HII Gets USN Submarine Engineering & Industrial Work Contract

October 25, 2012

Huntington Ingalls Industries' Newport News Shipbuilding (NNS) division awarded the $142.7 million contract from the U.S. Navy.

The contract option is for work on operational and decommissioning U.S. Navy submarines, conversion submarines, special mission submersibles, submarine support facilities and related programs.

NNS is the prime contractor for the work, which will include engineering, design, configuration management, integrated logistic support, database management, research and development, modernization and industrial support. Work is expected to begin immediately and continue through September 2013.

"No one will take better care of these products than we will," said Jennifer Boykin, NNS' vice president, engineering and design. "These ships represent the very best of American craftsmanship and innovation, and the pride that goes into their construction will continue during their maintenance to ensure that the Navy is equipped with the very best."

NNS is one of only two U.S. shipyards capable of building nuclear-powered submarines and has completed more than 200 ship repair projects for the U.S. government since the early 1990s, ranging from paint repair to complete hull and machinery renovation.
 

Logistics News

Suburban Propane President & CEO Honored with Dual Awards

Suburban Propane President & CEO Honored with Dual Awards

Chinese Sanctions on Hanwha Put $150B South Korea-US Shipbuilding Plan at Risk

Chinese Sanctions on Hanwha Put $150B South Korea-US Shipbuilding Plan at Risk

New Stena Line Vessel to Set Sail for Home Port

New Stena Line Vessel to Set Sail for Home Port

SC Ports Records Strong Growth in Q1 of FY26

SC Ports Records Strong Growth in Q1 of FY26

Subscribe for Maritime Logistics Professional E‑News

Sources say that FiberCop, a company backed by KKR, has filed a complaint with the EU regarding alleged Italian aid to KKR's rival.
Singapore asks UN to defer vote on carbon shipping price as US opposes the measure
FAA: Boeing can increase 737 MAX production up to 42 planes per monthly