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Two Navy Ships That Cost $300 Mil Are Headed To The Scrapyard Without Having Seen A Day Of Service



Jul 16, 2011 3 Comments ›› Toro520

Business Insider:

Embroiled by legal battles for more than 25 years, two U.S. Navy ships are finally headed to the scrap heap without ever having sailed and despite the fact that they’re almost completely finished.

According to Hampton Roads, the USNS Bejamin Isherwood and the USNS Henry Eckford were commissioned in 1985 at the Pennsylvania Shipbuilding Co. to carry fuel to the Navy’s fleet around the globe.

When the company defaulted on its Navy contract in 1989 the 660-foot ships were sent to Florida for completion, but cost disputes terminated that contract in 1993.

Since then, the vessels have sat 95 and 84 percent complete at the mouth of the James River as part of the mothballed ghost fleet.

In 1997, the Navy cut its ties and British company Able UK considered re-commissioning them for international sale to a NATO country.

Because they’re single-hulled ships, not the double-hulls required of today’s tankers, Able UK passed and instead took $10 million to scrap them along with two other ghost ships.

This week both vessels are being towed to International Shipbreaking Limited in Brownsville, TX to be cut up, their innards pulled out and their steel and other metals sold for recycling.

Hampton Roads quotes Joseph Keefe from maritimeprofessional.com who says the scrapping of the tankers will “close one of the saddest chapters in American shipbuilding and for that matter, federal fiduciary folly.”

No money will be returned to the U.S. treasury.


  • Chuck

    Shipyards able to build US Navy ships are few. A couple ships need to be scrapped now and again to keep those few remaing yards open, operating and producing better equipment. If the Dems had their way, all the yards would be closed and production capabilities would be shit in a dire situation.

  • http://nycright.blogspot.com Ron

    There are multiple scandals, not th eleast being the US Navy accepting the designs for Henry J. Kaiser class oiler’s with single hulls. Single hull civilian oil ships are rightly banned in US waters. But to allow such fragile ships to carry oil and munitions into a warzone is murder.

  • http://touchstonesjests.blogspot.com/ TouchStone

    And the Congress-roaches in D.C. voted to entrust our health care system to this same bureaucrappic brain-trust?

    Yeah.
    What could possibly be wrong with that……?