 ambulances, 2 flat bed trucks, 7 vehicle trailers, 2 rough terrain forklifts, 4 ATV-type vehicles and up to 33 20ft TEU containers.[17]
The ship is equipped to embark up to 8 containers of ammunition and up to 2 with hazardous materials, and also has an extensive fire sprinkler system.[2]
- Helicopter capability
Canterbury is able to accommodate up to four NH90 hellicopters for deployment ashore in support of NZ Army operations and disaster relief activities. She is also capable of operating the SH-2G Seasprite and the helicopter deck is able to handle a Chinook-size helicopter.
- Medical
Canterbury has a 5 bed hospital ward, a two bed sickbay, an operating theatre, medical laboratory and a morgue.[17]
- Others
The ship also contains a gym, workshops, an armoury and magazine as well as offices for government officials embarked (such as Department of Conservation or NIWA scientists).[2]
[edit] See also
- Logistic ships of the Royal New Zealand Navy
- HMNZS Canterbury (F-421) (name predecessor)
- Protector class IPV
- Protector class OPV
[edit] References
- ^ First Protector ship, HMNZS Canterbury, arrives June (from the Royal New Zealand Navy website)
- ^ a b c d MRV and Landing Craft (from the 'Project Protector' website of the Royal New Zealand Navy)
- ^ a b Farmer swims through surf to save navy boat - The New Zealand Herald, Tuesday 17 July 2007
- ^ Navy's new MRV launched (from the 'Project Protector' website of the Royal New Zealand Navy)
- ^ a b First of Navy's $500m worth of new vessels ready to report for service' - The New Zealand Herald, Wednesday 06 June 2007, Page A7
- ^ Summary (from the Maritime Forces Review, New Zealand Ministry of Defence, January 2002)
- ^ "New warship to benefit regional defence: NZ PM", ABC News Online, June 12, 2007. Retrieved on 2007-06-12.
- ^ a b Canterbury off to work at once - The New Zealand Herald, Wednesday 13 June 2007
- ^ Navy's HMNZS Canterbury has entered home port - The New Zealand Herald, Thursday 28 June 2007
- ^ a b Navy star defies stormy weather - The New Zealand Herald, Thursday 12 July 2007
- ^ Soldiers get a taste of the sea - Hawkes Bay Today, Saturday 22 September 2007
- ^ 'Run-down' army has no back-up battalions - The Dominion Post, Friday 23 November 2007
- ^ Farmer finds lost navy boat - The Dominion Post, Wednesday 18 July 2007
- ^ Record of Proceedings (from a Court of Inquiry of the Royal New Zealand Navy, 24 August 2007)
- ^ Navy probes 'perplexing' death - The New Zealand Herald, Sunday 7 October 2007
- ^ Design fault known before ship delivered - The Dominion Post, Saturday 22 December 2007
- ^ a b c d HMNZS Canterbury: Old Name, New Era - The New Zealand Herald, Wednesday 06 June 2007, Page A7
[edit] External links
- HMNZS Canterbury - L421 (official website of the Royal New Zealand Navy)
- Project Protector (from the Royal New Zealand Navy website)
- Phase One: Land Forces and Sealift (from the New Zealand Defence Force Capability Review, November 2000)
- Key Findings (from the Maritime Forces Review, January 2002)