Luke Pollard (Plymouth, Sutton and Devonport) (Lab/Co-op) I beg to
move, That this House has considered base-porting of
Type 26 frigates. It is a pleasure to serve under your
chairmanship, Sir Roger. As the Member of Parliament for Devonport
and its dockyard and naval base, I am...Request free trial
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I beg to move,
That this House has considered base-porting of Type 26
frigates.
It is a pleasure to serve under your chairmanship, Sir
Roger. As the Member of Parliament for Devonport and its
dockyard and naval base, I am proud to be standing here
again making the case for ensuring that Devonport—the
largest naval base in western Europe—is home to all the
Type 26 frigates and, I hope, the Type 31s and the
remainder of the Type 23 frigates with tails. As the son
of a Devonport-based submariner, I know how important a
strong defence is to our city. Plymouth is a proud
military city, but it is living under the cloud of
possible defence cuts.
We live in uncertain times, with the rise of Russia, new
insurgent technologies and tactics destabilising
countries across the globe, autonomous warfare,
cyber-warfare, piracy and old foes investing in their
militaries. I believe that the best deterrent against a
rearming and resurgent Russia is a strong Royal Navy. I
make no apologies for again making the case that many
have heard me make in this Chamber and elsewhere: we need
more and more capable frigates, and we must preserve our
amphibious capacities and base-port all our new frigates
in Devonport.
Given that a decision on base-porting frigates might be
imminent in the upcoming modernising defence review, I
hope that this debate will help to convince the Minister
of the compelling case for basing all the new global
combat ships—the Type 26 frigates—in Devonport. I will
set out why I believe there is a compelling and
convincing case for Devonport and why the Type 26 frigate
is a platform we can be proud of. I will also talk about
the critical cog in the Royal Navy, the backbone of the
senior service—the men and women of the Royal Navy—and
why basing them and the frigates in Devonport is the
right thing to do. That is not just my view; it is the
view of the cross-party Devonport taskforce, co-ordinated
by Plymouth City Council. Whether Conservative-run, as it
was up to May, or Labour-run, as it has been since May,
there is cross-party support, consensus, and
determination among all local parties to win these
frigates, to protect our amphibious ships and Royal
Marines, and to deal with the legacy of the old
submarines. I know that the Minister values cross-party
campaigning, and I hope we can demonstrate that today.
Devonport is already home to half the nation’s frigates.
We are the base for the Royal Navy’s anti-submarine
warfare Type 23 frigates. The Type 23s with tails are the
frontline of our efforts to counter increased Russian
submarine activity in the north Atlantic and protect our
northern flank.
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NATO revised its view of the north Atlantic and the High
North in the maritime strategy, as the hon. Gentleman has
just suggested. I understand his making the case for his
own constituency, but is it not sensible to ensure that
some of the Type 23s and Type 26s are based in Rosyth,
for example, to give us extra cover in the north? We have
seen many examples of incursions from Russian ships of
late, so it would make strategic sense to base some
ships—perhaps not the whole fleet—in Scotland, and
particularly in Rosyth.
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The hon. Gentleman will forgive me if I disagree with
base-porting older frigates there, but the idea of
forward-deploying the Type 31e frigates, which I will
come to in a moment, and basing them in locations other
than just their base port is a good one, and he might
want to pick up on that.
Devonport already has the skills and expertise to base
the Type 23s. Indeed, it is arguable that we already have
Type 26s in Devonport. I say that because HMS Argyll—a
Type 23 frigate that is already equipped with much of the
tech of a Type 26—is already one of our ships there. The
hulls might need renewing, but that Type 23 frigate,
which I was very pleased to visit on choppy seas earlier
this year, is already carrying the combat systems—the
tech and operational control functions—of a Type 26
frigate. Much of the crew of the first Type 26—HMS
Glasgow—are already probably serving on Devonport-based
Type 23s.
With quick access to the deep water of the north
Atlantic, Devonport is ideally suited to counter the
threats in the Atlantic and to support the continuous
at-sea deterrent and carrier strike. Devonport has
another ace up its sleeve: we are home to the world-class
Flag Officer Sea Training establishment, under Admiral
John Clink, who will retire shortly. Plymouth and navies
around the world, including our own, are indebted to his
leadership. FOST is the final hurdle that a ship and its
crew must clear before being sent on missions around the
globe. It is a jewel in the crown of the British armed
forces and, like all good things in Plymouth, we rarely
tell anyone about it. As a proud janner—someone born in
Plymouth who lives in Plymouth—I feel I can say that
Plymouth all too often hides its light under a bushel,
and then hides the bushel. That has been the case with
FOST, and I think we should speak loudly and proudly
about its global role. Given the location of FOST,
Devonport’s experience of basing anti-submarine warfare
frigates, and its geographical position, there is a good
case for allied nations using it more as a quick reaction
base for surface ships. I encourage the Minister to look
creatively at inviting NATO forces to use Devonport’s
superb facilities in the months and years ahead.
The people of the Royal Navy are the backbone of the
fleet. The crews of the Type 23s with tails have already
made Devonport and Plymouth their home. They have found
schools for their children and homes, and they have a
genuine connection to our city and the areas around
Plymouth. Those people will provide the leadership,
specialist trades, expertise and crews for the new Type
26 frigates.
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The hon. Gentleman mentions the importance of the crew to
the local economy—they are very much part of our culture.
He is probably aware of a study that either the council
or the university—I forget which—did about 10 years ago.
It showed that, surprisingly, quite a large proportion of
the crew of any ship base-ported in Plymouth—or anywhere
else, I imagine—live elsewhere in the UK, but a hard
core, or a significant minority, live in Plymouth or the
port area. They have a significant role in boosting our
local economy and being part of the local social fabric.
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The hon. Gentleman is exactly right. It is really
important that we value the people who serve on our ships
and, importantly, the people out of uniforms—the
civilians—who support the base-porting of the ships and
the jobs that result from that.
Many of the warfare and technical specialists who use the
combat and operating systems on the Type 23s and Type 26s
already live in a PL postcode. As south-west Members
know, the PL postcode extends far and wide across the far
south-west, as it should do. Preserving those roles and
those people in our region is paramount in this basing
decision. Confirming Devonport as a long-term naval
anti-submarine warfare centre of excellence would support
forces families as well as strategic efforts.
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I congratulate the hon. Gentleman on securing the debate.
I am sure he will recognise that this is about not just
the PL postcodes but the TQ postcodes of south Devon.
Many of the workers whose skills will be of benefit to
the future Type 26 programme live and work there and
commute to Devonport every day. To base-port the frigates
in Devonport would boost the wider regional economy, not
just Plymouth’s.
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I thank my near-neighbour for that comment. It was
foolish of me to forget our friends up the A38, which I
hope will soon be the M5.
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I too congratulate the hon. Gentleman on securing the
debate. It is important that we in this House acknowledge
the very proud service history that he has referred to in
his constituency. This is due serious consideration.
Having the frigates based there will ensure job security
and will send a very clear message that the modern
defence strategy incorporates the ability to place ships
strategically in strong defence areas. The hon. Gentleman
represents one of those areas.
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I thank the hon. Gentleman for that contribution. I agree
that it is important that we build on the areas of
expertise we already have. In Devonport, Plymouth and the
wider south-west we have military expertise and a close
connection with the armed forces, which aids recruitment.
The context of this debate matters. It is not just
frigates that are based at Devonport naval base and
serviced in the dockyard, but amphibious ships. When the
news of the threats to HMS Albion, HMS Bulwark and the
Royal Marines was first mooted last summer, I called for
clarity and for Ministers to rule out those cuts. Some
said that I was scaremongering, but the threat to those
ships was real then and sadly is real today, as is the
threat to HMS Ocean, our amphibious helicopter carrier,
which will shortly leave Devonport for the last time and
join the Brazilian navy as PHM Atlântico. That is when I
launched the campaign to fight for more frigates in
Devonport. I believed that we needed not just one extra
Type 23 with a tail transferred from Portsmouth, but a
commitment to make all the Type 26s and Type 31s
Devonport-based, too. At the time, I said:
“I’m no longer content with Devonport being on the
defensive and today call for all of the new Type 26 and
31 Frigates to be based in Devonport alongside our world
class amphibious ships.”
Most of the Type 31e frigates, which will join the Type
26s as part of the replacement for the Type 23s, will be
forward-deployed. The Type 26s will not be, so their
basing arrangement is perhaps the bigger win for any
locality, even if the Type 31e frigates may be with us
sooner than 2026 for their larger sister ships. I also
believe that the Type 31s should be based in Devonport,
even if that is more paper-basing than base-porting in
the traditional sense, due to the forward-deployed nature
of many of the new lighter frigates.
In January I led a Westminster Hall debate on the
Government’s national shipbuilding strategy. I made the
case to the Minister for why Devonport is a world-class
naval base and why it should be home to the Type 26s. The
energy behind the will to base the frigates there also
arises from the local community in the far south-west to
protect our amphibious warships. The petition that I
launched to preserve the amphibious ships and the Royal
Marines attracted 30,000 names, the bulk of them from the
far south-west, although the Minister will be pleased to
hear that 34 people in his constituency also signed it.
Since then, however, we have seen further threats to our
city with the confirmation that Stonehouse barracks, the
spiritual home of the Royal Marines, is to close, as is
the Royal Citadel, both in my constituency. There are
also job losses as Babcock restructures.
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The hon. Gentleman may be slightly mistaken. The
announcement of the rebasing strategy was in 2015, long
before the current process. This is not about party
politics, because over the years Governments of all
colours have not paid enough attention to Plymouth, but
if the rebasing strategy happens and the Type 26s can be
a base-ported in Plymouth, does he agree that under this
Government we shall actually see a growth in the military
for the first time in a generation, and that is to be
welcomed?
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We shall actually see replacement of the existing Type
23s with Type 26s, so the risk is that we shall lose
ships if we do not get the Type 26 decision, rather than
gaining extra ships. As the hon. Gentleman knows, we are
already losing HMS Ocean, sadly, so our naval base
contingent is already one large ship down.
The modernising defence review is a chance to present a
new vision for defence in Plymouth to back our jobs and
secure our future. The review needs to be used as a
positive way of encouraging more people to see their
future not only in the Royal Navy and the Royal Marines,
but in the industries that service the ships and our
fighting forces. To do that, we need certainty on the
future of HMS Albion, HMS Bulwark and the Royal
Marines—from the volume and frequency of questions I have
asked the Minister over the months since he took up his
role, he knows that I feel strongly about that.
However, we must be under no illusion: the new frigates
should not be based in Devonport simply as a sop for
losing the amphibious ships. We have fought a cross-party
campaign across Plymouth on three fronts: frigates;
amphibious ships and Royal Marines; and our legacy
submarines. We need to win on each of them, and we cannot
afford to lose any one element.
The Minister knows that I have had concerns about the
Type 31e and how lightly armed it is, but I have no such
concerns about the world-class Type 26. It is a ship that
our nation should and will be proud of. It is being built
in Scotland—
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Saying that, the hon. Gentleman allows me to ask whether
he agrees that the fact that the Type 26s are being built
on the Clyde shows the importance of Scotland’s place in
the United Kingdom, both for UK defence capabilities and
for the shipbuilding industry on the Clyde.
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I agree entirely. The remark about the apprentice who
will work on the last of the Type 26 frigates not being
born yet shows what a long-term commitment to British
shipbuilding the Type 26 programme represents and how
important it is for us to secure other shipbuilding
contracts, such as that for the fleet solid support
ships, so that such ships are built in British shipyards,
which many people across the House believe should be the
case.
The Type 26 will be a world-class ship. My only concern
is that there are too few of them—to be precise, five too
few—and that we are not replacing all Type 23s with a
Type 26. However, there is no doubt that this ship is
world-class, can be put in harm’s way, will have the
capabilities of a modern navy, and will be the envy of
our allies and a worry to our opponents. Numerically, our
fleet is small compared with that of Russia or China, but
our capabilities are miles ahead. Indeed, these are ships
that our allies may well sail as well.
I hope that Canada chooses the Type 26 platform for its
six new frigates and that our cousins down under order
nine of them for the Royal Australian Navy’s future
frigate programme. There is cross-party support for
selling not only the design of the platform but the
expertise in the supply chain, because not all the export
jobs for the frigates will be in building hulls, but in
weapons, combat systems and other support items on the
frigate, supplying value to the entire British supply
chain.
I do not want to use any time saying why other bases
would not work for the Type 26, because Plymouth and
Devonport’s case is sufficiently compelling. Portsmouth
is a good base for the carriers, the Type 45 destroyers
and the OPVs, or offshore patrol vessels. Devonport
should be home to frigates, refits and the Royal Navy’s
amphibious capabilities—not all the Royal Navy, just the
best bits.
Back in June last year, in my maiden speech, I called for
more capable frigates, which the capabilities of the Type
26 deliver. Shortly after winning my seat in the general
election, I wrote to the then Defence Secretary asking
for a new Type 26 to be named after Plymouth. That was a
campaign started by my predecessor, —formerly the
Conservative MP. I supported it as a candidate, and I
continue to do so now as an MP. I want to see one of the
new city-class ships named after Plymouth, but there is
little point naming her after Plymouth if she is to be
based in Portsmouth, as I am sure the Minister
understands.
With others, I have been working hard to lobby Ministers,
making the case for Devonport. This has been a team
effort, and our case is strongest in that cross-party
spirit. I have also been lobbying colleagues on the
Labour Benches. I am really pleased that Labour has
backed my campaign, pledging that a Labour Government
would base-port all Type 26 frigates in Devonport.
Whether that Labour Government is sooner or later, the
shadow Defence Secretary, my hon. Friend the Member for
Llanelli (Nia Griffith), is right when she says that
Devonport’s case for the new frigates is “compelling,
comprehensive and convincing”. I agree with her on that.
Plymouth’s three Members of Parliament—all present
today—the Labour leader of Plymouth City Council and the
Conservative leader of the opposition are united in our
belief that Devonport is the best place for the new
ships. I have called for cross-party working on the issue
since I started the campaign last year. Ministers have
told me that that is the approach they want to see from
Plymouth in the campaign, and I recognise that a strong
and united campaign by Plymouth is vital to persuade the
Ministry of Defence to decide in Devonport’s favour. We
achieve more when we work together and less when we are
divided. By the end of this debate I hope that Ministers
will have heard from the united voice of Plymouth and the
surrounding areas that Devonport is the ideal location
for the Type 26 frigates.
From 2026 onwards, I want to see HMS Glasgow and her
sister ships in Devonport, together with our world-class
amphibious ships. In setting out the case for Devonport,
I have also set out the cross-party and cross-Plymouth
support that the campaign enjoys. Basing the new frigates
in Devonport is the right strategic choice, the right
defence choice, the best option for forces’ families, and
the right choice for Plymouth, Devonport and our nation.
I realise that the Minister has to make many tough
decisions in his role—hard decisions, life-and-death
decisions—but this is not one of them. This should be a
simple decision—an easy choice for him. Devonport is the
best location for the Type 26s. I encourage the Minister
to make that decision in our favour at the earliest
opportunity.
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It is a pleasure to serve under your chairmanship, Sir
Roger.
I congratulate the hon. Member for Plymouth, Sutton and
Devonport (Luke Pollard) on his speech, much of which I
agree with and subscribe to. I also congratulate the
other Members for the city of Plymouth on being present
to support the debate. It is right to describe the
Plymouth campaign as city-wide, and the campaign is
appreciated. It was certainly difficult not to come away
from my visit to Plymouth with the strong impression of
the support afforded over centuries to the Royal Navy by
the people of the city of Plymouth. I appreciate the
passion displayed by all hon. Members, the three
representing the city in particular, and the Ministry of
Defence and I understand the feeling behind the speech.
The decision on the base-porting of the Type 26 is an
important one that will have to be taken sooner rather
than later. When we take that decision, we shall take
into account a number of factors that have to be
considered seriously and carefully, as the hon. Member
for Plymouth, Sutton and Devonport will understand. We
shall be looking at issues of logistics, infrastructure
and personnel. On personnel, I echo the tribute he paid
to the Royal Navy crews who man the frigates already
based in Plymouth and to their support staff, whether
military or civilian.
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On the timing, does the Ministry of Defence grasp the
issue about us needing a commitment not even sooner
rather than later, but before the summer recess? We need
a decision point that we can look at, and take back to
people and say, “Yes, we will get a decision on it,” so
that we will have delivered something from the campaign.
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My hon. Friend tempts me to offer an answer now, but I am
sure he understands that it would be remiss of me to make
such a commitment now, especially as we are still
awaiting the completion of the Modernising Defence
Programme. However, I stress again that we are looking at
the issues seriously, including training, force
generation and cost. We will certainly make an
announcement before the end of the year. I anticipate
that we might be able to make announcements before then,
although I would not want my hon. Friend to come away
thinking that the intention is to have an early decision.
We are trying to ensure that we make a decision based on
the facts of the situation, and I assure my hon. Friend
that the support that Plymouth is showing for the
campaign is being taken on board. Plymouth’s capability
and the capacity as a naval base is also understood by
the Ministry of Defence. I hope that gives some
reassurance, if not the exact dates that he was looking
for.
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Has the Minister given any consideration at all, on a
slightly longer time scale, to where the new Type 31s may
be based?
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Ultimately, we are looking very carefully at the
rebasing; the fact of the matter is that we are building
an enhanced Royal Navy. We will have more surface ships
in the Royal Navy than we have had for a long time. We
have seen the Royal Navy grow for the first time in a
long time. All these decisions are under review. That is
why it is important to understand that the decision on
the Type 26 is not being taken in isolation. We are
making decisions in the context of a growing Royal Navy.
I suspect that every Member who has spoken in this debate
would welcome the fact that the Royal Navy is growing.
The reason for that growth is the new challenges that we
face and the demand that we respond to them, and some of
those were articulated by the hon. Member for Plymouth,
Sutton and Devonport.
We are aware of the long-standing support offered to the
Royal Navy by Plymouth and the Devonport base since 1691.
There is a 300-year history. It is very difficult to
visit Plymouth without being moved by the contribution
that the city has made to the prosperity and the
protection of this country over 300 years. Clearly, the
size of the estate is unique. It is the largest base of
its kind in Europe, stretching over 940 acres, and has
more than 100 listed buildings and 3.5 miles of
waterfront. This is a base that has been providing
support for our Royal Navy for a very long time. That
history is clear from visiting the city of
Plymouth.
The Government’s commitment is clear: to enhance the
Royal Navy—the surface fleet and the submarine fleet. It
is important to understand the context of this debate,
which is the growth in the Royal Navy. We are committed
to building our eight anti-submarine warfare Type 26
frigates. The hon. Gentleman’s support for our export
campaigns in Australia and Canada is appreciated. We have
run a fantastic campaign in Australia and we are running
a fantastic campaign in Canada. The capability of the
platforms that we are building, with the support of our
fantastic shipbuilders on the Clyde, is something that we
take very seriously. It is great to see this unified
approach to highlighting the capability of the Type
26.
The contract to build the Type 26 was awarded in June
2017. We have already cut steel and are building the
first blocks on HMS Glasgow, which is very good news.
Some people have claimed that it is nothing more than a
paper ship; any hon. Members who have been to the Clyde
will be able to say quite categorically that that is not
the case. The work is being undertaken and the quality of
the work is excellent.
The hon. Member for Plymouth, Sutton and Devonport
highlighted the long-term commitment to shipbuilding on
the Clyde that that order represents in his comments
about the apprenticeships opportunities. The last of the
apprentices who will be involved in the Type 26 programme
have not yet been born. The Type 26 programme shows our
commitment to long-term shipbuilding. I make no apology
about the fact that we are also looking at the Type 31e.
It is a case of identifying our capability need and what
the Navy needs. The Type 31e is welcome from a
procurement point of view. It is a general-purpose
frigate being built to a cost limit, but it is also a new
way of doing procurement.
When I travel around the world in my role—when the
parliamentary arithmetic allows such travel to occur—I
find it fascinating to see how closely defence
departments in other countries are watching our Type 31
procurement. The capability and the cost of the Type 26
are recognised and have been recognised in the debate.
Not many countries have the capability or the financial
power to purchase such a high level of capability as the
Type 26, but they are interested in what we are trying to
achieve with the Type 31. The combined effort is showing
a degree of confidence in our shipbuilding strategy, but
it is also showing a confidence in our Royal Navy.
It is important to highlight that the Type 23 frigates
have been and remain a significant part of the activities
in Devonport. The decision to base the eight
anti-submarine Type 23s in Devonport was correct. That
decision has resulted in more coherence in our basing. I
share the hon. Gentleman’s admiration for the crews of
the Type 23; I have also flown on to Argyll and have
enjoyed Thursday war games with the crew. The
professionalism and the commitment of the crew was
something to behold.
I take exception to the comments that the hon. Member for
Plymouth, Sutton and Devonport made about defence cuts.
We have to acknowledge this issue on a cross-party basis,
and it needs to be very carefully articulated, because it
contributes to a false impression of what is happening in
defence. The Government are committed to increasing
defence spending. We have a protected budget of £37
billion. That budget is increasing by half a per cent
above inflation year in year out for the lifetime of this
Parliament. That commitment needs to be understood.
We talk about cuts, but it is important to put that in
context. We are increasing defence spending. The
challenge is to manage that increased spending. When we
casually use the word “cuts”, we are sending a
message—often a false message—that is a reassurance to
our opponents and that causes distress and concern for
some of the people working in our armed forces. I
understand the context in which the comment was made, but
I want to put it on record that we are expanding and
extending our defence capabilities and are spending more
on defence. My own equipment budget is £180 billion over
the next 10 years, which by any stretch of the
imagination is a significant budget. That includes a £63
billion commitment to enhancing the Royal Navy. I am sure
that most Members will acknowledge that that is a
significant commitment.
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I welcome the Minister’s comments. Clearly, we have to
conduct the debate from a position of truth. We have a
growing defence budget, but in Plymouth we have seen
things like the defence rebasing strategy that have put
people’s livelihoods and jobs in that city under threat.
It has kind of paused; it is not going anywhere. We need
the commitment. Will the Minister take back to the
Department that we need something firm to deliver for the
people of Plymouth in the very near future?
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At the risk of repeating myself, I think the message has
been heard loud and clear from the three Members from
Plymouth and from other Members. The Ministry of Defence
has heard that message. We have to put things in order,
because we have to do things in the context of the
Modernising Defence Programme, but I assure my hon.
Friend and other colleagues that the message about the
importance of this decision for Devonport has been
understood.
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Will the Minister give way?
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For the final time, I will.
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I thank the Minister for his generosity. He talks about
cuts, but I would argue that the position is not quite as
he painted. Can I infer from what he has said that HMS
Albion and HMS Bulwark are now safe?
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The hon. Gentleman should be aware that HMS Albion and
HMS Bulwark are safe until 2033 and 2034, which is the
current situation. Those are the decommissioning dates
for both vessels.
The situation in Plymouth and Devonport is still a
significant success story. I acknowledge that there are
challenges, but the activities taking place there—the
flag officer sea training, Royal Marines Tamar and the
commitment for the new oil jetty that has been built at
Thanckes—are commitments and expenditure that highlight
the fact that there is a very positive future for the
base at Devonport. That positive future is not because we
owe anything other than the right decision for the people
of Plymouth, but that right decision will reflect the
history of service and support that has been offered to
the Ministry of Defence and the Royal Navy by the people
of Plymouth and the people involved in the bases in
Plymouth. We should be very proud of the fact that it is
a key component of our defence infrastructure. The
continued added investment made by the Ministry of
Defence highlights the fact that there is a bright future
for the base in Devonport.
I will close by thanking all hon. Members who have
contributed to what has been a constructive debate. It is
important to put everything into the context of a growing
Royal Navy, for the first time in decades—we all welcome
that. The context is an enhanced and increasing defence
budget, but one that is still challenged, for the reasons
that the hon. Member for Plymouth, Sutton and Devonport
highlighted, such as the changing threat
environment.
I stress to all hon. Members, especially the three hon.
Members representing the city of Plymouth, that we have
heard the message very clearly. That message will be
conveyed back to the Department. I look forward to the
result of the Modernising Defence Programme and, in due
course, a decision being made on the basing of the Type
26 frigates, which are a world-class capability.
Question put and agreed to.
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