Taiwan Eyes Budget for New Submarines

By Aiswarya Lakshmi
Thursday, September 3, 2015

 Taiwan’s defense ministry seeks financing to expand the country’s submarine fleet, reports Reuters quoting local media reports.

The government has allocated $92.55 million over four years, beginning next year, to launch a long-awaited program for the island to build its own diesel-electric submarines.
The plan come as other navies in the regional expand their submarine fleets in part to create a strategic deterrent against China's growing naval assertiveness in Asian waters.
Taiwan has long sought to expand its aging submarine fleet. Taiwan has four aging submarines, including two that date to World War Two, although its military is otherwise considered generally modern.
China currently operates more than 60 submarines and is rapidly expanding its anti-submarine warfare capabilities to further dilute any threat Taipei’s future submarines could pose. 
Taiwan’s Ministry of National Defense (MND)  is planning to award a design contract in 2016. The entire project is expected to span four years. 
Categories: Finance Maritime Security Navy Subsea Defense Vessels

Related Stories

Puerto Rico Inks LNG Contract with New Fortress Energy

Panama Canal Unveils Decade Roadmap of Transformation

WSC Launches AI Tool for Detecting Misdeclared Goods

Current News

Puerto Rico Inks LNG Contract with New Fortress Energy

Panama Canal Unveils Decade Roadmap of Transformation

Nissen Kaiun Becomes Stakeholder in Econowind

China's Hold on Global Ports focus of Trump Administration

Subscribe for Maritime Logistics Professional E‑News