
Eyeing Arctic dominance, Trump bill earmarks $11 billion for US Coast Guard icebreakers, World News
The funding includes $4.3 billion for up to three new heavy Coast Guard Polar Security Cutters, $3.5 billion for medium Arctic Security Cutters, and $816 million for procurement of additional light and medium icebreaking cutters.
The cutters will have reinforced hulls and specially angled bows designed for open-water icebreaking.
The Coast Guard had been seeking eight to nine Arctic-ready icebreakers. Its current fleet now just includes three.
Trump has been pushing to revive US shipbuilding to counter China's growing strength in maritime manufacturing and naval dominance. Earlier this year, he unveiled separate plans to levy fees and tariffs on Chinese ships and port equipment including ship-to-shore cranes to bolster that effort.
As climate change shrinks polar ice packs, Arctic seas are increasingly being considered as trade routes connecting the Pacific and Atlantic Oceans to major economies.
China and Russia have been working together to develop Arctic shipping routes and fortify their defences. The United States, Canada and Finland last year announced a trilateral partnership called the "ICE Pact" to build a fleet of 70 to 90 ice-breaking ships over the coming decade to "project power" into the polar region and enforce international norms and treaties.
Trump has also repeatedly called for the United States to acquire as many as 40 new icebreakers to enhance national security in the Arctic. Those icebreakers could help companies with logistics and keep open supply lines for potential oil and gas and mineral development in the rugged and frigid region.
Russia has the world's largest fleet of icebreakers and ice-capable patrol ships with 57, according to the International Institute for Strategic Studies.
China has a far smaller fleet, but is also investing in growing it. The two countries in May pledged to raise co-operation to a new level and "decisively" counter US influence. Who builds them?
Louisiana-based shipbuilders Bollinger Shipyards and Edison Chouest Offshore in May announced a strategic partnership called United Shipbuilding Alliance (USA) to manufacture icebreakers to meet "urgent Arctic operational needs".
USA will bid to build icebreakers for the Arctic Security Cutter programme, a Bollinger spokesperson said.
The Coast Guard recently gave Bollinger the green light to begin full construction of the first ship in the Polar Security Cutter Program at its Pascagoula, Mississippi, facility. That project, which ran into trouble with a shipbuilder Bollinger purchased, had been "plagued by delays and cost overruns," the Congressional Budget Office said in an August report.
At that time, CBO estimated that building all three new Polar Security Cutters on the Coast Guard wishlist would cost $5.1 billion in 2024 dollars, roughly 60 per cent more than the Coast Guard had estimated.
Other potential icebreaker builders include Quebec-based Davie Shipbuilding, which in June announced plans to buy Gulf Copper & Manufacturing's shipbuilding assets in Galveston and Port Arthur, Texas.
"We welcome the commitment to strengthen America's icebreaker fleet," a Davie spokesperson said. "This is a vital step in addressing growing threats and emerging opportunities in the Arctic."
Singapore-based Keppel's Keppel Amfels also has a presence in Texas.
Shipyards in Canada or Finland could also provide the ships, but that would require a presidential waiver for the US Coast Guard to buy ships from a foreign yard, US Naval Institute News said.
The Coast Guard recently took possession of its first polar icebreaker in 25 years. Built by Edison Chouest Offshore's North American Shipbuilding in 2012, according to LSEG data, the modified Coast Guard Cutter Storis set sail in June and its home port will be Juneau, Alaska.
The polar fleet also includes the 399-foot heavy icebreaker Polar Star, and the 420-foot medium icebreaker Healy, according to its website.
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