Babcock frigate win offers lifeline to UK shipbuilding

Babcock’s Arrowhead 140 design beat rival bids from BAE Systems and Atlas Elektronik UK, which will help the company improve ties with its investors. (Supplied)
Updated 12 September 2019
Follow

Babcock frigate win offers lifeline to UK shipbuilding

  • Ships will cost an average £250 million to produce and support 2,500 jobs

LONDON: Babcock International has won a contract to design new Type 31 frigates as Britain seeks to revive its once-mighty shipbuilding industry.

The frigates will be assembled at Babcock’s facility in Rosyth, Scotland, and the program will support more than 2,500 jobs across the Britain, including its supply chain.

The deal will boost Babcock’s efforts to repair ties with investors after a period when the engineering group’s management and stock price came under fire. 

Its shares are more than 35 percent below their mid-2018 level. Babcock’s Arrowhead 140 design beat rival bids from BAE Systems and Atlas Elektronik UK, and a formal contract award is expected later this year, Babcock said.

“Arrowhead 140 is a modern warship that will meet the maritime threats of today and tomorrow,” Babcock Chief Executive Archie Bethel said.

“It provides a flexible, adaptable platform that delivers value for money and supports the UK’s National Shipbuilding Strategy.”

The government will buy at least five of the frigates and has said the first ship is set to be in the water by 2023.

Babcock said detailed design work would start immediately, with manufacturing beginning in 2021 and finishing in 2027. The ships will have an average production cost of £250 million ($308 million) a ship.

HIGHLIGHTS

• Babcock design selected for Type 31 frigate.

• Firm beat designs from BAE Systems and Atlas Elektronik.

• PM Johnson pledges to reinvigorate decimated shipyards.

The government has committed to keeping up a fleet of at least 19 frigates and destroyers with the aim of expanding the fleet in the 2030s. Type 31 frigates will replace Type 23 ships.

“(The) UK is an outward-looking island nation, and we need a shipbuilding industry and Royal Navy that reflect the importance of the seas to our security and prosperity,” Prime Minister Boris Johnson said in a statement.

“I am convinced that by working together we will see a renaissance in this industry which is so much part of our island story — so let’s bring shipbuilding home.”

Britain is building patrol vessels and new Type 26 frigates at BAE Systems’ Govan shipyard on the Clyde river in Glasgow.

But the country’s shipbuilding industry has suffered a catastrophic decline in the past 40 years, with shipyards in places from Sunderland to Portsmouth closing.

Belfast’s Harland and Wolff shipyard, where the Titanic was built, went into administration last month.


DP World announces new leadership appointments

Updated 13 February 2026
Follow

DP World announces new leadership appointments

DUBAI: DP World announced the appointment of Essa Kazim as Chairman of its Board of Directors and the appointment of Yuvraj Narayan as Group Chief Executive Officer.

Essa Kazim currently serves as Governor of the Dubai International Financial Centre and Chairman of Borse Dubai. He brings extensive experience in financial and economic affairs, having previously held senior leadership positions in several national institutions.

Yuvraj Narayan has extensive professional experience in financial management, corporate finance, supply chains, and global trade. Since joining DP World in 2004, he has led a number of strategic and transformational initiatives that supported the company’s expansion across international markets and strengthened its role as an integrated global provider of end-to-end supply chain solutions.

Narayan has served as Group Chief Financial Officer since 2005, contributing to the company’s financial resilience and operational efficiency.

DP World affirmed that the new appointments support its strategy for sustainable growth and reinforce its role in strengthening global supply chains and supporting Dubai’s position as a leading hub for trade and logistics.