US Navy's Third Littoral Combat Ship Commissioned for Service

September 23, 2012

'USS Fort Worth Commissioning: Photo credit Lockheed Martin
'USS Fort Worth Commissioning: Photo credit Lockheed Martin

Lockheed Martin-led team's second Littoral Combat Ship, 'USS Fort Worth' (LCS 3) commissioned by U.S. Navy in Galveston, Texas.

USS Fort Worth, the second of the Freedom-variant in the LCS class, successfully passed Acceptance Trials in May and was delivered to the U.S. Navy in June, two months ahead of schedule.

"Today's global security challenges demand new and improved solutions, and the Littoral Combat Ship represents the innovation that is needed to respond to this dynamic environment," said Bob Stevens, Lockheed Martin Chairman and CEO.  "We are incredibly proud of the men and women on our team who helped design and build Fort Worth and honored to serve those that will rely on this ship to support U.S. security goals."

Now formally commissioned, Fort Worth will transit to its homeport in San Diego, Calif., where it will be integrated into the fleet and the industry-Navy team will conduct additional program testing and crew training.  

The Lockheed Martin-led LCS team includes ship builder Marinette Marine Corporation (MMC), a Fincantieri company, and naval architect Gibbs & Cox, as well as hundreds of teammates worldwide.

Milwaukee (LCS 5) and Detroit (LCS 7) are under construction at MMC's shipyard. Little Rock (LCS 9) and Sioux City (LCS 11) were awarded in March 2012 and are in the early stages of procuring long-lead materials.



 

Logistics News

Baltic Index Reaches One-Week High on Higher Capesize Rates

Baltic Index Reaches One-Week High on Higher Capesize Rates

NYK Group’s ICO Launches Belgium’s First Shore Power Facility for RoRo Ships

NYK Group’s ICO Launches Belgium’s First Shore Power Facility for RoRo Ships

BMT, Austal Sign Engineering Alliance to Support Shipbuilding Projects

BMT, Austal Sign Engineering Alliance to Support Shipbuilding Projects

Irish Consultancy Opens Its Doors for Offshore Wind, Subsea Markets

Irish Consultancy Opens Its Doors for Offshore Wind, Subsea Markets

Subscribe for Maritime Logistics Professional E‑News

Grids are being urged to change data center power regulations by the US Energy regulator
Zambia and the US increase use of $491 Million grant programme for critical metals infrastructure
India's NSE IPO, which has been delayed for years, brings $2.6 billion to top investors