Royal Navy Offshore Patrol Vessel HMS Medway underwent a successful planned maintenance period, delivered by BAE Systems and Royal Navy Ship Staff in Naval Station Mayport in Jacksonville, Florida, from December 2020 through January 2021.

Under the Contractor Logistics Support contract BAE Systems provides whole ship availability management service to all of the eight Royal Navy’s Offshore Patrol Vessels around the globe.

Repairs and maintenance are delivered wherever in the world they are operationally required, minimising waited transit time and ensuring rapid defect rectification.

Darren Coukham, BAE Systems Ship Manager for HMS Medway, was quoted as saying:

“I am hugely proud of our teams for completing this work on time. I believe our customers recognise that BAE Systems will go above and beyond, when required, to meet their needs, and has the expertise to re-plan such projects quickly and effectively.”

According to a news release from the firm:

“The maintenance received by HMS Medway, the second of five new OPVs built by BAE Systems, ensures that she continues to be fit to operate in the demanding conditions of the Caribbean Sea as part of her role in the Atlantic Patrol Tasking North (APTN) group. HMS Medway’s APTN mission is focused on providing reassurance to Commonwealth and British Overseas Territories in the Caribbean, disrupting the flow of smuggled narcotics and supporting humanitarian relief efforts.

For this maintenance period BAE Systems called on expertise from its Jacksonville facility located two miles (three kilometres) from the Atlantic Ocean, at the intersection of the St. Johns River and the Atlantic Intracoastal Waterway, to complete the work.

During the maintenance period restrictions on the international movement of parts and labour meant that much of the maintenance had to be planned and project managed from 4,000 miles away, in the UK. However, through careful re-planning and remote management BAE Systems was able to complete the project with only one of 62 tasks deferred, ensuring that the ship was in an enhanced material state before she sailed.”

You can read more here.

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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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Joshua Rieser
2 years ago

Sorry George but I think it should read ‘The HMS Medway’ in appreciation of our Foreign Secretary!

Gunbuster
Gunbuster
2 years ago

62 tasks!!!

Lightweights.