So far, just under £2.5bn has been spent on the Type 26 Frigate since 2017, with just under £530mn being spent on Type 31 over the same period.

Expenditure for the Manufacture phases for the Type 26 and Type 31 frigate programmes (rounded to the nearest million) is detailed in the table below.

According to a statement given by Alec Shelbrooke, Minister of State at the Ministry of Defence, “the costs incurred against the Assessment Phase have not been included, in line with normal reporting against Business Case approvals. The costs Spend data for the current financial year (FY2022-23), is excluded as this is incomplete”.

Project NameFY2017-18 £ millionFY2018-19 £ millionFY2019-20 £ millionFY2020-21 £ millionFY2021-22 £ million
Type 26288.8464.3507572.3642.2
Type 3175.4199.2252.6

BAE Systems recently confirmed that HMS Glasgow, the Royal Navy’s first Type 26 frigate, is set to enter the water for the first time this year.

BAE Systems said in its half-year results:

“The Type 26 programme continues to progress with construction underway on the first three City Class Type 26 frigates. Preparations continue for the first of class, Glasgow, to depart our Govan shipyard and enter the water later this year. She will then transition to our Scotstoun shipyard where further outfit, test and commissioning will take place. Half of the major units of the second ship in class, Cardiff, are erected, while the third ship, Belfast, continues to progress after entering manufacture in June 2021.”

Massive barge arrives in Glasgow to move new frigate

A massive submersible barge, one of the largest in Europe, will carry Type 26 Frigate HMS Glasgow down the river before ‘floating’ her off in the deep waters of Glen Mallan.

According to Malin Group, the barge will initially be used to transport and ‘launch’ the Type 26 Frigates being built by BAE Systems for the Royal Navy and then berthed on the Clyde and made available to industry as required, “catalysing further opportunities for the wider supply chain in fields including shipbuilding, civil construction and renewable energy”.

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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
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JohnM
JohnM
1 year ago

Eye watering amounts but hopefully money well spent on these warships. Frustrating the timescales involved from first steel cut to in service and some concern over the proposed offensive weapons packages but each class is designed for a long life with upgrade potential so I am quietly optimistic.

Jim
Jim
1 year ago
Reply to  JohnM

On an international comparison the T26 and especially the T31 are looking pretty reasonable. T26 is coming in at half the cost of a flight III now due to the drop in GBP.

AlexS
AlexS
1 year ago
Reply to  Jim

T26(RN) do not look like any good regarding price. Not even AAW defence it can do. It is basically T23 mission capability with tomahawk cells added and an empty mission bay.
T31 seems it would be better but not really much data to make a definitive answer.

Last edited 1 year ago by AlexS
David
David
1 year ago
Reply to  AlexS

The Type 26 was never designed as an AAW platform but as a specialised sub-hunting frigate with a primarily role to protect the carriers. AAW is the purview of the Type 45s – something they do extremely well. That said, I do believe that given the few hull numbers we have, more should be made of them. E.g., there’s no reason a canister AShM can’t be added to the Type 45s permanently and Mk41 VLSs should have been added instead of the 24 Sea Ceptors planned, giving more versatility. Anyway, hopefully more money can be afforded if the new PM’s… Read more »

AlexS
AlexS
1 year ago
Reply to  David

If it was a specialized ASW platform, for this size it would have 2 helicopter hangars and anti submarine missiles.

The point is that is too expensive for what it offers.
The radar is a rotating asset from 15 years ago, no 360º fixed panels, no dual frequency.
The sonar is state of art but nothing different than what is deployed in FREMM or the derivated Constellations(which have 2 helicopters and ASW missiles) and are area AAW costing 1-1.2B$.

Ron
Ron
1 year ago
Reply to  AlexS

Mmmm, a T26 can take two Wildcats or a Merlin plus RUAVs, by using the mission bay three Merlins. The Artisan radar is based on Sampson. As for the comparrison of Fremm frigate to T26, the two types have diffrent roles, however with the 48 Sea Ceptors and a possibility of 24 Aster 30s. I have just sent a request for information to BAE if this is possible. FREMM frigate Italian navy does not have fixed panels, French do. The US Constellations have a lower to horizon coverage as well as a possible limitation of missile salvo due to the… Read more »

AlexS
AlexS
1 year ago
Reply to  Ron

1 Merlin is not equivalent to 2 Merlin/NH90 (or SH-70). Wildcat is no ASW and will have a small capability if it gets. Mission bay don’t works well for that, it is on the way. You have to take off the mission bay helo and only then land the helo on the air. Hangar should be side by side like in Italian FREMM/ Constellations/OHP to have their ways unimpeded. Radar is no good enough for area AAW with Aster 30 a 150km missile. FREMM Italian is a 12 year old ship so it has a rotating radar of same era… Read more »

Gunbuster
Gunbuster
1 year ago
Reply to  AlexS

Connie has no hull mounted sonar…bit of an issue.

AlexS
AlexS
1 year ago
Reply to  Gunbuster

That is something that is puzzling me, is hull sonar considered a bit of marginal advantage?
Note that i think Type 31 will also not have hull sonar.

David Lloyd
David Lloyd
1 year ago
Reply to  David

The T45’s are crap. Only one has successfully had the PIP, the other 5 constantly break down when on operations and have spent most of their time alongside. We would do better paying them off and buying South Korean Aegis destroyers at half the price. And they work.

Spyinthesky
Spyinthesky
1 year ago
Reply to  AlexS

‘Empty mission bay’, isn’t that the point of a mission bay though, it’s there to use as per mission dictates by offering flexibility, you don’t dictate what’s in it before the ship is even launched. As for AAW it has a very effective short/medium capability probably well suited to a predominantly anti submarine frigate. All bells and whistles are the ideal true but aren’t easy to accomplish in reality. Anti ship is still to be seen mind but surely it will be fitted for effective missiles… but fitted with is perhaps the concern if one is a little cynical on… Read more »

AlexS
AlexS
1 year ago
Reply to  Spyinthesky

The point being: if it is empty you need to pay for what goes there in top of paying the ship.

Dern
Dern
1 year ago
Reply to  AlexS

As opposed too….

Jim
Jim
1 year ago
Reply to  AlexS

I recon the fact that it has more export and foreign orders than any surface combatant in half a century would disagree with your assertion. Also clearly you got no idea about ASW escorts.

AlexS
AlexS
1 year ago
Reply to  Jim

Not if the US ends up building +20 constellations. There are currently 18 FREMM in service and +2 being build for Italy.

Meko frigates have got more than 40 orders. I think that OHP’s also got a good number of export orders.

DanielMorgan
DanielMorgan
1 year ago
Reply to  Jim

Huh? Try taking Economics 101, it might help.

James
James
1 year ago
Reply to  Jim

That assumes the original build cost still stands, depends how much of the ship is bought in from abroad. If lots of parts are then the cost of purchasing due to the pound dropping has gone up.

AlexS
AlexS
1 year ago
Reply to  James

That is a good point, the whole ship in theory can be more ship if the GBP goes down but components( MBDA?), US 5″ guns , Thales sonars might get more expensive. Without numbers is impossible to know.

Jim
Jim
1 year ago

BAE need to sort themselves out with the frigate factory ASAP. It’s looking ridiculous moving ships the size of ww2 cruisers around like this. One can only imagine the additional cost associated with outdoor work and continuous moving operations.

Jon
Jon
1 year ago
Reply to  Jim

Will the frigate factory will change moves to Scotstoun and floating off at Glen Mallan? I didn’t think it would.

Mike
Mike
1 year ago
Reply to  Jon

We see the facilities in Australia and weep with envy.

The companies and unions together have lost us much ground in ship building skills, efficiencies and orders

Expat
Expat
1 year ago
Reply to  Mike

Agreed people moaned about the T31 competition saying it was unhealthy for yards to compete but the result is investment and 2 ship factories.

Spyinthesky
Spyinthesky
1 year ago
Reply to  Jon

No but a ship has to be launched at some stage, it’s the work in getting to that stage as with any ship that counts the most, there’s always a lot of work done after launch but mostly internal.

700 Glengarried men
700 Glengarried men
1 year ago

Money well spent jobs and apprenticeships should ensure the future of UK shipbuilding with probably about 20% returned through taxes.

Gavin Gordon
Gavin Gordon
1 year ago

Nice to see that all 700 of you share the same view.

Dern
Dern
1 year ago
Reply to  Gavin Gordon

Much like the Geth, they form a consensus first.

Ron
Ron
1 year ago

Nop the reality is about 40% return in tax, you forgot the 20%VAT plus income tax profit tax, tax on new equipment, NI etc Oh and profit returns. Thats the issue, we forget that to buy something overseas we pay the tax in those countries, if we buy something in the UK it might look more expensive but we pay tax on it, so money comes back to the treasury. An example the Tide class built in Korea, UK workers were not involved in the build, no VAT on goods bought by workers, no tax paid on saleries, no income… Read more »

Expat
Expat
1 year ago
Reply to  Ron

Agreed but what’s nicer still is if its an export order that’s 40% of foreign money going to the treasury. We shouldn’t hide behind tax returned to the treasury to support inefficient builds. Remember that tax money will ultimately go to government employee or pensioner so if they spend it on a BMW or Samsung TV the money leaves the country anyway just takes a bit longer. So we need to export to keep the balance.

700 Glengarried men
700 Glengarried men
1 year ago
Reply to  Ron

Ron totally agree with the above , the UK economy is in a perilous state and ALL Govt spending should seek to support UK workers. I don’t support the Scot Govt but to give them credit they have passed a public sector procurement law that any award must show benefit to local communities, hasten to add this has worked against the ferry operator when it awarded contracts to Turkey

donald_of_tokyo
donald_of_tokyo
1 year ago
Reply to  Ron

Overall I agree. But, the tax return may not be so large. See T31. ship design license cost = Denmark main diesel engines and gear-boxes = majority to German main radar = almost all on Netherlands guns = almost all on Sweden CMS = mostly on UK-Thales, but good fraction goes to Thales-Netherland CAMM missile = mostly UK SeaSentor torpedo defense system = mostly UK welding, wiring, integration and testing = mostly UK program management, systems engineering = mostly UK Even in case of T26 MT30 GT = UK main diesel engines = majority to German gearbox = UK main… Read more »

Jon
Jon
1 year ago

If we’d have been willing to spend £700m per annum instead, the first ship would be in RN hands and twelve more could have been following, one every year and a quarter.

grinch
grinch
1 year ago
Reply to  Jon

damn right!

Pacman27
Pacman27
1 year ago

It’s critical that we get the maximum return on the sunken costs of T26 and improve the efficiency of the yard further to bring prices down dramatically. 16 T26 should really be the optimal with the next 2 batches having an upgraded radar (Sampson replacement) and a central VLS with 72 quad packable tubes with 24 strike length to replace the T45, by the time all these are built we will need replacements and should aim for 1 every 2 years indefinitely. This only works with a much bigger fleet of Poseidons, which are far cheaper to buy and operate… Read more »

David Steeper
David Steeper
1 year ago
Reply to  Pacman27

What will fly off there decks ? Royal Marines, Helicopters or UAV’s not included. Manpower and operating costs not included. Additional capital spending and manpower for basing, maintenance and refit of all of the above not included. £5.5bn p/a at least doubled. RAF and Army extremely unhappy if they don’t get the same increase in budget. Result at absolute minimum an extra £33bn p/a increase in Defence budget.

Last edited 1 year ago by David Steeper
Pacman27
Pacman27
1 year ago
Reply to  David Steeper

Not at all David, most of these ships will require less personnel than the current ones, and the RN are moving to pods and unmanned systems (that’s what all the new classes are about). will we require more air assets, personnel and RM – yes definitely but the above redresses the savage cuts undertaken and the increasing requirements of HMG. we will build ships in similar numbers, be in no doubt, but this way we get the best price and equipment for our money. The defence budget does need increased in my opinion by about £12bn pa. And defence has… Read more »

David Steeper
David Steeper
1 year ago
Reply to  Pacman27

I can guarantee the RN has fully factored in that the newer classes will have lower manpower needs than the ones they replace. The current recruitment and training programmes will be designed around those future needs. The RAF and Army will expect to receive the same increase as the RN. Now you want a BMD programme on top of all the above. In less than 20 mins the cost has risen £10-20bn imagine what the cost inflation would be over 20 years !

Pacman27
Pacman27
1 year ago
Reply to  David Steeper

You are aware the new PM has promised an increase to 3%of GDP i am more than happy to have a BMD instead of an armoured division sitting in Germany, a country that really should pay far more into NATO than it does. thats my choices and I believe they can be delivered within a £60bn pa defence budget that s linked to inflation. the key is to stop cutting the budget and making short term cost savings that hit us further down the line. italso means we spend money on replacing equipment instead of the vast amounts of money… Read more »

Jim
Jim
1 year ago
Reply to  Pacman27

You are aware that the new PM has promised many things some of which are contradictory and will be lucky to be the in the job for 18 months.

I don’t want to call her a bare faced liar and an opportunist but…… well.

Geoff Roach
Geoff Roach
1 year ago
Reply to  Jim

Then why did you? Talk about not giving somebody a chance.

Tams
Tams
1 year ago
Reply to  Geoff Roach

I mean were talking about Ms. Pork Markets and Cheese.

Not to mention her incredibly opportunistic changes in character.

While everyone should be given a chance, we are allowed to be incredibly doubtful ans skeptical.

Geoff Roach
Geoff Roach
1 year ago
Reply to  Tams

I presume your making a point there somewhere but I have no idea what it is.

James
James
1 year ago
Reply to  Jim

And what if another pandemic springs up over the winter months costing however much?

What if the war in Europe spreads?

What if the energy costs keep rising and the cost of capping it to the government doubles or trebles?

Its all well and good slating decisions if they have to change, but if they change due to external factors and we simply dont have the money (which we dont) to see them through then just blaming the person who said it as a pledge initially is completely the wrong thing to do.

Andy reeves
Andy reeves
1 year ago
Reply to  James

Figures are baffling l no wonder the defence budget is in such a mes, we’re being mugged by the defence manufacturers

David Steeper
David Steeper
1 year ago
Reply to  Pacman27

I don’t disagree with your judgement on Defence stategy for the future but I think it’s impossible to prioritise in the way you describe. It might be possible to move some items from one of the service budgets to another but any change to the services share of the budget would provoke all out war within the MoD. Defence inflation has been an issue for over 100 years and sadly there is no indication that it will cease to be an issue for the future. Technology is progressing in leaps and bounds as it has for those 100 years and… Read more »

donald_of_tokyo
donald_of_tokyo
1 year ago
Reply to  Pacman27

A point to comment…

> and the RN are moving to pods and unmanned systems (that’s what all the new classes are about).

This does not mean less man-power needed. Un-manned assets needs man-power to handle it. In principle, increased maintenance needs may even INCREASE the man-power needed.

Just a comment on this single point.

FOSTERSMAN
FOSTERSMAN
1 year ago

I’m glad you pointed this out, most people assume UAVs fly themselves around. It would be interesting if the RAF would do a comparison on say a Reaper squadron Vs a Typhoon squadron to see whose more manpower intensive, I think it’ll be a lot closer than what most people would thin.

Pacman27
Pacman27
1 year ago

i didn’t say pods will reduce manpower, I said the new ships will (which is a fact based on RN data), The big advantage of pods or containerised solutions is that vessels can be standardised and are more easily configured for specific tasking and those trained go with the pod not the ship. I also see these as capability enhancers rather than full replacement with a prime example being a T23 with 2 Schiebel 100’s in air at any given time with a wildcat for the more precise engagement. Likewise with pods we do not need dedicated minehunters so can… Read more »

donald_of_tokyo
donald_of_tokyo
1 year ago
Reply to  Pacman27

Thanks for clarification. So it is good that someone else who read it do not misunderstand it as related to “man power”, which is not. On your own comment, my top concern is the shortage of RN (and RFA) man power. For example, RN is currently manning only 12 escorts, out of 18 hulls. RFA is putting two Waves in extended readiness, mainly because of lack of man power. Increasing the number of assets needs significant increase in man power. Without such increase, those assets will be a ship “Fitted for but not with CREW” = just kept alongside in… Read more »

Robert
Robert
1 year ago

No doubt in my mind,crewing of R.F.A. ships has slowly got worse,since the take over by the r.n. Especially as the number of r.n. personnel on board has vastly increased. Also doing away with the Stonnery crews. I think was a big mistake !

Paul Bestwick
Paul Bestwick
1 year ago
Reply to  Pacman27

Batch 1 type-26 is 3 ships, batch 2 is supposed to be 5 ships, type 83 an all purpose destroyer, ie not specifically AAW will replace type-45. The last all purpose destroyer the RN had was HMS Bristol. This was significantly larger than the Type-42 AAW destroyer that followed it into service. I expect the T-83 will be significantly larger than the type-26 or the type-45. At present the scoping work for type-83 and type-32 is going on. If there are to be increases in the fleet size I suspect that it will come with these vessels and not with… Read more »

Pacman27
Pacman27
1 year ago
Reply to  Paul Bestwick

I don’t think we should design a new ship for T45 replacement, we should accept that by adding more missiles in the middle section, perhaps at the cost of mission bay space is worth the cost savings, after all the reality is these ships will benefit from the best hull acoustics and will only ever really be used for sub hunting and CSG AAW. with the money saved we can buy more T31/32’s and quite possibly avoid another 20 year wait and reduction in hulls. can we get everything we want from a dedicated AAW from the T26 hull I… Read more »

Andy reeves
Andy reeves
1 year ago
Reply to  Paul Bestwick

I hope that the star wars weapons ordnance and electo sonar/radar improvement can enhance the performance of the ship or tank I do think that British defence should be ahead of the rest maybe we’re not so far away, as we think from from totally autonomous warships altogether. Food for thought

FOSTERSMAN
FOSTERSMAN
1 year ago
Reply to  Pacman27

I think the naval service could do with doubling along the existing assets. This could be achieved with XLUUV instead of ssks and more astutes along with converting the vanguard’s into tomahawk carriers. Navy pods are really what going to help achieve this plan by getting more ships out there that can be quickly converted to the situation as apposed to sitting on a large number of dedicated vessels.

Monkey spanker
Monkey spanker
1 year ago

Wow it just shows how much money is actually sunk into a project before 1 ship hits the water. Type 31 is already over half way through the budget. Hopefully much less chance of changing minds about the ships now.
Will need to try and get to bridges area with binoculars for a look at rosyth when Prince of wales arrives.

Supportive Bloke
Supportive Bloke
1 year ago
Reply to  Monkey spanker

The expensive bit of a warship isn’t the hull: it is the weapons, machinery and other systems.

The weapons, machinery and systems need to be ordered well in advance. That is why the cash flow curve is so skewed.

You cannot build a warship with just in time deliveries otherwise it takes forever and costs explode.

Most of the bits of T31 will be sat in a warehouse already waiting to be called off.

Jonathans
Jonathans
1 year ago

That’s the problem with giving out these figures, without the context of what has already been purchased, it’s impossible to really say if the money has been well spent so far or not.

donald_of_tokyo
donald_of_tokyo
1 year ago
Reply to  Monkey spanker

Type-31 total program cost is £2Bn.

Type-31 spent is £527M, which is only 26 percent of this.

The “£1.2Bn Babcock contract” is only a part of the T31 program. “£250M per hull” is just a propaganda. It is clearly stated it does not include SeaCeptor system, SeaSentor torpedo defense system, and many other support costs, which are usually included in build program cost. Simply, T31 cost is £2Bn.

Last edited 1 year ago by donald_of_tokyo
Monkey spanker
Monkey spanker
1 year ago

Yeah not sure what I was thinking with half way through the t31 budget.
I thought it said £700m (not sure where I got that from either) so over half of £1.25b.
As you say that without the bells and whistles added on.
What I was kind of saying was that when someone cancels projects part way through this just shows how actually wasteful that is.

Monkey spanker
Monkey spanker
1 year ago

Sub brief guy on you tube did a great video about prince of wales, rosyth, westlant 22. Had a great description of the problems the ship suffered.
https://youtu.be/K8amC7BLrXc

Gavin Gordon
Gavin Gordon
1 year ago
Reply to  Monkey spanker

Yes, followed that. Interesting that Aaron said likely fault was very rare – to the extent of effectively never 😐

Monkey spanker
Monkey spanker
1 year ago
Reply to  Gavin Gordon

Yeah. He had a great description and graphic of the part. I now know how 2 shafts are connected. Also the fact the propellor appears to have hit the rudder shows how broken it must of went.
He wouldn’t put an estimate on the time scale for dry docking apart from its a big job.
He did say she was meant to be getting a hull inspection next year so maybe they bring that forward.
Hopefully it’s just one of the shaft parts that’s faulty. If it’s all 4 we could see both needing done on each carrier.

Bean
Bean
1 year ago

It will be interesting to know a rough ball park figure for each unit to be built and fit out (excluding development costs).
I still can’t find a unit price for the type 45’s (excluding development costs).

Chris
Chris
1 year ago

Interesting comments as I read the figures as cumulative demonstration and manufacture costs to year end rather than annual costs. Also things like equiping the type 31s with SeaCeptor are not additional costs to the type 31 programme as all the equipment is already paid for or already in the future MoD programme. The Type 45 programme cost just over £6m for the 6 ships including the developments of roughly £2b so the cost saving for not buying 8 was only £1.3 b not the £2b claimed by the government at the time and the capability gap caused was planned… Read more »

Last edited 1 year ago by Chris
Chris
Chris
1 year ago

Just re-read what I posted yesterday, of course it should be £6B for the Type 45 not £6m