Congress Funds Training Ship for Texas A&M

December 22, 2020

Congress on Monday approved $390 million to fund construction of a fourth National Security Multi-Mission Vessel (NSMV). The state-of-the-art ship will be assigned to the Texas A&M Maritime Academy at Texas A&M University at Galveston, serving as a training platform for future merchant mariners and offer a critical disaster resource in the Gulf Coast.

Scheduled for delivery in 2025, the new NSMV for Texas A&M is the fourth in a series of five ships to replace the aging and outdated fleet of training vessels currently used by state maritime academies. Philly Shipyard holds the exclusive contract for the new purpose-built ships and recently laid the keel for the series' first vessel for the State University of New York Maritime Academy. Massachusetts Maritime Academy and Maine Maritime Academy receiving the second and third, and the fifth will be for the California State University Maritime Academy. 

A digital mockup depicting the new NSMV docked at Texas A&M University at Galveston (Image: MARAD)
A digital mockup depicting the new NSMV docked at Texas A&M University at Galveston (Image: MARAD)

The 525-foot ship is outfitted with eight classrooms, a full training bridge, lab spaces, an auditorium, space available for hospital facilities roll-on/roll-off ramps, cargo crane and berths for 600 cadets and up to 1,000 humanitarian workers.

“This ship will not only provide student cadets with next-generation maritime training, but will also support humanitarian relief missions,” said Michael K. Young, president of Texas A&M University.

In addition to being an educational platform for the Texas A&M Maritime Academy, the vessel is a national asset capable of responding to humanitarian and disaster response and relief efforts, which is critically needed in the Gulf of Mexico. Texas A&M-Galveston’s central location along the Gulf Coast and in the heart of an international port makes an ideal staging area for response and relief efforts.

“While the ship will serve as a state-of-the-art classroom for the maritime program at Texas A&M University at Galveston, it will also provide a key mission capability for disaster response along the Gulf Coast – able to respond to emergencies in other states and U.S. territories – and will provide a needed emergency response resource to Texas and the gulf,” said Nim Kidd, Chief of the Texas Division of Emergency Management and Vice Chancellor for Disaster and Emergency Services.

State academy training vessels are federally owned and available to support federal response efforts to national and international disasters. The Texas A&M Maritime Academy’s previous ship, Texas Clipper II, was activated in support of relief efforts for Hurricanes Katrina and Rita in 2005 before being recalled and reassigned by the federal government to support the Air Force. Three state academy training vessels, including Texas A&M Maritime Academy’s current 224-foot training ship, TS General Rudder, aided in humanitarian efforts during Hurricane Harvey.

“Investment in the Gulf Coast’s only state maritime academy is essential to strengthening Texas’ maritime industry, which provides billions in economic support to the state and ensures rapid response capabilities in the most hurricane-prone region of the United States,” said John Sharp, Chancellor of The Texas A&M University System. “We are grateful to the Texas congressional delegation, state elected officials, former students and industry leaders for their support in securing this resource.”

“Having the ability to live, learn and train together as a single unit is essential to meeting our mission in educating and training the next generation of merchant mariners who go on to serve in both our armed forces and the maritime industry,” said Col. Michael E. Fossum, Vice President of Texas A&M University, Chief Operating Officer of the Galveston Campus and Superintendent of the Texas A&M Maritime Academy. “We’re excited to be able to do so in just a few years on a vessel that is the pinnacle of industry standard.”

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