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Norway awaits arrival of new LSV

By Richard Scott |

The Royal Norwegian Navy’s (RNoN’s) new and much-delayed Logistics and Support Vessel (LSV), KNM Maud , has begun its delivery voyage from South Korea.

Separately, the Norwegian Ministry of Defence (Forsvarsdepartementet) has announced that Maud will be dual-crewed to maximise operational availability. This move follows the sinking of the Fridtjof Nansen-class frigate KNM Helge Ingstad in Hjeltefjorden last November following a collision.


        KNM
        Maud
        has begun its delivery voyage.
       (RNoN)

KNM Maud has begun its delivery voyage. (RNoN)

Daewoo Shipbuilding and Marine Engineering (DSME), partnered by BMT Defence Services, was awarded a NOK1.32 billion (USD153.2 million) contract in June 2013 by Norway’s Defence Logistics Organisation for the design and build of the LSV under Project 2513. The new ship is intended to meet the RNoN’s long-standing requirement for a multirole auxiliary vessel to provide afloat and logistics support for a maritime task group, and to contribute to NATO-led international operations.

Construction work on Maud began at DSME’s Okpo shipyard in May 2015 after a programme critical design review the previous month. Keel laying occurred in December 2015, followed by launch in June 2016.

Under the original programme schedule, ship acceptance had been planned for September 2016. However, the construction programme suffered significant delays attributable to DSME’s financial situation and the complexity of the build and integration. As a result, the LSV delivery schedule was pushed back to April 2018.

Sea trials began in December 2017, but the programme encountered a further delay after the ship’s main machinery suffered damage during testing. Rectification and repair work meant Maud was not accepted off contract until 16 November 2018, more than two years later than original planned.

Maud

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