Norway picks UK to build its new warships in £10,000,000,000 deal

HMS SOMERSET COLD MOVES IN TO 2 BASIN The Type 23 Frigate HMS Somerset has made a spectacular emergence from the Frigate Support Centre in HMNB Devonport. After over two years inside the Frigate Shed being up-graded and fitted out by the Royal Navy's industrial partner, Babcock International as part of the Type 23 frigate Capability Sustainment Programme, she will now be under-going further work in 2 Basin. It is expected that she will return to the Fleet in the latter part of 2021, when she will serve alongside the other Type 23s, before the introduction of the New Devonport based Type 26 frigates
Dozens of warships could be made in the new deal (Picture: Royal Navy)

£10 billion worth of warships for the Norwegian navy will soon be built in Glasgow in a historic deal, the Ministry of Defence has announced.

Type 26 frigates will be constructed at the BAE Systems yard in the Govan area, allowing a fleet of at least 13 anti-submarine ships from the UK and Norway – at least five of which will be Norwegian – to operate jointly.

The deal comes as Europe hopes to deal with increased Russian activity in northern Europe.

Prime Minister Sir Keir Starmer learned of the decision during a call with his Norwegian counterpart Jonas Gahr Store on Saturday night.

A Downing Street spokeswoman said the decision marks an ‘important and historic moment for European security’.

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It will also bring an estimated 2,000 jobs at BAE, with a further 2,000 in the supply chain within the next decade.

Starmer said: ‘This £10 billion deal is what our Plan for Change is about – creating jobs, driving growth and protecting national security for working people.’

Stock Computer Generated Image of the future Type 26 Ship for the Royal Navy. All of the Royal Navy?s next-generation Type 26 frigates will be homed in Devonport, the Defence Secretary Gavin Williamson announced at the Naval Base today. The eight Type 26 warships will start being delivered to the Royal Navy from the mid-2020s, heralding yet another new era in the role of a base which has played a central role in the defence of the UK for hundreds of years ? from the Napoleonic wars to the Falklands Conflict. The 6,900-tonne frigates will be world-class anti-submarine warships and will provide cutting-edge protection for the likes of the UK?s nuclear deterrent and the Queen Elizabeth Class aircraft carriers, with the ability to conduct a whole range of other operations anywhere in the world. The Type 26 will replace the UK?s Type 23 frigates, with the first set to enter service in the mid 2020s and the last remaining in service beyond the middle of the century.
Future type-26 ships will be produced in Scotland (Picture: BAE)

He said the success is a testament to thousands of people in the UK working to increase national security for the UK, Norwegian allies and NATO.

Defence Secretary John Healey said the deal ‘deepens our strategic partnership’ with Norway.

He added: ‘Our navies will work as one, leading the way in NATO, with this deal putting more world-class warships in the North Atlantic to hunt Russian submarines, protect our critical infrastructure, and keep both our nations secure.’

Scottish Secretary Ian Murray said the decision shows the ‘tremendous success’ of Scotland’s shipbuilding industry.

In June, an extra £6 billion investment for military capabilities was announced, which will fund drones, ships and 7,000 UK-built long-range weapons.

Around £1.5 billion of it will go to building at least six new factories to build weapons, producing things like explosives and pyrotechnics.

They will operate on an ‘always on’ basis, meaning production can be easily scaled up if needed, the government said.

It comes as Russia and Ukraine continue to bitterly wage war, with some of the worst attacks seen so far, even as peace is constantly claimed to be within reach.

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