he guided-missile destroyer USS Paul Ignatius (DDG 117) arrives in Narvik, Norway, March 15, 2024, following its participation in Steadfast Defender 2024, the largest NATO exercise since World War II.

he guided-missile destroyer USS Paul Ignatius (DDG 117) arrives in Narvik, Norway, March 15, 2024, following its participation in Steadfast Defender 2024, the largest NATO exercise since World War II. U.S. Navy

Navy offers 2-option shipbuilding plan

One path shows the service's desired path; the other, a plan for no real growth in the Navy budget.

The U.S. Navy released its latest long-range shipbuilding strategy, which outlines construction and retirement plans for the service’s fleet over the next 30 years. The strategy document encompasses two potential outcomes based on how much funding is provided over the coming decades.

The first option, which is designated as the Navy’s official shipbuilding plan, reflects the service’s goal of reaching a fleet of 381 ships in support of the National Defense Strategy. This goal aligns with a Battle Force Ship Assessment and Requirement (BFSAR) report released in June 2023. The second option, which is labeled as an alternative to the official shipbuilding plan, shows what would happen to the future fleet under a resource-constrained environment with zero real budget growth above inflation.

The Navy’s preferred plan would see the manned battle force grow past 330 ships in the mid-2030s, reaching 377 ships by 2045 and 387 in 2054. The resource-constrained alternative would produce a fleet about 10 percent smaller: 343 ships in a decade, topping out at 348 ships in 2042.

The biggest difference between the two approaches is that the resource-constrained plan supports fewer surface warships–specifically, frigates and Littoral Combat Ships–and fewer combat logistics force ships. Both options support similar submarine fleets and a total of 31 amphibious warships for the Marine Corps.

The dual-path strategy is an improvement over recent shipbuilding plans that outlined three alternatives based on resource levels. The latest strategy more clearly outlines the fleet the Navy wants, as well as the consequences of failing to adequately fund its construction plans.

In addition to manned ships, the strategy says the Navy could field between 89 to 143 unmanned platforms by 2045. The number of unmanned platforms will be adjusted as new capabilities are developed and integrated into the fleet. The 2023 BFSAR report outlined an objective of 134 unmanned platforms, comprising 78 unmanned surface vehicles and 56 extra-large unmanned undersea vehicles.

The new shipbuilding strategy also describes the Navy’s plan to decommission 19 ships in FY25, 10 of which would be removed from service early. If approved by Congress, the early departures will include two Littoral Combat Ships, two cruisers, four Expeditionary Fast Transports, one amphibious dock landing ship, and one Expeditionary Transfer Dock.