|
a |
Naval
Industry News - France |
|
|
|
|
DCNS
successfully completes latest series of sea trials with FREMM frigate
Aquitaine |
|
FREMM
frigate Aquitaine berthed at DCNS’s Lorient shipyard on Friday
25 November after three weeks of successful sea trials, during which
DCNS teams pursued integration and testing of the combat system under
the supervision of the French defence procurement agency (DGA). The
ship is to be delivered to the French Navy in the third quarter of 2012.
The trials were conducted in the Atlantic off Lorient and off Groix
Island in the Bay of Biscay. The Aquitaine was crewed by French Navy
personnel, with staff from DCNS conducting the tests under the supervision
of representatives of the DGA and of OCCAR[1], the contracting agency
for the FREMM programme. The work included further testing of the combat
system, in particular to verify the performance of the sonar suite and
continue integration of the communication systems. |
|
DCNS FREMM
Frigate "Aquitaine"
(picture: DCNS)
|
Following the trials, the ship made its first call
at its future home port of Brest to test interfaces with the port’s
communication systems and mooring facilities.
“This fourth series of trials confirms that the first FREMM frigate
is meeting its milestones: all the systems tested to date have met the
customer’s requirements,” said Vincent Martinot-Lagarde,
FREMM programme manager. “Each successive series of tests with
the Aquitaine has confirmed that the programme is on track in every
respect.”
The success of the Aquitaine’s latest trials comes as DCNS continues
to ramp up construction of the state-of-the-art FREMM frigates. With
the first steel now cut for the Languedoc, a total of five FREMM frigates
(Aquitaine, Mohammed VI, Normandie, Provence and Languedoc) are now
at different stages of construction at the DCNS shipyard in Lorient.
“With five FREMM frigates under construction at the same time,
DCNS is successfully stepping up to another major challenge in naval
shipbuilding,” added Vincent Martinot-Lagarde. “Importantly,
the programme is also proceeding exactly on schedule and on budget as
we move into full-scale series production.”
|