VESSEL REVIEW | Aotearoa – Large supply tanker to support Royal New Zealand Navy’s deployed task forces

MARITIME SECURITY WEEK

The largest ship ever to be operated by the Royal New Zealand Navy (RNZN) is a highly versatile fleet replenishment tanker capable of providing adequate logistical support to deployed units of the RNZN and even others from the New Zealand Defence Forces (NZDF) and friendly nations for extended periods.

Measuring 173.2 by 24.5 metres and displacing approximately 26,000 tonnes, the Lloyd’s Register-classed maritime sustainment vessel HMNZS Aotearoa was designed by Rolls-Royce and built by South Korean shipyard Hyundai Heavy Industries (HHI) to be capable of transporting large quantities of stores that include dry goods, fresh water, ammunition, spare parts, and marine and aviation fuel.

Perhaps the most important benefit guaranteed by this capability is that deployed RNZN and NZDF units will have a readily available source of vital supplies wherever they may be in the world, such as when they are conducting peacekeeping, anti-piracy, training, and humanitarian aid missions in other regions for weeks at a time.



Named after the traditional Maori word for New Zealand, Aotearoa can carry a total cargo volume equivalent to that of 22 standard 20-foot shipping containers. The onboard equipment even includes a desalination plant that can produce up to 100,000 litres of fresh water per day, an attribute that is particularly vital in certain situations such as when NZDF units are delivering humanitarian aid to disaster-stricken areas with limited access to clean drinking water. The ship’s cargo tanks meanwhile can hold around 8,000 tonnes of marine fuel and another 1,500 tonnes of aviation fuel.

Like many modern supply tankers in service with other countries’ navies, Aotearoa can carry out replenishment at sea (RAS). This capability will allow RNZN task groups to receive sufficient quantities of fuel and other vital stores while minimising the number of needed port resupply stops en route, which will in turn mean less time spent sailing to an operational area.



Aotearoa was also built for operation in Antarctic waters, allowing it to perform vital resupply of New Zealand’s two scientific research stations on the remote continent. For this purpose, winterisation features such as upper deck trace heating, underwater fittings. and an ice-strengthened hull have also been incorporated in the final design, ensuring the ship’s compliance with Polar Class 6.

The hull features a unique wave-piercing bow that helps minimise fuel burn. Additionally, because of its combined diesel-electric and diesel (CODLAD) propulsion plant and selective catalytic reduction (SCR) technology, Aotearoa enjoys lower NOx emissions compared to older vessels. The propulsion arrangement includes two Rolls-Royce Bergen B33:45L9P diesels supplemented by two electric power take-in motors to drive two controllable-pitch propellers. Steering is via two Rolls-Royce (now Kongsberg) flap rudders.

Thanks to its range of 6,750 nautical miles, the ship can access a large selection of ports and harbours worldwide as well as areas with little to no prepared port infrastructure. This long range also enables it to stay out at sea for long periods, an important attribute when accompanying RNZN ships conducting extended patrols in areas where logistical support would otherwise be non-existent.

A FarSounder Argos 1000 forward-looking long-range sonar provides Aotearoa‘s crew with real-time 3D data of the sea ahead. The sonar is also intended to help the large ship navigate through shallow areas that may be strewn with debris, like areas with unprepared ports and even the waters in and around Antarctica.

A CarteNav AIMS-ISR integrated sensor management system collects all data gathered by the ship’s various sensors (i.e. radar, EO/IR video cameras, AIS, etc.) to present the bridge crew with an augmented reality-based tactical picture of the immediate area around the ship. Effective maritime surveillance control is made possible through this system, which also includes moving map displays and vessel classification and tracking.

Being a large ship, Aotearoa has ample accommodation spaces for its core crew of 64 as well as 34 other personnel including passengers and aviation crews. There are also medical facilities consisting of a treatment room and a two-berth ward. The stern has a flight deck and hangar designed for one medium utility helicopter.

Although the tanker is primarily an auxiliary support platform not meant to engage in combat, it possesses limited self-defence capability provided by a Phalanx 20-millimetre close-in weapon system (CIWS) designed for use against low-flying aircraft, helicopters, and even anti-ship missiles. There are also two Rafael Mini Typhoon remote weapon stations fitted with light machine guns on port and starboard.

The onboard electrical systems and even the RAS system and bow thruster all draw power from four MTU generator sets.

Aotearoa was handed over to the RNZN in June 2020 and was commissioned into service the following month. The ship and its crew are continuing to undergo further trials that senior navy officials expect will bring it to full operational standard. Among the first missions it will perform upon completion of this crucial phase will be a resupply voyage to Antarctica, which will be conducted jointly with Australia in early 2022.

See all the other news, reviews and features of this month’s Maritime Security Week right here.

 

HMNZS Aotearoa
SPECIFICATIONS
Type of vessel: Naval sustainment ship
Classification: Lloyd’s Register Shipping 100A1 NSA Replenishment Ship, PC6, SA1, SDA, FDA, CM, ESA1, ESP AIR, LI, ACS(B,V), TA[NS], *IWS LMC, UMS, IBS, PSMR*, SCM, MPMS IGS MD(SP), SERS, ENV (IHM,GW,OW,RS,P), LNMA, RAS(B,V)(NT) CEPAC2, LA, LA(NS), LE, FDA Ice, WINTERISATION C(-25)
Flag: New Zealand
Owner: Royal New Zealand Navy
Operator: Royal New Zealand Navy
Designer: Hyundai Heavy Industries, South Korea; Rolls-Royce, Norway
Builder: Hyundai Heavy Industries, South Korea
Hull construction material: Steel
Superstructure construction material: Steel
Deck construction material: Steel
Length overall: 173.2 metres
Length bp: 168.7 metres
Beam: 24.5 metres
Draught: 8.4 metres
Depth: 12.5 metres
Displacement: 26,523 tonnes
Deadweight tonnage: 14,508
Gross tonnage: 17,990
Net tonnage: 5,397
Capacity: 1,232 cubic metres liquid cargo; 300 tonnes dry cargo (22 TEU)
Main engines: 2 x Rolls-Royce Bergen B33:45L9P, each 5.4 MW
Gearboxes: 2 x Kongsberg 1180GFC-SC750
Propulsion: 2 x Kongsberg controllable pitch propellers; Kongsberg 144A5D-BG-100FA shafting system
Auxiliary engines: 2 x Kongsberg power take in, each 1.2 MW
Generators: 4 x MTU 20V4000M53B, each 2.6 MW; STX KTA19DMGE, 410 kW
Side thrusters: Rolls-Royce Power Engineering TT3000 CPP tunnel bow thruster, 2.5MW
Steering system: 2 x Kongsberg RV1650-3 steering gear; Kongsberg FS4700 rudder
Cruising speed: 16 knots
Range: 6,750 nautical miles
Radars: 2 x Kelvin Hughes SharpEye Mk II S-band; SharpEye Mk II X-band
Depth sounder: Skipper GDS102
Sonar: FarSounder Argos 1000
Satcom: Furuno Sailor 500
Weatherfax: Fut
Autopilot: Hensoldt SEM 300
Compass/es: iXblue Marins M3 gyrocompass; Lilley and Gilly Mk2000S binnacle magnetic compass
GMDSS: Furuno
GPS: Saab R5 Supreme
Plotters: iXblue GECDIS-W
AIS: Saab R5 Supreme
Other electronics: Kelvin Hughes integrated navigation and bridge system; Servowatch integrated platform management system; Carte Nav AIMS ISR integrated sensor management system
Winches: 5 x Arim Machinery and Engineering AHM-KC-18 mooring winches
Windlasses: 2 x Arim Machinery and Engineering AHL-KCM-B68 anchor windlasses
Cranes: Palfinger Marine DKF800; 2 x MEP-Pellegrini Marine Equipment GNK 1.8-10EH stores cranes
Other deck equipment: Flight deck; hangar; 2 x Kongsberg replenishment/fuelling-at-sea stations
Watermakers: 2 x Enwa desalination plants
Armament: Phalanx 20mm CIWS; 2 x Rafael Mini Typhoon weapon stations with machine guns
Firefighting equipment: Inergen engine room firefighting system; NK Co local watermist systems; Survitec fixed foam and water sprinklers; Skum AFFF cannon
Liferafts: 4 x Viking 25DK+; 2 x Viking 35DK+
Lifeboats: 2 x Palfinger LBT1090T Polar Code complient
Rescue boat: Zodiac J5
Tender: Zodiac J5
Type of fuel: Diesel
Fuel capacity: 1,870 cubic metres
Freshwater capacity: 277 tonnes
Sewage/blackwater capacity: 22 cubic metres per day
Accommodation: 100
Crew: 64


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