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Bangladesh Building Frigates with Chinese help - Indian Defence Magazine

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The news below was published a few months ago. But, since it is an Indian magazine I am posting it here. Note that our newspapers and magazines are not allowed to publish any kind of detailed defence procurements. Usually, they publish only piecemeal news. So, we have to go to foreign sources.

-Eastwatch-


FORCE-A Complete News Magazine on National Security-Defence Magazine,Indian Defence,AERO India 2011 Bangalore Bengaluru,magazine on Indian navy,Indian Army,Indian Air Force,Indian Paramilitary forces,Naxalism,Jammu & Kashmir,terrorism,national securi

FEATURE/REPORT
Industrial Embrace
Khulna Shipyard signs a contract for five IPV and seven guided-missile corvettes with CSOC
By Prasun K. Sengupta

Bangladesh’s state-owned Khulna Shipyard recently signed a contract with China’s Shanghai-based Hudong Zhonghua Shipyard and the China Shipbuilding & Offshore International Ltd (CSOC) for licence-building five inshore patrol vessels (IPV) and seven guided-missile corvettes. While the IPVs are based on the 80-tonne Huang Pu-class vessel, the guided-missile corvettes, to be built to a brand-new design, will each have a displacement of 260 tonnes, length of 46 metres, beamwidth of 7.4 metres, and have a top speed of 30 Knots.

While the CSOC will supply the first two guided-missile corvettes off-the-shelf, the remaining five will be licence-built by Khulna Shipyard. Each such vessel will be armed with up to four CPMIEC-built C-802A anti-ship cruise missiles. The IPVs will each have a length of 27.5 metres, beamwidth of 5.5 metres, and a maximum speed of 18 Knots. On-board armaments will comprise twin 14.5mm machine guns. For navigational purposes, one I-band Type 347G mast-mounted radar will be installed on each IPV. The combat information centre (CIC) for the FFGs and guided-missile corvettes will be supplied by CETC International.

It may be recalled that Dhaka had announced an ambitious force modernisation plan in February 2009 for its armed forces, which included the procurement of anti-armour guided-missiles and anti-ship cruise missiles, up to four medium-range maritime patrol aircraft, two guided-missile frigates (FFG), a regiment of NORINCO-built Type 96G main battle tanks, and two CATIC-supplied Z-9C shipborne helicopters.

Subsequently, Bangladesh’s Parliamentary Standing Committee in June 2009 agreed in principle to approve a 10-year force modernisation programme (known as the ‘deterrent force’ and to be fully realised by 2021), under which the Bangladesh Navy would acquire two stealthy FFGs, seven guided-missile corvettes, three large OPVs equipped with helicopter decks, 12 maritime patrol craft, one diesel-electric submarine, two landing craft (utility), two hydrographic survey ships, one salvage vessel, five coastal IPVs, and new-generation anti-ship cruise missiles (Otomat Mk2 Block 4 from MBDA and C-802A from CPMIEC) and short-range air-defence systems (FN-90N) for installation on board the Navy’s existing FFGs — BNS Osman and BNS Bangabandhu.

The Bangladesh Navy in future is expected to replace its three existing ex-Royal Navy frigates (BNS Abu Bakar, BNS Ali Haider and BNS Umar Farooq) with three new-generation FFGs to be provided by CSOC. Each such FFG will have a displacement of 1,500 tonnes, length of 97 metres, beamwidth of 10.90 metres, and a maximum speed of 30 Knots.

The FFG will also be able to accommodate a medium-twin shipborne helicopter like the Z-9C, and will be armed with a 76mm main gun, up to 30 vertically-launched 35km-range air-defence missiles, twin triple-torpedo launch tubes, and four C-802A anti-ship cruise-missiles. It is believed that the Pakistan Navy too has evinced interest in acquiring three such stealthy FFGs, with contract negotiations with CSOC now reported to be in progress.

Meanwhile, the Pakistan Navy’s Vice Admiral Tanveer Faiz Ahmed on March 1 laid the keel of the first of two Type 022 Hobei-class fast attack craft FACs on order at China’s Xinggang Shipyard in Tianjin. The Type 022 Hobei-class catamarans, which have been mass-produced since 2002 by up to four Chinese shipyards (Xinggang Shipyard in Tianjin, Quixin and Jiangnan shipyards in Shanghai, Huangpu Shipyard in Guangzhou, and at Dalian Shipyard), were jointly designed by Australia-based AMD Marine Consulting and Guangzhou-based Sea Bus International.

The vessels, capable of attaining a top speed of 38 Knots, feature a wave-piercing catamaran hull design known as small waterplane area twin hull (SWATH), which becomes very stable even on choppy seas. The bulk of the displacement necessary to keep the catamaran afloat is located beneath the waves, where it is less affected by wave action, as wave excitation drops exponentially with depth. The Type 022 Hobei-class catamaran has a full-load displacement of 224 tonnes, length of 42.6 metres, beamwidth of 12.2 metres, draught of 1.5 metres, and a crew complement of 12.

The propulsion system comprises twin diesel engines each rated at 6,865hp (5,119kW) and driving four KAMEWA waterjet propulsors. The armaments package comprises four CPMIEC-built YJ-83 (C-802A) anti-ship cruise missiles (ASCM) housed in two large stern-mounted missile launchers, one bridge-mounted FLS-1 surface-to-air missile launcher along with 12 QW-2 missiles, and one KBP-designed AO-18 six-barrel 30mm gun.
 
The news above is very positive. This is the 1st report I have read that Bangladesh is building Corvettes in its own shipyard, albeit, with Chinese assistance. AL seems not to have lost its vision, and has not been misguided by the big neighbour. It is doing according to the defence needs of the day.
 
so they are building five 80 ton gunboat and five 300 ton missile boat in Bangladesh?? I believe Bangladesh is eyeing building frigates within 10 years.. Even it is possible now. build the body and then send china for armament. .

Anyway, where is 600 ton patrol vessel to be built in china deal???

It is good that we are getting VLS SAM ranging 35 km in new frigates. Must be HQ-16.... 5 frigates armed with otomat/C802/803 and fm90/hq16 is enough to guard bay of bengal... We should concentrate on air defence and attack helicopters.....
 
The news above is very positive. This is the 1st report I have read that Bangladesh is building Corvettes in its own shipyard, albeit, with Chinese assistance. AL seems not to have lost its vision, and has not been misguided by the big neighbour. It is doing according to the defence needs of the day.

Not AL. Give thanks to Myanmar for kicking äss of our policy.. They should keep it doing on regular basis....
 
Not AL. Give thanks to Myanmar for kicking äss of our policy.. They should keep it doing on regular basis....

See the old records. It is AL who spends more on defence than BNP. It may be because AL is distrusted by the military establishment that AL wants to appease it by making purchases. AL endorses most of the procurement requsts from the military. BNP can afford to neglect the military only because this Party of General Ziaur Rahman is trusted by it.
 
12327423243357lr4.jpg

Huang Pu-class vessel of the Mauritania Navy.

Not sure about the FFG or the corvette.
Maybe something similar like this:
Houbei class missile boat - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
 
The news below was published a few months ago. But, since it is an Indian magazine I am posting it here. Note that our newspapers and magazines are not allowed to publish any kind of detailed defence procurements. Usually, they publish only piecemeal news. So, we have to go to foreign sources.

-Eastwatch-


FORCE-A Complete News Magazine on National Security-Defence Magazine,Indian Defence,AERO India 2011 Bangalore Bengaluru,magazine on Indian navy,Indian Army,Indian Air Force,Indian Paramilitary forces,Naxalism,Jammu & Kashmir,terrorism,national securi

FEATURE/REPORT
Industrial Embrace
Khulna Shipyard signs a contract for five IPV and seven guided-missile corvettes with CSOC
By Prasun K. Sengupta

Bangladesh’s state-owned Khulna Shipyard recently signed a contract with China’s Shanghai-based Hudong Zhonghua Shipyard and the China Shipbuilding & Offshore International Ltd (CSOC) for licence-building five inshore patrol vessels (IPV) and seven guided-missile corvettes. While the IPVs are based on the 80-tonne Huang Pu-class vessel, the guided-missile corvettes, to be built to a brand-new design, will each have a displacement of 260 tonnes, length of 46 metres, beamwidth of 7.4 metres, and have a top speed of 30 Knots.

While the CSOC will supply the first two guided-missile corvettes off-the-shelf, the remaining five will be licence-built by Khulna Shipyard. Each such vessel will be armed with up to four CPMIEC-built C-802A anti-ship cruise missiles. The IPVs will each have a length of 27.5 metres, beamwidth of 5.5 metres, and a maximum speed of 18 Knots. On-board armaments will comprise twin 14.5mm machine guns. For navigational purposes, one I-band Type 347G mast-mounted radar will be installed on each IPV. The combat information centre (CIC) for the FFGs and guided-missile corvettes will be supplied by CETC International.

It may be recalled that Dhaka had announced an ambitious force modernisation plan in February 2009 for its armed forces, which included the procurement of anti-armour guided-missiles and anti-ship cruise missiles, up to four medium-range maritime patrol aircraft, two guided-missile frigates (FFG), a regiment of NORINCO-built Type 96G main battle tanks, and two CATIC-supplied Z-9C shipborne helicopters.

Subsequently, Bangladesh’s Parliamentary Standing Committee in June 2009 agreed in principle to approve a 10-year force modernisation programme (known as the ‘deterrent force’ and to be fully realised by 2021), under which the Bangladesh Navy would acquire two stealthy FFGs, seven guided-missile corvettes, three large OPVs equipped with helicopter decks, 12 maritime patrol craft, one diesel-electric submarine, two landing craft (utility), two hydrographic survey ships, one salvage vessel, five coastal IPVs, and new-generation anti-ship cruise missiles (Otomat Mk2 Block 4 from MBDA and C-802A from CPMIEC) and short-range air-defence systems (FN-90N) for installation on board the Navy’s existing FFGs — BNS Osman and BNS Bangabandhu.

The Bangladesh Navy in future is expected to replace its three existing ex-Royal Navy frigates (BNS Abu Bakar, BNS Ali Haider and BNS Umar Farooq) with three new-generation FFGs to be provided by CSOC. Each such FFG will have a displacement of 1,500 tonnes, length of 97 metres, beamwidth of 10.90 metres, and a maximum speed of 30 Knots.

The FFG will also be able to accommodate a medium-twin shipborne helicopter like the Z-9C, and will be armed with a 76mm main gun, up to 30 vertically-launched 35km-range air-defence missiles, twin triple-torpedo launch tubes, and four C-802A anti-ship cruise-missiles. It is believed that the Pakistan Navy too has evinced interest in acquiring three such stealthy FFGs, with contract negotiations with CSOC now reported to be in progress.

Meanwhile, the Pakistan Navy’s Vice Admiral Tanveer Faiz Ahmed on March 1 laid the keel of the first of two Type 022 Hobei-class fast attack craft FACs on order at China’s Xinggang Shipyard in Tianjin. The Type 022 Hobei-class catamarans, which have been mass-produced since 2002 by up to four Chinese shipyards (Xinggang Shipyard in Tianjin, Quixin and Jiangnan shipyards in Shanghai, Huangpu Shipyard in Guangzhou, and at Dalian Shipyard), were jointly designed by Australia-based AMD Marine Consulting and Guangzhou-based Sea Bus International.

The vessels, capable of attaining a top speed of 38 Knots, feature a wave-piercing catamaran hull design known as small waterplane area twin hull (SWATH), which becomes very stable even on choppy seas. The bulk of the displacement necessary to keep the catamaran afloat is located beneath the waves, where it is less affected by wave action, as wave excitation drops exponentially with depth. The Type 022 Hobei-class catamaran has a full-load displacement of 224 tonnes, length of 42.6 metres, beamwidth of 12.2 metres, draught of 1.5 metres, and a crew complement of 12.

The propulsion system comprises twin diesel engines each rated at 6,865hp (5,119kW) and driving four KAMEWA waterjet propulsors. The armaments package comprises four CPMIEC-built YJ-83 (C-802A) anti-ship cruise missiles (ASCM) housed in two large stern-mounted missile launchers, one bridge-mounted FLS-1 surface-to-air missile launcher along with 12 QW-2 missiles, and one KBP-designed AO-18 six-barrel 30mm gun.


Its sad and bad news for India. Its total loss for India. Indian govt should have won this contract. Instead of china making ship for BD it would be better for us, if India would have assisting BD in making ship for them..

Bloody politicians (Indian politicians), they loose every time.
 
Meanwhile, the Pakistan Navy’s Vice Admiral Tanveer Faiz Ahmed on March 1 laid the keel of the first of two Type 022 Hobei-class fast attack craft FACs on order at China’s Xinggang Shipyard in Tianjin. The Type 022 Hobei-class catamarans, which have been mass-produced since 2002 by up to four Chinese shipyards (Xinggang Shipyard in Tianjin, Quixin and Jiangnan shipyards in Shanghai, Huangpu Shipyard in Guangzhou, and at Dalian Shipyard), were jointly designed by Australia-based AMD Marine Consulting and Guangzhou-based Sea Bus International.

Pakistan isn't getting type 022. :disagree:
 
Its sad and bad news for India. Its total loss for India. Indian govt should have won this contract. Instead of china making ship for BD it would be better for us, if India would have assisting BD in making ship for them..

Bloody politicians (Indian politicians), they loose every time.

What made you troll here?

On topic: these are 6th 7th generation craft and out of Indian league. You can take our Royal Navy Frigates that we are decomissioing soon. That will give you some idea of how technologically advanced ship operates.

Thanks.
 
Woah 7 guided missile corvettes :) !!! But by when are we completing these ships? Does khulna shipyard has that much capabilty??
 
Its sad and bad news for India. Its total loss for India. Indian govt should have won this contract. Instead of china making ship for BD it would be better for us, if India would have assisting BD in making ship for them..

Bloody politicians (Indian politicians), they loose every time.
India has its hands full with building ships for the Indian Navy which would take years to complete. All available resources are being harnessed and concentrated for completing these projects on time. So don't blame the politicians.

And so what if China is helping BD in ship construction? Why are you so alarmed at China helping BD? Even India does not appear to be averse to a greater Chinese role in its own infrastructure development, including building of power plants or high-speed rail networks. With the Indian government planning to spend around $1 trillion on infrastructure projects, India will like China to play an important role in this sector over the next few years, according to well-placed sources.

Chinese companies have already completed and are in the process of executing infrastructure projects worth $40 billion in India! Already active in sectors like power, telecom and roads, Chinese companies are often seen to outbid competition in cost and duration, sometimes completing projects in record time unlike Indian counterparts!

So what's the big deal in China assisting BD in ship building for half a billion dollars? C'mon man, its high time you start looking at the bigger picture and not get paranoid at any Chinese help here. Now go get some fresh air and coffee to relieve yourself of utter panic that seems to have engulfed you!! :cheesy:
 
Prasun gupta? the indian version of zaid hamid.
Well, almost but not quite! At least PG doesn't say that we'll have breakfast in Rawalpindi after a lightning thrust into Pakistan starting midnight! Zaid goes further by saying that the Pakistani flag would be fluttering atop the Red Fort even before breakfast at Delhi!! LOL! :rofl:
 
Its sad and bad news for India. Its total loss for India. Indian govt should have won this contract. Instead of china making ship for BD it would be better for us, if India would have assisting BD in making ship for them..

Bloody politicians (Indian politicians), they loose every time.

Please do not make fun of your own poor and technologically backward country, India just for the sake of trolling. It is not enjoyable. Please stick to the topic if you are not jealous of Bangladesh.
 
FORCE-A Complete News Magazine on National Security-Defence Magazine,Indian Defence,AERO India 2011 Bangalore Bengaluru,magazine on Indian navy,Indian Army,Indian Air Force,Indian Paramilitary forces,Naxalism,Jammu & Kashmir,terrorism,national securi

FEATURE/REPORT
Industrial Embrace
Khulna Shipyard signs a contract for five IPV and seven guided-missile corvettes with CSOC
By Prasun K. Sengupta

Subsequently, Bangladesh’s Parliamentary Standing Committee in June 2009 agreed in principle to approve a 10-year force modernisation programme (known as the ‘deterrent force’ and to be fully realised by 2021), under which the Bangladesh Navy would acquire two stealthy FFGs, seven guided-missile corvettes, three large OPVs equipped with helicopter decks, 12 maritime patrol craft, one diesel-electric SUBMARINE, two landing craft (utility), two hydrographic survey ships, one salvage vessel, five coastal IPVs, and new-generation anti-ship cruise missiles (Otomat Mk2 Block 4 from MBDA and C-802A from CPMIEC) and short-range air-defence systems (FN-90N) for installation on board the Navy’s existing FFGs — BNS Osman and BNS Bangabandhu.

Please note that Bangladesh Navy is determined to procure at least one Submarine in the very near future. The paragraph contains the list of major procurements by our Navy. It is said that the BoB contains at least 100 trillion cft of natural gas. In comparison the mainland BD contains about 34 trillion cft of gas.

It is nothing even if BN spends $10 billion to purchase all the items listed above and many others, because the value of 100 trillion of gas is worth $500 billion. We must not allow our two poor greedy neighbopurs to steal our wealth by saving only $10 billion. It is only a pittance comparing to the gas wealth.
 
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