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Tonga receives its second Guardian-Class Patrol Boat VOEA Ngahau Siliva Featured

Tonga receives its second Guardian-Class Patrol Boat VOEA Ngahau Siliva

31 October, 2020. Tonga received its second Australian-built Guardian-class Patrol Boat (GCPB), VOEA Ngahau Siliva (P302), at a ceremony in Henderson, Western Australia on October. 30.

The High Commissioner to Australia HRH Princess Angelika Lātūfuipeka Tuku’aho and His Majesty’s Armed Forces’ Lieutenant Colonel Tevita Siu Fifita accepted the vessel on behalf of Tonga during the handover ceremony.

Tonga receives its second Guardian-class patrol boat - Naval News

The VOEA Ngahau Siliva (“Silver Arrow“) is the eighth Guardian-class vessel to be delivered under the Australian Government’s Pacific Maritime Security Program. It is the second Guardian-class Patrol Boat for Tonga and the eighth for the Pacific. Tonga received its first Guardian-class vessel, VOEA Ngahau Koula (P301), on June 21, 2019.

The new Guardian-class vessels are replacing Tongan Maritime Force’s Pacific Forum class patrol boats in service  since the late 1980s. The Guardian-class vessels are slightly larger, and more capable compared to Pacific Forum-class boats.

Australia Delivers Austal-built Guardian-class Patrol Boat to Fiji

Australian Minister for Defence Linda Reynolds said the handover represented a focus on the enhanced maritime capability in the defence cooperation between our nations.

“Australia and Tonga have long worked together in pursuit of our shared goals for sovereignty, security and prosperity in the Pacific,” Minister Reynolds said. “Tonga’s second Guardian-class Patrol Boat is a considerable step up in Tonga’s maritime capability, and I have no doubt the vessel will admirably serve Tonga and the Pacific region in meeting their maritime security goals.

“This Program, which is the successor to the Pacific Patrol Boat Program, demonstrates a 60 year commitment to the Pacific and to regional maritime security. We have already delivered seven Guardian Class Pacific Patrol Boats, with another five under construction at Henderson.

Tonga Archives - DefPost

This is just one component of this Government’s up to $183 billion Naval Shipbuilding Plan which will see more than 70 naval vessels built here in Australia, by Australian workers, with Australian steel. This investment is creating thousands of Australian jobs while building a globally competitive Australian shipbuilding enterprise.”

Assistant Defence Minister and Minister for International Development and the Pacific, the Hon Alex Hawke said the Guardian-class Patrol Boats were an important part of Australia’s collaboration with the Pacific in the COVID-19 environment.

“Guardian-class Patrol Boats are playing a key role in supporting the Pacific response to complex COVID-19 related economic and security challenges,” Minister Hawke said. “The VOEA Ngahau Siliva will protect Tonga’s maritime resources, and reduce the costs of illegal activities on both the economy and society.”

Melissa Price MP's tweet - "Proud to keep building maritime security  capability across the Pacific with the 8th Guardian-class Patrol Boat  handed over in WA. Tonga's fleet now complete as VOEA Ngahau

Minister for Defence Industry Melissa Price said she was pleased to attend the ceremony and see how Australia’s defence industry and Austal Ships are playing a key role in the Pacific Maritime Security Program.

“Australia is proud to play a part in the next generation of Pacific maritime capability through the delivery of Australian-built vessels,” Minister Price said. “Guardian-class Patrol Boats are another great success story for Australia’s growing defence industry and support around 400 direct and indirect Australian jobs.”

Pacific Patrol Boat Replacement (PPB-R) Project

Australian shipbuilder Austal is delivering 21 Guardian-class Patrol Boat (GCPB) to 12 Pacific nations and Timor-Leste under the Pacific Patrol Boat Replacement (SEA3036) Project as part of the Australian Government’s $2 billion Pacific Maritime Security Program (PMSP).

The Pacific Patrol Boat Replacement (PPB-R) Project was awarded to Austal in May 2016, with an additional contract option awarded in April 2018 taking the program to 21 vessels valued at more than A$335 million.

Twelve Pacific Island nations including Papua New Guinea, Fiji, the Federated States of Micronesia (FSM), Tonga, Solomon Islands, Cook Islands, Kiribati, Marshall Islands, Palau, Samoa, Tuvalu, and Vanuatu; and Timor Leste will receive the vessels through to 2023.

The 39.5-meter steel monohull GCPB patrol boat designed, constructed and sustained by Austal Australia is based on a proven design platform that has included the 38-meter Bay-class, 56-metre Armidale-class and 58-meter Cape-class patrol boats that are in service with the Australian Border Force (ABF) and Royal Australian Navy (RAN).

The GCPB vessels are 39.5 meters long with a beam of 8 meters and a loaded draft of 2.5 meters. It is capable of traveling at 20 knots and at 12 knots possesses a 3,000 nautical mile range. Each vessel can accommodate 23 people.

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