Australia’s Nautilus Institute
has produced a very up to date “Peace
and Security Special Report”:
Titled “AUSTRALIA’S FUTURE
SUBMARINES: AN EXPLAINER”
By Allan Behm, Rear Admiral
Peter Briggs (Retired) and Commodore Paul Greenfield (Retired)
Dated November 16, 2022
Its 33 pages contain a wealth of knowledge, that former senior naval officers are best placed to provide, about Australia’s submarine needs.
At the moment I’m focusing on
the main section on nuclear propulsion, which states in part:
“Nuclear reactors also
radically change the power available to submarines, their endurance underwater,
the transit times and time on station, as well as the “hotel” services
available to submarines and their crews. Combat system capability,
habitability, air quality, water availability and general amenity are much
enhanced. There is much to be said for nuclear propulsion, especially when the
submarine’s survivability and that of its crew is taken into account. The cost
multiplier, however, may not match the force multiplier effects.
Nuclear propulsion would also
raise a host of new and imponderable issues for Australian industry, and for
the RAN’s ability to support the submarine. Lacking a nuclear industry—and thus
the education and associated skills streams that support such an industry—Australia
would necessarily have to develop the education, infrastructure and industrial
support needed to maintain the capability as part of the cost of that program.
It would be important that Australia develop a sovereign capability in all
these areas, as the availability of third parties in a time of tension is moot.
At present, the Royal
Australian Navy (RAN) has no nuclear qualified personnel. The nuclear-powered
attack submarines (SSNs) and the ballistic missile submarines (SSBNs) in
service with the USN and the Royal Navy require between 40 and 50 crew members
qualified at varying levels of nuclear expertise per boat, with considerable
numbers of similar personnel in the logistics and support functions ashore.
Maintaining the pipeline of nuclear-trained personnel in the US or the UK will
be costly—approximately $1 million per person per year. Establishing and
maintaining a similar pipeline in Australia will not be significantly less
expensive.
In June 2022, the US House of
Representatives introduced legislation that would assist the RAN to train its
future submarine operators in the US: the Australia-US Submarine Officer
Pipeline Act will permit at least two Australians to train in the US each
year.[15] This is an important, but ultimately token, effort. The
pipeline will need to be as wide as it is long to remediate the shortfall in
the RAN’s skill base.
It is important to recall that
the UK and USA established their SSN capabilities in the circumstances of the
Cold War, drawing upon a large force of conventionally powered submarines and
steam powered surface ships. This situation assisted in providing the essential
manpower and skills base. Nonetheless, the task was a serious challenge for
each navy.
Australia has none of these
resources and will have to draw heavily on the supplier navy’s training system
and seagoing submarine force to train its personnel. The availability of the
necessary level of support would be a major risk for an Australian SSN program,
and one that needs early resolution.
Equally importantly, the
numbers and skillsets in an SSN crew are significantly different to that of a
Collins crew. The training program would entail converting existing RAN
submarine personnel and a substantial initial training program. Both would
require long periods of training and overseas service to gain the necessary
experience. Until Australia’s SSN force reached sufficient operational
submarines to undertake the at sea training of trainees (say, at least six SSN)
most of this training would have to be conducted overseas - and it would take
about 20 years to deliver this number of SSNs after initiating the program.
At this point, RAN schools and
a nuclear engineering faculty established within a selected Australian tertiary
institution could finally begin to take over this task. But in the absence of
any nuclear power generation industry in Australia, the cost of establishing
and operating this training infrastructure would be borne by the SSN program.
The problem is enormous.”
Pete
ReplyDeleteThanks, a fascinating read.
There is one issue that I think is exaggerated in difficulty. Australia does already have five university engineering departments running courses in nuclear engineering. Two of these (ANU and UNSW), are courses in nuclear power engineering, which would be directly relevant to SSNs. So there may be no nuclear power qualified engineers in the RAN, but there are a few in Australian universities.
The RAN will need to create a career structure for nuclear engineers within its ranks, not just entry level positions, if it wishes to attract and retain these skills. And the trained graduate nuclear engineering officers will then need to get experience on SSNs before ours are in the water. The USN and RN can help there, and they are short of those skills too, so that is a mutual benefit.
But the RAN needs to publish a timetable. Nobody will sign up for four years of engineering training in a specialist discipline that has limited other employment prospects in Australia if they are then sitting around with no work when they graduate. Defence needs to start naming dates so that individuals and industry can start gearing up to meet their needs.
Hi Anonymous @Nov 22, 2022, 8:46:00 PM
ReplyDeleteAustralia's broader SSN goal setting process needs to take place Before we begin mass nuclear education and onboard UK or US SSN training, ie:
- be March 2023 our SSN Taskforce https://www.defence.gov.au/about/taskforces/nuclear-powered-submarine-task-force recommending a UK or US SSN for Australia to build.
- over the next months after March 2023 the National Security Committee of Cabinet (in consultation with Australia's submarine building industry and SSN provider ally) need to accept the SSN Taskforce's Recommendations.
- pricing and costings (including nuclear education-training) then need to take place in the May 2024 (probably not May 2023 - too short a time) Australian Federal Budget.
This is noting we are talking a $500 Billion SSN Construction and Operation Project taking into account 5% inflation/year (in Aus (UK or US)) over 30 years.
So planning must take place before launching into education.
Regards Pete
P.S. Anonymous
ReplyDeleteSubmarine reactor education is highly specialised
- something that will mainly take place in the UK or US from 2024-2044
ie. until Australian Unis and RAN establishments have built up the necessary Specialised teaching knowledge
AND onshore submarine reactor facilities.
The opportunity is enormous.
ReplyDeleteAn entire high tech industry waiting to be built.
Modern gen nuclear reactors for civilian use do not have Chernobyl type risks. If Australia can get over a sub, it can get over a single nuclear reactor being built. A perfect supplement to the battery plant in Adelaide, for example.
Imagine Australia is ok with out of sight, out of mind....build a couple near Darwin, export the power to Indonesia and Singapore, even be able to export to SEA nations in cases of emergency.
Andrew
Hi Andrew
ReplyDelete1. A risk is if Australia eventually getting SSNs is perceived by the Anti-Nuclear Power voting Australian public as an All Too Hard DUAL PACKAGE then that risks the SSN proposal never getting up.
2. Given the civilian power reactor alternative - the UK RN has had and is having major problems retaining on-shore and on-sub Nuclear Engineers/Technicians. This is because they (for decades and now) are being drawn off by the UK civilian nuclear power industry.
Its not just a question of the RN trying to outbid the nuclear power industry over pay - and often failing to outbid...
Once RN Nuc reactor specialists marry and have kids they value staying at home more (versus long RN mission absences and compulsory RN 2-4 year land postings). They prefer spending their last 2 decades of work tending a land power reactor in just one part of the UK. So they can watch their kids grow up - and this also allows their wives/partners to get and keep jobs.
Regards Pete