Page 26: of Maritime Reporter Magazine (June 1988)

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U.S. NAVY

CURRENT NAVY, COAST GUARD & MARAD OVERHAUL, REPAIR & CONVERSION CONTRACTS AT U.S. SHIPYARDS (As of April 1988)

SHIPYARD

Alabama Dry Dock

Amertech Industries

Atlantic Dry Dock

Avondale Shipyards

Bath Iron Works

Bender Shipbuilding & Repair

Bethlehem Steel—

Sparrows Point

Braswell Shipyards

Charleston Naval Shipyard

Charleston Naval Yard

Colonna's Shipyards

Continental Maritime

DMI Shipyard

General Ship Corporation

Houston Ship Repair

SHIP TYPE OF WORK SVALUE COMP

USS Lexington (AVT-16) PM 10,131,466 8/90

Empire State (MarAd) REP & OH 417,528 4/88

USS Aubrey Fitch DSRA 6,950,000 3/88 (FFG-34)

USS Underwood DSRA 7,466,000 8/88 (LSD-36)

USS Boone (FFG-28) SRA 9,998,452 7/88

USS John J. Hall DSRA 11,170,581 9/88 (FFG-32)

USS Radford (DD-968) ROH 20.700,000 5/89 4 USCG cutters ROH 117,452.000 89

USS Brumby (FF-1044) ROH 14.501,392 4/88

USS Koelsch (FF-1049) OH 12,000,000 8/88

USS Redstone DD & OH 5,429,704 9/88 (T-AGM-20)

USNS Neosho DD & OH 4,489,339 5/88 (T-AO-143)

USS Antigo (YTB-792) SRA 1,047,448 4/88

USNS Neosho DD & OH 7,366.392 8/88 (T-AO-143)

USS Andrew Jackson OH 112.058.684 3/90 (SSBN-619)

USS Woodrow Wilson OH 120.928,007 3/89 (SSBN-624)

USS Henry L. Stimson REF 19,673,812 8/89 (SSBN-655) & USS

Mariano J. Vallejo (SSBN-658)

USS Richard E. Byrd DSRA 4.280,000 7/88 (DDG-23)

USS Ranger (CV-61) SRA 4,926.630 6/88

USS Mars (AFS-1) DPMA 10,073.284 5/88

USS Barbey (FF-1088) DSRA 3,677,605 4/88

USS Cook (FF-1083) DSRA 3,324.711 4/88

MSB-1 ROH 41,057,000 —

USS Trippe (FF-1075) ROH 8,801,078 5/88

USS Stephen W. Graves EDSRA 10,969,490 6/88 (FFG-29)

Chesapeake (NDRF) REP 299,985 4/88

Mount Washington REP 549,000 5/88 (NDRF)

Navy Market (continued) 30-month design and engineering phase for the new generation mine; • expenditures over the next two years for Aegis engineering and de- velopment to exceed $350 million; • more than $118 million earmarked in FY 1988-89 for surface ship ASW system development and engineer- ing; • development and engineering of submarine sonar systems projected to exceed $275 million over the next two years; • full scale engineering to develop and deliver 28 AN/BSY(2) submar- ine combat systems—a $7.3 billion long-term development and pro- curement program for the Seawolf submarine; • expenditures to develop the Fixed

Distributed System (FDS)—a key component of future offboard ASW surveillance—totaling $170 million in FY 1988-89; • more than $97 million over the next two years to be spent on devel- oping advanced submarine commu- nications systems; and • almost $87 million to be available in FY 1988-89 for developing new manufacturing technology.

Companies interested in this area will find the IMA guide use- ful for identifying business op- portunities in the new naval tech- nology program. The 220-page guide is available for $550. For further information, contact: In- ternational Maritime Associates, 835 New Hampshire Avenue,

N.W., Washington, D.C. 20037; telephone: (202) 333-8501; fax: 202-333-8504; or telex: 64325

IMA.

Exhibit 4—Expenditures for NRF Ship Maintenance and Modernization

Spending for

Fiscal Number of Maintenance and

Year NRF Ships Modernization (millions of $) 1982 43 $ 62.8 1983 35 100.3 1984 36 97.4 1985 32 123.6 1986 39 127.9 1987 44 148.3 1988 48 167.6 1989 48 213.2

Source: Department of Defense

SHIPYARD SHIP TYPE OF WORK $VALUE COMP

Industrial Welding & Machine State of Maine (MarAd) REP 517,200 5/88

Ingalls Shipbuilding USS Stark (FFG-31) REP 28,700,000 8/88

USS Wisconsin (BB-64) MOD 221,768,170 10/88

USS Richmond K. Turner ROH 28,780,830 8/88 (CG-20)

Jonathan Shipyard USS Saginaw PM 9,900,000 6/90

Long Beach Naval Yard LPH Class Ships PM 8,096,132 10/90

McDermott Inc. IX-513 Barge MODIF 7,422,802 4/88

Metro Machine Atlantic Fleet LPDs PM 5,334,400 8/91

USS Bowen (FF-1079) OH 6,900,000 —

Metro Machine Corp. USS John King (DDG-3) DSRA 3,089,604 9/88

Mid-Coast Marine USCG buoy tenders. DD 670,000 5/88

Ironwood &

Sweet Briar

Moon Engineering USS Conynham REP 1,484,444 — (DDG-17)

NASSCO 4 LSTs PM 3,500,000 90 3 LSTs MAINT 5,858,543 —

USS Hewitt (DD-966) ROH 26,619,695 4/88

USS Elliott (DD-967) ROH 27,779,349 9/88

Newport News Shipbuilding USS Pittsburgh SRA 7,055,300 7/88 (SSN-720)

USS Enterprise OH 34,277,751 9/88 (CVN-65)

USS Newport News PSA 3,400,000 1/89 (SSN-750)

Surface Ship REP 48,095,123 7/89

Support Barge

USS Oklahoma City PSA 3,367,692 — (SSN-723)

USS Key West PSA 38.000,000 12/88 (SSN-722)

USS George C. REF 11,172,200 10/88

Marshall (SSBN-654)

USS Lewis & Clark REF 10,751,500 7/88 (SSBN-644)

Norfolk Naval Yard USS Baton Rouge SRA 5,462,494 10/88 (SSN-689)

USS Vulcan (AR-5) DSRA 4,800,000 5/88

USS Memphis (SSN-691) SRA 8,486,562 10/88

Norfolk Shipbuilding AO-178, 179 & 186 PM 38,900,000 —

USS Lawrence (DDG-4) REP 4,966,666 —

USS Puget Sound ROH 12,210,546 5/88 (AD-36)

USS Resolute ROH 9,200,000 6/88 (AFDM-10)

Mormacsea & UPG 7,973,482 —

Mormacsaga (RRF)

Northwest Marine Iron Works USS Anchorage ROH 15,300,000 11/88 (LSD-36)

USS Paul Foster ROH 26,423,466 5/88 (DD-964)

USNS Mercy (T-AH-19) PSA 4,600,000 4/88

USS Okinawa (LPH-3) ROH 14,091,106 1/89

Pennsylvania Shipbuilding USS Patterson PM 5-10 mil/yr. — (FF-1061)

Philadelphia Navy Yard USS Independence SLEP 240,000,000 — (CV-62)

Phillyship USS Estocin (FFG-15) SRA 3,805,219 4/88

Portsmouth Naval Yard USS Kamehameha ROH 112,100,000 11/88 (SSBN-642)

USS Albuquerque SRA 11,416,336 11/88 (SSN-706) &

USS Philadelphia (SSN-690)

Puget Sound Naval Yard USS Nimitz (CVN-68) REP & OH — 89

USS Alexander Hamilton ROH 110,713,798 11/88 (SSBN-617)

Robert E. Derecktor USS Connole ROH 2,500,000 — (FFG-12)

Service Engineering USNS Spica (T-AFS-9) OH 10,700,000 —

AE-29, -32-34 PM 4,154,000 89

Southwest Marine USS Dubuque (LPD-8) OH 10,000,000 —

USS George Philip EDSRA 10,758,483 4/89 (FFG-12)

USS Tripoli (LPH-10) PMA 3,036,390 7/88

USS Wichita (AOR-1) REP 41,600,000 — & USS Kansas (AOR-3)

USS Pluck (MSO-464) SRA 1,041,000 —

LST-1185, -1186 OH 35,000,000 87-89 & 1191

USS Okinawa (LPH-3) ROH 16,114,285 7/88

USS Ramsey (FFG-2) MAINT 3,000,000 4/88

USS Durham (LKA-114) DD 7,611,149 7/88

USS Anchorage (LSD-36) ROH 15,048,870 11/88

USS Stein (FF-1065) ROH 9,148,194 10/88

Tacoma Boatbuilding USNS Hayes (T-AG-195) CONV 33,878,232 3/90

Tampa Shipyards T-ACS-7 & 8 CONV 43,158,333 10/88

Todd-Seattle USS Camden (AOE-2) REP 12,643,642 7/88 8 WHECs OH 234,903,000 2/91

USCG-Curtis Bay 14 buoy tenders SLEP 8,500,000 — 16 WMECs MAINT — —

Legend: CONV-Conversion; DEACT-Deactivation; DSRA-Docking Selected Restricted Avail- ability; EDSRA-Extended Docking Selected Restricted Availability; MAINT-Maintenance;

MODIF-Moficiation; MMA-Major Maintenance Availability; OH-Overhaul; PM-Phased Mainte- nance; PMA-Phased Maintenance Availability; PSA-post-Shakedown Availability; REF-refit;

REP-Repair; ROH-Reglar Overhaul; SER-Service; SLEP-Service Life Extension Program;

SRA-Selected Restricted Availability; UPG-Upgrade. 28 Maritime Reporter/Engineering News

Maritime Reporter

First published in 1881 Maritime Reporter is the world's largest audited circulation publication serving the global maritime industry.