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Fincantieri Invests in U.S. Yards

Thursday, November 05, 2009
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Fincantieri Cantieri Navali Italiani S.p.A is investing and committing more than $40m in 2009-10 facility improvements at its mid-tier United States shipyards, Marinette Marine Corporation (MMC) and Bay Shipbuilding Company.

The currently approved improvements are the beginning of a five-year $100m plan to modernize the shipyards to support the construction of the U.S. Navy’s Littoral Combat Ship (LCS) and other government and commercial projects.

“We are honoring the commitment we made when we bought the U.S. yards,” said Giuseppe Bono, Fincantieri’s CEO. “We are not just transferring our experience in designing and building complex vessels. Through these capital expenditures, which also will benefit our other U.S. facilities in addition to the Marinette yard, we will further expand our production capacities and improve our infrastructure and processes. This will increase our competitiveness and foster synergies among our facilities in light of the challenges that we will face in the future”

The USS Freedom (LCS-1), a first-in-class ship built at MMC by the Lockheed Martin-led team and delivered to the U.S. Navy in September 2008, has successfully logged more than 7,000 nautical miles since its delivery.  The Lockheed Martin-led team is currently constructing the Fort Worth (LCS-3) at MMC for the U.S. Navy and has achieved several critical milestones including the most recent setting of the gas turbines in the engine room.

The MMC facility improvements include installing state-of-the-art CNC controlled pipe-bending equipment, doubling the lifting capacity in the module construction and outfit buildings, increasing the main erection facility lifting capacity to 200 tons in each bay, and significantly lengthening MMC’s largest erection building. 

Fincantieri’s five-year modernization plan strategically targets improvements at MMC that will reduce cycle time, improve quality and reduce overall ship construction cost.  The engineering and design effort has already begun for lengthening MMC’s largest erection building by 183 feet.  This will provide an additional 35,000 square feet of erection space and support the simultaneous indoor construction of two complete LCS hulls, along with the keel-laying of two additional LCS ships.  The construction is expected to be completed in 2010. 

Capital improvements for Bay Shipbuilding include a new floating dock, panel line and other efficiency related items to support the LCS program.

Fincantieri intends to provide an additional $60m in capital expenditures over the next four years to improve capacity, reduce construction cycle times and reduce overall costs.
 

Maritime Reporter October 2009 Digital Edition
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