Prime Minister pledges to bring shipbuilding back to the UK
PM will on Thursday announce which company is the preferred bidder
to design new Type 31 frigates to be built in the UK, with work
commencing before the end of this year and the first ship ready by
2023 The Type 31 contract and commitment to invigorating the market
in commercial and merchant ships will create thousands of jobs
across the UK and help catalyse investment in training and
apprenticeships in the industry Today’s
shipbuilding...Request free trial
Thousands of jobs in the British shipping
industry will be created over the next decade, the Prime Minister
will announce on Thursday, as he pledges to bring shipbuilding
back to the UK and strengthen the Royal Navy.
During a visit to a ship in the Thames for
London International Shipping Week the Prime Minister will
announce which bidder’s design has been selected for new Type 31
warships. The UK Government has committed to buying at least five
of these cutting edge vessels for the Royal Navy, with more
expected to be exported to governments around the world. The
first British Type 31 ship will be in the water by
2023.
The Type 31 programme will support over 2,500
jobs across the UK, with different elements of the frigates being
assembled and built at British shipyards. At least 150 of these
jobs will be for new technical apprenticeships. The ships will be
built exclusively in the UK.
Today’s announcement forms part of the Prime
Minister’s commitment to reinvigorate the British shipbuilding
industry, ensuring British design and building expertise, in
military and commercial shipping, is once again at the heart of
this important international market.
The new Type 31 ships will build on the
exporting success of the Type 26 frigates, which were designed in
the UK and will soon be sailing as part of the British,
Australian and Canadian navies.
The Government is also committed to realising
the UK’s potential to be a world leader in commercial
shipbuilding, particularly for cruise ships, ferries and yachts.
The leisure, superyacht and small commercial marine sector
expanded by 1.7 per cent last year, its seventh consecutive year
of growth. Last year the UK was third in global yacht building
rankings.
To realise this shipbuilding ambition, the
Prime Minister has appointed Defence Secretary Ben Wallace as Shipbuilding Tsar. As part
of this brief the Defence Secretary will work across government
to enhance the UK’s shipbuilding enterprise, including with the
Department for Education, BEIS and the Department for
International Trade which this week launches a new Maritime Trade
and Investment Plan.
The Prime Minister has tasked Ben Wallace with looking at how the
government can use Further Education, skilled apprenticeships and
graduates to achieve a sustainable, longer term skills base for
British shipbuilding across the UK. This will ensure that British
shipyards are able to compete fairly for all UK government
contracts as we leave the EU.
The Prime Minister’s commitment to
reinvigorating the British shipbuilding industry will also
strengthen and enhance the capabilities of the Royal Navy and
those of our international partners and allies.
The Government has pledged to maintain a
surface fleet of at least 19 frigates and destroyers and to grow
this fleet in the 2030s. The first batch of five Type 31 frigates
will help achieve this, by replacing Type 23 frigates.
At a time where the challenges across the
world’s seas are increasing, the Type 31 frigates will enable the
UK to undertake more missions such as the interception and
disruption of those breaching international maritime law,
intelligence collection and protecting commercial
shipping.
Prime Minister Boris Johnson said:
“UK is an outward-looking island nation, and
we need a shipbuilding industry and Royal Navy that reflect the
importance of the seas to our security and
prosperity.
“This is an industry with a deep and visceral
connection to so many parts of the UK and to the Union itself. My
government will do all it can to develop this aspect of our
heritage and the men and women who make up its workforce – from
apprentices embarking on a long career, to those families who
have worked in shipyards for generations.
“I look forward to the restoration of British
influence and excellence across the world’s oceans. I am
convinced that by working together we will see a renaissance in
this industry which is so much part of our island story – so
let’s bring shipbuilding home.”
Defence Secretary Ben Wallace said:
“These mighty ships will from the next
generation of the Royal Navy fleet. The Type 31 frigates will be
a fast, agile and versatile warship, projecting power and
influence across the globe. The ships will be vital to the Royal
Navy’s mission to keeping peace, providing life-saving
humanitarian aid and safeguarding the economy across the world
from the North Atlantic, to the Gulf, and in the Asia
Pacific.
Secretary of State for International
Trade, Liz Truss, said:
“We will make the Type 31 frigate an export
success. Like the Type 26 before it, there has been significant
interest in the design and capabilities of the Type 31 from
around the world. Countries are modernising their fleets to
safeguard against 21st century naval threats
and British-built vessels and maritime technology are in high
demand. An outward looking United Kingdom will seize this
opportunity as we leave the EU.”
Notes to Editors:
|