Supply Chain Council of European Union | Scceu.org
Procurement

Military shipbuilding facing fresh delays as a result of COVID-19: procurement chief

By Canadian Press

Dec 21, 2021 | 10:44 AM

OTTAWA — The Defence Department’s top procurement official is warning of fresh delays in the delivery of already overdue warships and other new equipment to the Canadian Armed Forces because of COVID-19.

Assistant deputy minister of materiel Troy Crosby says the Halifax and Vancouver shipyards building new fleets for Canada’s navy and coast guard have been hit particularly hard by lockdowns and supply chain disruptions.

While the government is working with the shipyards to determine the full extent of the problem, Crosby says their already revised delivery schedules will slip yet again.

Any schedule slippage will delay delivery of much-needed new ships for the navy’s aging fleet, which has seen five vessels retired over the past decade that still haven’t been replaced. 

Related posts

Only one in five pounds of direct Government public procurement spending awarded to SMEs

scceu

Organisations call for UK ban on controversial degradable plastics

scceu

The Global Enterprise: a roadmap to achieving success at the 2021 NPT Review Conference

scceu