Page 24: of Maritime Reporter Magazine (June 1988)

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U.S. NAVY

Exhibit 2

PRIVATE SHIPYARDS WITH NAVY CONSTRUCTION PROGRAMS (31 March 1988)

MARINETTE MARINE

MARINETTE. WL 3 MCM

PETERSON BLDRS

STURGEON BAY, WL 4 MCM

BATH IRON WORKS

TACOMA BOATBUILDING

TODD SHIPYARDS

SAN PEDRO. CA 1 FFG

NATL STEEL CO

SAN DIEGO. CA 1 AOE

NEW ORLEANS. LA 3T-AO 5 LSD

HALTER MARINE INC

NEW ORLEANS. LA 6 T-AGOS

McDERMOTT SHIPYARD GROUP

MORGAN CITY. LA 1 T-AGOS (SWATH)

TEXTRON MARINE BELL AEROSPACE 12 LCAC irrroN UNGALLSI

PASCAGOULA, MS 10 CG-47 1 DDG-51 3 LHD 1 BB(R)

LOCKHEED. GULFPORT

GD'ELECTRIC BOAT

PENN SHIP

CHESTER. PA 4 T-AO

BETH STEEL ISP}

SPARROWS POINT. MD 2 T-AGS

NEWPORT NEWS

NEWPORT NEWS VA 2 CVN 10 SSN

NORSHIPCO

INTERMARINE USA

SAVANNAH. GA 1 MHC

TAMPA SHIPBUILDING 2 T-ACSiCl 9 LCAC

Exhibit 3—Job Starts and Expenditures for Active Fleet Ship Maintenance and Alteration FY 1986-1989

No. of Job Starts

Number of Overhauls

Number of SRA's

Number of PMA's

Total

Expenditures (in milions of $)

Scheduled Overhauls

Short Term Availabilities

Ship Alterations

Intermediate Maintenance

Technical Support

Fleet Outfitting

Inactivations

Berthing/Messing

Total

Source: Department of the Navy

FY 1986 actual 33 103 35 171 $1,813.7 1,262.5 1,303.3 321.5 131.7 328.2 40.5 43.6 $5,245.0

FY 1987 actual 39 108 54 201 $1,859.4 1.506.4 1.342.5 368.4 145.6 289.9 25.7 49.0 $5,586.9

FY 1988 budgeted 27 86 65 178 $1,271.8 1,485.9 1,026.1 325.2 137.5 315.4 66.7 32.0 $4,660.6

FY 1989 planned 23 100 58 181 $734.1 2,060.5 1,077.0 321.1 139.7 360.5 110.6 39.9 $4,843.4

Exhibit 5—Naval Research, Development Test and Evaluation Budget (In millions of $)

FY 1989

House Armed

Services Comm.

FY 1988 Proposed Recommendation

Technology Base $ 750.0 $ 772.6 $ 777.6

Advanced Technology Devel. 233.4 204.0 206.0

Strategic Programs 1,252.1 781.0 781.0

Tactical Programs 5,663.1 5,992.4 6,116.1

Intelligence & Communic. 913.9 751.7 751.7

Defense Wide Mission Supp. 700.6 714.4 714.4

Total $9,512.9 $9,216.2 $9,346.9

Source: Department of the Navy (continued) submarine menace. Additional funding of $40 million has been rec- ommended to begin this program.

Twelve years ago, IMA was asked by the Navy to perform a major study of its procedures for managing naval ship procurement. This was followed by an assessment of proce- dures used to manage the naval ship modernization program. Since then

IMA has performed consulting as- signments for over 100 commercial clients in 20 countries—establishing a leading international position in marine and naval market research.

In 1981, IMA began publishing a series of special reports on naval business opportunities. These re- ports now reach over 400 subscrib- ers. They include equipment manu- facturers, shipyards, technology firms, electronics suppliers, etc.

This article draws from several recent reports and provides an indi- cation of the type of coverage pro- vided to subscribers.

New Naval Technology

Opportunities

IMA has just published a detailed guide to the new naval technology program. It describes more than 200 specific projects involving technolo- gy development representing tre- mendous sales opportunities for de- signers, suppliers and manufactur- ers.

Highlights include: • a major high-level effort initiated to develop revolutionary surface ship designs; • engineering development of the

SSN-21 which requires expendi- tures of more than $400 million over the next two years; • more than $800 million to be spent over the next five years on advanced attack submarine concepts—a ma- jor new initiative to be managed by

DARPA; • design and development of nu- clear propulsion technology which continues to exceed $700 million an- nually; • D-5 ballistic missile development expenditures which will exceed $1.6 billion over the next two years as the

Lockheed-managed program transi- tions to the production stage; • Tomahawk cruise missile develop- ment expenditures to exceed $130 million over the next two years; • Boeing-managed Sea Lance ASW standoff weapon development ex- penditures which will exceed $150 million FY 1988-89—a figure lower than originally planned due to bud- get constraints; • substantial increases in funding for development of the MK 50 ad- vanced lightweight torpedo (ALWT) in the new FY 1989 bud- get—with two-year funding of de- velopment expenditures now pro- jected to exceed $275 million; • project definition contracts to be awarded this summer kicking off a 26 Maritime Reporter/Engineering News

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