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Featured Pakistan Navy Type 054AP Frigates - Update, News & Discussion

The contract is for four more, on top of the additional 4 that are currently in service. This was big news in 2012, search it up.

Pakistan to Get Four more F-22P Frigates
May 8, 2012
By Kashif Munir



Pakistan is going to obtain four F-22P Frigates to be built in Pakistan in collaboration with China as part of country’s efforts to strengthen its navy.

Recently Pakistan was has got three frigate from China while fourth is being built. Previously, China also handed over four frigates to Pakistan.

According to a report, published in Daily Jang, the leading Urdu daily of the country, Pakistan was happy over getting the fighters at low price and got booked orders for four new ships.

The report said that the Chinese frigate costs 200 million dollar while the US LCS ship having similar qualities and technologies costs 600 million dollars.

According to the report, the F-22P Frigate is laced with modern missile technology. The first ship, PNS Zulfiquar, was handed over to the PN on 30 July 2009 and the second, PNS Shamsheer, on January 23, 2010. The third is undergoing sea trials, The Fourth and Last Frigate of F-22P series for the PN was launched on 17 June 2011.(TNT)

Additional F-22P frigates was fake news reported by many media outlets, including Usman Ansari/Defense News.

That's great news. I have a few questions :

1. what kind of countermeasure systems does have against the supersonic missile and torpedo threat ?
2. In addition, what level of a ship are we talking about in terms of EW systems?
3. Will we see the Pakistani strategic cruise missiles such as BABUR 1B, ZARB or HARBA on the ships ?

This model of export Type 054A was also displayed at IDEAS 2016. Most likely it is the version Pakistan is buying.

csic-4000-ton-ffg-2-jpg.438754


Comparing with the PLAN Type 054A, it doesn't have the Type 366 OTH radar (Chinese copy of Russian Mineral-ME). There are 2x Type 730B CIWS installed besides the FL-3000N launcher. The VLS cells appear to be taller when compared with PLAN Type 054A, which (I think) could be due to the usage of new Chinese 7m VLS.

As per a post on Sina, the Pakistani version will have a 100mm main gun (compared to 76mm) and will carry Kamov Ka-28 helicopter.

Remaining specs of the PN version are unknown.
 
Additional F-22P frigates was fake news reported by many media outlets, including Usman Ansari/Defense News.



This model of export Type 054A was also displayed at IDEAS 2016. Most likely it is the version Pakistan is buying.

csic-4000-ton-ffg-2-jpg.438754


Comparing with the PLAN Type 054A, it doesn't have the Type 366 OTH radar (Chinese copy of Russian Mineral-ME). There are 2x Type 730B CIWS installed besides the FL-3000N launcher. The VLS cells appear to be taller when compared with PLAN Type 054A, which (I think) could be due to the usage of new Chinese 7m VLS.

As per a post on Sina, the Pakistani version will have a 100mm main gun (compared to 76mm) and will carry Kamov Ka-28 helicopter.

Remaining specs of the PN version are unknown.

If OTH is not there what effect it will have on ships tracking and searching capabilities because its standard radar have only 120km search range.
 
The PN in conjunction with new frigates/corvettes should also upgrade the AAW capabilities of F22 frigates and also sole OHP. Unlike as many statements there are rumors that PN has got CX01 and similarly they also have developed Babur CM version for dual antiship and anti surface role, there are vital chance that new frigates will be armed by them not necessarily existing Chinese missiles. PN also requires offensive capabilities in case of surface fleet along with sub surface fleet.
The latest version of Hq16/LY80 is having automatic missile with range of 70KM, the chances are that PN shipa may have them instead of existing version.
PN also showed interest in Umokhonto SAM may be they can be used to arm F22 frigates, meanwhile the FM90 of the F22's to be transferred to up coming OPVs.
 
If OTH is not there what effect it will have on ships tracking and searching capabilities because its standard radar have only 120km search range.

OTH is not necessary. The sensor suite appears totally changed. I believe this is an active phased array multifunction radar (APAR), hitherto unseen on any Type 054A.

842096703e3b47a0932f81a2658be286dc987f8a2233e3ea193915540981b7289aa5bcde.jpg

CSOC 4000 ton frigate model - IDEAS 2016
 
Its not about na-shukray kinda but failed to understand why they're sign contract of Type A when its production is over and Type B is already available with not much variation cost I guess. After all chutye think tanks and planner same as PAF
 
OTH is not necessary. The sensor suite appears totally changed. I believe this is an active phased array multifunction radar (APAR), hitherto unseen on any Type 054A.

842096703e3b47a0932f81a2658be286dc987f8a2233e3ea193915540981b7289aa5bcde.jpg

CSOC 4000 ton frigate model - IDEAS 2016

So it could be Type 54A+ model?
 
F22p has been somewhat of a disappointment for PN. The four more F22p turned out to be four Type 54A's. I don't think we will be getting any more surface combatants out of China other than what has already been procured or ordered.

However, the Turkish option is there and most probably PN will go for it.

IMO AShM capability has been beefed up but both ASW and AAW are lagging behind.

Ideally PN should be looking for a CODAG power plant that gives higher acceleration and speed. Additionally, better ASW and AA capability.
 
Additional F-22P frigates was fake news reported by many media outlets, including Usman Ansari/Defense News.



This model of export Type 054A was also displayed at IDEAS 2016. Most likely it is the version Pakistan is buying.

csic-4000-ton-ffg-2-jpg.438754


Comparing with the PLAN Type 054A, it doesn't have the Type 366 OTH radar (Chinese copy of Russian Mineral-ME). There are 2x Type 730B CIWS installed besides the FL-3000N launcher. The VLS cells appear to be taller when compared with PLAN Type 054A, which (I think) could be due to the usage of new Chinese 7m VLS.

As per a post on Sina, the Pakistani version will have a 100mm main gun (compared to 76mm) and will carry Kamov Ka-28 helicopter.

Remaining specs of the PN version are unknown.
With 7M depth VLS it can fire HQ9? Sina article said Pakistan version will have FL3000 terminal-interception missle system.
 
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Don't think those four are coming. This is 2018. If they were being built we'd have seen some progress in 6 years don't you think? We're getting the Type-54 instead.


Asalamu Alaikum

So where are they?

It appears the plans have been dropped, although there was nothing in the news about this.


Additional F-22P frigates was fake news reported by many media outlets, including Usman Ansari/Defense News.

It wasn't fake news it came from Admiral Noman Bashir at the time, although this is a while back now.

“We need to expand F22P, whether we do exactly the same as F22P or we make some upgrade, make it even better. Because of the technology is changing every year, in order to keep it up to date, you have to keep upgrading what you have.

http://www.klsreview.com/HTML/2010Jan_Jun/20100531_03.html


But the plans have been dropped.

F22p has been somewhat of a disappointment for PN. The four more F22p turned out to be four Type 54A's. I don't think we will be getting any more surface combatants out of China other than what has already been procured or ordered.

That still leaves the navy a little short on ships don't you think, in light of the tasks ahead of it?
I'd say they should look at procuring four more corvettes, a good bet would be the China Shipbuilding Trading Company's trimaran frigate which at 2,450 tons is nimble but offers good capabilities i.e. a 32-cell VLS, 2×4 AShM launchers and a 76-mm main gun and is reputed to travel around 30-35 knots. It was displayed at IDEX last year.

Of course if the navy could go for four more Type 54A's that would be incredible, but budget could be a concern.

For all posters here is a good cost breakdown of the Type 54A as per 2015's prices.


What does it actually cost Chinese naval shipyards to build major warships? Chinese sources do not disclose actual or estimated warship and submarine production costs, so it falls on external analysts to generate this important dataset. Quantifying warship production costs bolsters our understanding of how China’s defense budget actually translates into hardware and capabilities.

This analysis focuses on the Type 054A (NATO codename: Jiangkai-II) frigate, for three primary reasons. First, it is China’s most prolifically produced large, modern major surface combatant. Second, it has been series produced for several years. Third, it is the cornerstone of the PLAN’s surface warfare capabilities at present and has actually seen sustained (and ongoing) operational deployments.

Readers should note that this is a “Beta Version” estimate of the Type 054A’s production costs. It is well-developed, but will almost certainly evolve as more participants contribute their insights. I share my core calculations and assumptions in order to provide a springboard for other analysts and hopefully catalyze a broader discussion that advances our knowledge of China’s naval-industrial complex.

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Costs by Segment

This author estimates that the Type 054A currently costs a total of approximately $348 million per vessel to build and fit out (Exhibit 1). This estimate derives from breaking the ship down by its main systems categories (hull and equipment, propulsion/power transmission, weapons, and electronics) and calculating their respective costs, as well as the cost of the labor needed to assemble the ship into a finished product. The estimate relies heavily on valuation by analogy in many cases because Chinese sources simply do not disclose cost information on the vast majority of the inputs used in warships being built in China. As such, the figure as stands is conservative and may overestimate the construction and equipment costs.

Exhibit 1: Type 054A Cost Breakdown

Million USD, Percentage of total estimated ship cost (numbers rounded)



Source: Alibaba, U.S. Navy, Local and Foreign Media Sources, Author’s Analysis

The next section elaborates sequentially on the Type 054A’s cost structure, with the areas that contribute the most to final ship cost addressed first.

Electronics: $102 million, 29 percent. Chinese military-grade electronics makers disclose little or no information on the unit costs of systems they produce for the People’s Liberation Army (PLA). Moreover, the PLA does not publish detailed budgets such as those commonplace in US DoD. As such, this analysis uses a valuation by analogy approach to estimate the likely cost of the ship’s main electronics systems. The ship’s ZKJ-4B/6 combat data system is said to be based on Thompson CSF’s Tavitac. The Naval Institute Guide to World Naval Weapons Systems, 1997-1998 estimated that the Tavitac accounted for less than 5 percent of the final cost of the French Lafayette frigate, which based on the US$466 million original unit cost of the six Lafayette-class frigates (“Kang Ding”) purchased by Taiwan in 1992, suggests Tavitac costs approximately US$20 million. Given the systems’ stated similarity, it is reasonable to value the ZKJ-4B/6 at US$20 million per unit.

The Type 382 3D search radar likely costs approximately $15 million per unit based on the price of the AMD radar system Saab sold to Australia for its Canberra-class LHD and the fact that Chinese radar makers likely have not yet attained the experience and efficiency level of Saab’s production process. The Type 054A’s sonar suite likely costs around $20 million, based on the unit cost of the Royal Navy’s Sonar 2087 and the procurement requirements the U.S. Navy used in 2005 when specifying the characteristics of a new towed sonar array. Finally, the author estimates that the Type 054A’s machinery control system costs $15 million, based on the fact that Northrup Grumman has contracted to supply the much larger LHA-7 amphibious assault ship’s machinery control system at a cost of $50.6 million. The author acknowledges that shipboard electronics costs may in fact be lower, although no data presently known to him supports a lower cost.

Weapons: $84 million, 24 percent. The most expensive part of the Type 054A’s weapons suite is likely the vertical launching system cells. An 8-cell module from the US Mk 41 VLS system – the most widely used in the world – costs around $15 million. The Type 054A has 32 total VLS cells and the author discounts the 8-cell module cost to $10 million, making the system cost an estimated $40 million. The second most expensive component of the Type 054A’s armament are its two Type 730 close in weapon systems (“CIWS”), which likely cost around $11 million for both. The U.S. Navy’s Phalanx Block 1B CIWS costs $5.6 million per unit, and the author believes this is a reasonable proxy for the Type 730 CIWS cost because although the Chinese gun is a larger caliber and the system is physically larger, the assembly and materials costs are likely substantially lower.

Labor: $75 million, 22 percent. While data is somewhat scarce, building and commissioning a frigate-sized warship of between 3,000 and 4,000 tons displacement appears to require between 2.5 million man hours (U.S. FFG-7) and 10.8 million man hours (India Godavari-class) of labor. The author estimates that at present, Chinese military shipyards, which can afford a higher degree of labor intensity than Western yards due to a large labor force, but which are also almost certainly substantially more efficient than Indian yards, require around 3.2 million man hours to build and commission a Type 054A frigate. Chinese yards’ average labor cost is based on the 2013 labor expenditures of Jiangsu Rongsheng, a top private shipbuilder, which are then increased by 25 percent to reflect the premium paid for special skill sets required for shipbuilding work done to naval specifications.

Hull and equipment: $45 million, 13 percent. This cost estimate is based on the fact that around one-third of the light ship weight of surface combatants such as the Type 054A typically consists of metals – primarily steel, along with lesser quantities of high-grade alloys and wiring and pipes. The author then multiplied the 1,200 metric tons of steel likely required for a ship the size of the Type 054A by an average cost of $2,000/metric tons for high quality steel such as that used in warships. The remainder of the cost comes from composite materials and radar absorbent materials, whose cost data was obtained from similar items sold on Alibaba.com and from the cost of applying radar absorbent coatings to frigate-sized U.S. warships, as disclosed by the Chicago Tribune (admittedly a bit dated as it is 1993-vintage). Cost data for paint, piping, pumps, valves, and wiring also come from similar Chinese-made items advertised for sale on Alibaba.com as well as the London Metals Exchange spot price for copper, the underlying component of wiring, and likely at least part of the pipe alloys.

Propulsion: $32 million, 9 percent. The biggest share of the Type 054A’s propulsion costs come from its four Pielstick/Shaanxi PA6 diesel engines. At least one trading company offers Pielstick engines for sale at between $1and $10 million apiece. This estimate uses the mid-range price of $5 million per engine to reflect the size of the engine and the premium quality needed for a military application. The balance of the estimated cost reflects the gearbox, drive shafts, steering gear, and props.

Miscellaneous costs: $10 million, 3 percent. This category is a “catchall” that helps the overall estimate account for bits and pieces that might have been overlooked in the process of estimating each ship segment’s cost.

Conclusion and Strategic Implications

The $348 million unit cost estimate dovetails reasonably well with the price at which China offered Type 054 frigates to Thailand in early 2013. Thailand’s Navy sought to spend $1 billion on new frigates and China reportedly offered three Type 054s at that price. China’s offer of ships at an effective price of $333 million each suggests that with higher international-level profit margins built in, the actual delivered ship cost is likely between $350 million and $375 million per vessel. In addition, the imported ships would likely cost less to build given that they are not as comprehensively capable as the Type 054As delivered to the PLAN.

If the Type 054A’s actual construction cost falls into this range, and the shipbuilders are allowed a five percent “profit” margin for ship deliveries to the PLAN, the delivered ship price would be $365 million. In procurement terms, this would offer the PLAN a significant value relative to the cost of foreign-sourced vessels. For instance, French shipbuilder DCNS has sold a FREMM class frigate to Morocco for $676 million and Germany’s first four F125 frigates are priced at $740 million apiece.

Military hardware spending always incurs an opportunity cost, since even a large and growing economy like China’s still has a finite amount of resources that can realistically be devoted to military expenditures. To put the cost of purchasing one Type 054A at $365 million into perspective, consider that the ship uses funds equal to each of the following alternative expenditures, all of which are in demand in various branches of the PLA:

  • Thirteen J-10 fighter aircraft.
  • Ten SU-30K strike fighters.
  • 177.5 million gallons of jet fuel for training – enough fuel to allow each of China’s 97 SU-30 fighters to be fully loaded with fuel 600 times apiece.
  • The annual salaries of nearly 64,000 junior PLA officers.
A navy ultimately sails on the strength of the national treasury. In that respect, the PLAN increasingly gets a significant “bang for its buck” with ship acquisition costs that are much lower than those of other major Asia-Pacific naval powers. The analytical community now has the opportunity to create a unique warship cost dataset that will unlock powerful new avenues of inquiry into China’s naval modernization and defense spending.

Gabe Collins is the co-founder of China SignPost and a former commodity investment analyst and research fellow in the US Naval War College’s Maritime Studies Institute.

https://thediplomat.com/2015/06/how-much-do-chinas-warships-actually-cost/

 
I thought the production of 054a was ended when 054b was rumored to be launched soon. It seems now we are gonna produce 2 more 054a for our Pakistan brothers. It is a rational choice for PN, since we already has built 30 of 054a, the fixed cost has been diluted hence the cost of 2 more 054a would not be very expensive.
 
So it could be Type 54A+ model?

CSOC 4000 ton frigate - export version of Type 054A.
I haven't seen a Type 054A+/B, except on fan made illustrations.

With 7M depth VLS it can fire HQ9? Sina article said Pakistan version will have FL3000 terminal-interception missle system.

I think so, as the HQ-9 is reported to be 6.8m long.

FL-3000N is visible atop the hangar.

It wasn't fake news it came from Admiral Noman Bashir at the time, although this is a while back now.

“We need to expand F22P, whether we do exactly the same as F22P or we make some upgrade, make it even better. Because of the technology is changing every year, in order to keep it up to date, you have to keep upgrading what you have.

http://www.klsreview.com/HTML/2010Jan_Jun/20100531_03.html


But the plans have been dropped.

I meant to say no orders were placed and all reports claiming so were fake.

I didn't deny existence of plans. There were many plans - 4x additional F-22P frigates, 4x Milgem corvettes, 3x Type 214 submarines and many more which existed until the calamity called Zardari fell upon.
 
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Congratulations to our Pakistan brothers!

Type 054A is my favorite warship for like 15 years. She is always the most beautiful type in Chinese fleet until the launch of type 055.

For the past decade, type 054A service the Chinese Navy excellently. Though not with the most powerful equipment, I sincerely think the PN made a good choice.

Yes, she has no ability to fire a cruise missile (at least for the original version), but she could totally be the backbone of the system. With this system, PN can actually fire cruise missiles safely from any platform. Comparing to some All-in-one ships, I think this one is actually more efficient.

One real shortage for this class is that she is really defensive, thus not so effective in over sea threatening operations.
 

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