River class Offshore Patrol Vessel HMS Clyde entered Portsmouth Harbour for the first time in 12 years this morning.

Clyde is to be decommissioned at the end of 2019, at which time it will be sold to the Brazilian Navy.

The vessels only time off station has been maintenance periods in South Africa.

Local media earlier reported that Rear Admiral Amaury Calheiros Boite confirmed that the Brazilian Navy had been in talks with the Royal Navy and BAE Systems to take over the lease of HMS Clyde when it expires at the end of 2019.

HMS Clyde is part of the Royal Navy’s Fishery Protection Squadron. The Offshore Patrol Vessel was designed and built by BAE Systems and is leased and operated by the Royal Navy, while the company provides maintenance and logistical support to the vessel.

HMS Clyde will be replaced by a new Batch 2 River class vessel, HMS Forth.

George Allison
George has a degree in Cyber Security from Glasgow Caledonian University and has a keen interest in naval and cyber security matters and has appeared on national radio and television to discuss current events. George is on Twitter at @geoallison

56 COMMENTS

        • She might need some re-ballasting and a slight stretch for 16 inch guns Herodotus!

          Nice Christmas present for the Brazilian Navy though….

          • Reminds me of the late Dr Bull, the Canadian scientist, that welded the barrels of two 16 inch ex-US Navy guns together. The object was to launch small reconnaissance satellites into low orbit using a sabot. He achieved some success at doing this but the US decided that they were not going to fund a development programme. He went off in a sulk and dabbled with Hussein producing a supergun. I believe he was murdered in his hotel room by Mosad agents. One of those James Bond type stories that seem hardly credible!

  1. A job extremely well done, congrats to all the crew and welcome home.

    Hopefully, we will see an increase in the number of the Batch 2’s fitted out for escort duties as well as fisheries protection to replace the ageing Batch 1’s.

    • Trying to turn OPVs into escorts isn’t really practical. Not only is there no budget for it, but that money would be better spent resolving manpower issues and either procuring additional T31s or sorting out the maintenance issues with the rest of the fleet.

      • The defence select committee has suggested we increase our spending to 3% per cent of GDP from its current level of 2%.

        Let’s wait and see what this government intends to do given that we are now leaving the EU and need to be able to stand on our own two feet military.

        It makes little sense to me to be solely reliant on other nations once we do!

        • What the defence select committee recommends and what politicians do are two very different things. In the midst of Brexit and a dozen big spending commitments, finding an additional ~ÂŁ20bn a year for defence seems too good to be true. I hope I’m wrong, but…

          I struggle to see how leaving the EU changes our defence position significantly. We’re still in Europe, we’re still in NATO, none of our existing defence commitments change. Depending on foreign policy, there may be an additional focus on defence engagement abroad, but it doesn’t fundamentally chance anything else.

          In any case, none of that changes the point about upgunning OPVs. It’s not like we have a massive surplus of them: if money was wasted turning them into third rate escorts, they either perform escort duties and abandon the constabulary role where they’re needed, or do fishery protection and waste the additional equipment. The RN is primarily facing a manpower and hull shortage, neither of which is addressed by upgunning OPVs.

          • Agreed, we don’t participate in EU military activities in any significant way; our presence in the Baltics is NATO, and our more active partnerships with France, Netherlands and Norway are unilateral rather than via the EU.
            Increased manning will give us something like 15% greater availability for our escort fleet without building any more hulls at all, seeing as there’s a T23 and a T45 tied up semi permanently on a rotational basis due to lack of crew.

          • Were the RN manpower issues due to the government cutting 5,000 Royal Navy personnel since 2010? And then not exactly trying to recruit as many as possible, just like reducing sandhurst intake numbers. We probably train far more foreign officers/ soldiers than our own these days!. Atleast the Gurkhas have had an increase in numbers!

          • According to the RN they will in due course be based abroad. As 1SL alluded to a few years ago.

            Hopefully relieving our main escorts from this task.

            Allied to the LSS that I believe will be procured, and the T31.

            I agree. Leaving the EU makes no difference to our membership of NATO or our commitments to it or elsewhere.

          • It makes no sense always sending ships to the Caribbean every year, may aswell have an OPV permenantly based there and maybe a new base to go with it, maybe fund it out of foreign aid for disaster relief operations, shame our OPVs have no dedicated hangar for a small chopper! Merlins a bit over kill. An old lynx would have been great, folding tail ect.

          • we already have a base in the caribbean, its on Andros island in the bahamas and is jointly operated with the US. Nice place too.

          • If we are so short of money and manpower, my suggestion makes more sense surely.

            Type 31 cost ÂŁ250M (expected to exceed this amount according to a post by Janes Defence)

            Batch 2 cost ÂŁ 155M

            Type 31 Crew 117 (Based on Iver Huitfeldt class frigate)

            B2 Crew 34

            I would have thought the Type 31’s would be of more use protecting the carriers and patroling the world oceans and shipping lanes than UK escort duties?

            And don’t forget, we still need ASM’s to fulfil this role, price not included!

            NSM
            https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Naval_Strike_Missile

          • Literally the opposite. When you’re short on manpower and hulls, the solution isn’t to take hulls from other important roles, increase their manpower requirement, and end up with an inefficient half arsed corvette.

            What relevance does the unit cost have? We’re discussing upgunning existing ships, not buying new OPVs. Unless you’re suggesting we buy more OPVs instead of T31? Regardless, you’d have to account for a significant increase in the cost and crew of an R2 to make it fit for escort duties, and even then it’s still lacking crucial features like a hangar or mission bay, and would be rather cramped.

            The T31s ARE for patrolling the world’s oceans. UK escort duties are either already often done by existing OPVs (the Fleet Ready Escort, bit of a misnomer) or require a dedicated ASW platform (the frigate protecting the deterrent). Can you see how an upgunned OPV/corvette is therefore unnecessary, given that the role is either already done by normal OPVs or required a proper ASW frigate?

            TLDR: an upgunned OPV is overkill for what it could be used for, and not fit for what it would need to be used for. It would also take funds and crew away from ships that are more useful.

          • My point at the beginning of this thread was to replace the ageing batch 1’s not add to the five Batch 2’s that we have ordered and make them more flexible. It’s about making the most of what you have available and having a Type 31 escorting Russian ships around these shores makes little sense to me.

            “Furthermore, the BAES OPV can be fitted with up to six 20 ft ISO containers. There is no indication that this capability has been removed from the R2s. This means that the ships will be able to be fitted with just about any system or equipment that can be containerised or palletised.

            One can easily imagine the ships being fitted with containerised/palletised mine hunting systems, or mine-laying systems (for defensive mine laying, probably in support of allies), or containerised workshops and spares stores to act as command and support ships for minehunters or patrol boats, or a containerised/palletised system carrying unmanned surface vessels and extra rigid hull inflatable boats allowing the ships to serve as forward force protection base ships. One could even imagine them being fitted with palletised Sea Ceptor missiles (would should be relatively easy to do) — assuming each pallet carried six Sea Ceptors (as would be carried by each vehicle in the land-based version of the missile), an R2 could carry anything from six (one pallet) to 36 (six pallets) missiles, making it a very useful local area air defence escort for amphibious ships and auxiliaries.”

            “The other source of flexibility for the R2s resulting from their lack of a hangar is that fact that this allows them to have a larger flight deck, capable of taking the Merlin. As the RN is standardizing on the Lynx/Wildcat and the Merlin, and these will carry out all helicopter roles and missions within the Fleet Air Arm, this means that the R2s will be able to support all these roles and missions: anti-surface vessel warfare, ASW, airborne early warning, assault, and so on.”

            Army Fires a Naval Strike Missile from a Palletized Load System Truck.

            https://www.military.com/video/army-fires-naval-strike-missile-palletized-load-system-truck

          • You are right that River batch 1s will Not last for ever. There will come a point a decision will need to be made to either, replace them with more batch 2s or Not replace them at all. Then the UK back down to 5 OPV’s!

          • It seems to me the decision to retain the batch 1’s was a stop-gap measure until all 5 batch 2’s enter service, by 2021. Plus, just in case a Post Brexit conflict with EU fishermen. Are we expecting a conflict this coming Spring?

          • River 2 is a very flexible ship design. I can see it becoming a RN workhorse with containerised weapons and unmanned remote vehicles, and roles defined by crew skills: inspecting fishing nets, Caribbean humanitarian aid containers, anti drug running, anti-piracy ( with helo from an RFA ), casualty evacuation, fleet ready escort, mine hunting mother ship, global OPV, special forces insertion, lily pad refuelling for extending range of task force Merlins.
            Very handy ship. I’d build more when we retire the B1s.

          • And in addition to this, the LRASM will eventually canister launched too.

            “For smaller frigate-sized vessels that don’t use the Mark 41 VLS (in U.S. service, Littoral Combat Ships or some future FFG(X) design), Lockheed Martin is developing a deck-mounted canister-launched version—though the U.S. Navy has chosen the cheaper, shorter-range Norwegian Naval Strike Missile to fulfil this role for now.”

            https://nationalinterest.org/blog/buzz/meet-lrasm-us-navys-powerful-new-missile-91706

          • We won’t get 5 T31 for the budget.

            We would better buying 6 Holland class OPV. For the budget we could afford them all to have the ‘electronics mast’ option and perhaps a few Wildcat too.

          • I disagree. I think we will. And we should have at least 8. The Babcock bid has been accepted: Type 31 ought to be a low risk build. The sooner we start paying Babcock to build new ships rather than Lifex Type 23 the better. Sir John Parker was spot on. We need to stop treating RN ships as if they are classic car restorations!

          • I agree Paul.

            I also think what will happen is T26 down to 6, with just 3 in batch 2. And the T31 increased to 8.

            Saves Billions and then HMG can say the RN escort fleet has increased.

            I don’t agree with significant extra armament on the R B2s. They are presence vessels, or force enablers. Enabling our best ships to be used in their primary role.

            I would like to see the B2s forward deployed ( as the RN have already implied )

            There was an excellent article on Save the RN about this, which included possible extra intelligence fits for them.

            Much more sensible and achievable.

          • I’m still doubtful that 5 Type 31’s can be produced for the ÂŁ1.25 billion allocated,there is always going to be a few problems and snags along the way which will push the price up – not massively but maybe up to about ÂŁ100 million per Hull or so, hopefully I’m wrong but time will tell.But Daniele has a fair point – with a new regime in No10 and whispers of scrutiny with the MOD’s finances the price of the T26 vs the T31 in the eyes of lets just say the Military Illiterate will surely raise some questions.Id hate to see a Politician try and spin a reduction in the T26 order (especially as all 8 are named) but if it happened would anyone here be surprised ?.As far as has been reported negotiations for the last 5 T26 are ongoing ,maybe BAE won’t miss the chance of an open goal and some costs can be reduced.

          • I wonder if the naming saves them. Typically London was last I think and the Cardiff Glasgow Belfast first. Far easier to cut that, it’s only the Capital of Great Britain after all!

          • Ian – certainly but all things considered its a win-win for all parties.If the RN saw a need to keep it on their books then surely that would be the outcome but with the B2 Rivers coming into service they should have all needs covered.

          • Every Time I watched Hms Clyde on tv it seemed to always be having problems! Atleast BAE paid for the “problems”

          • I’m not sure if this could be done, but…

            If BAE Systems was smart, they would take HMS Clyde, refurbish/refit the ship at their expense; and then donate it back to the Royal Navy.

            HMS Clyde could be used with the 3 batch 1’s in home waters, or as a spare hull for when the batch 1’s need service.

            I think this would earn BAE more than it would cost them.

            Thanks,

        • Would be lovely to increase defence spending to 3% but not likely to happen. The Defence Select Committee has been saying that for years but government doesnt listen. Best defence gets is a half-billion here and there to stave off more cuts.

          Jeremy Hunt had pledged to increase defence spending by about ÂŁ15 billion, would have been around 2.75% then. But hey ho, we got Boris instead…

          Personally I’d rather see more Type 31s brought in. 8-10 instead of 5, then up arm them. Could be done relatively cheaply; 24 VLS cells for Sea Ceptor plus two quad canister launchers for NSM would give them more of a punch and wouldn’t be that expensive really.

          Should also fit anti-ship missiles to every Type 45 and every Type 23/26, plus arm the F35s with them.

          • The 2020 defence review should answer the question of how many escorts/ personal are needed to provide a permanent four escort plus SSN availability for the active carrier and meet standing commitments.

            That’s the question, it remains to be seen if Boris will rise to the challenge….

        • The country could certainly afford increased defence expenditure, but the political will is not there. It would mean increased taxation, which the government is opposed to, or even greater cuts elsewhere in the government’s budget. Brexit is generally expected – by all credible mainstream economists – to be bad for the economy, so it’s not as if there will be a sudden boom providing more cash all round. In fact, the noises coming out of government all point to a defence review (aka defence cuts).

      • Additional type 31s would seem to be the answer given the success of the original design. Could be built in the north east and other locations

        • Building in multiple locations eliminates the efficiency gains from a single yard building the same design. As much as I’d like to see surface warship building return to England, practicality dictates a T31 production line at Rosyth

      • Maybe it’s a two fold thing
        First not up arming the B2 stops them being used as frigates

        Second by forward deploying them it frees up more important ships and then makes the case for more frigates
        A post point could be that you don’t require a battleship to show the flag when a patrol boat will do

    • Same as the current Gulf T23 is maintained .

      The UK “owner” of the maintenance ( Babcock or BAe) sends out contractors . They also employ local Shipyard specialists to do the regular work.
      Painting can be done by local contractors.
      Mechanical and Pipework by local Shipyard contractors.

      Weapons and radar is where you need UK specialists.

  2. Hmmm… Brazil?
    They discussed it and said no apparently.
    I have been informed that Its going somewhere else unless there has been a late change in plans.

    • Dear Santa, for Christmas I would like it if every time an OPV story appears on the UKDJ someone does not launch into a diatribe about how they should be somehow up-gunned. The topic has been done to death and it is clear that they are not for intended for or fit for this purpose. Let’s just rejoice in the fact that their additional numbers will ease the pressure on our escort fleet as it modernizes and will provide a starting point for crew/command training. Thanks! Steve

      • In that case, maybe they should be fitted with a rubber strike rail around the upper hull. We don’t want Lt Leslie Philips’ ‘right hand down a bit’ rearranging the deck levels of HMS Troutbridge’!

  3. But its not all bad news, I would assume that the likes of BAe and other UK defence companies get revenue from some of the licensed systems and equipment maintenance.

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