Sunday, December 14, 2014

Brazil President Rousseff Inaugurates Nuclear Submarine Shipyard 
President of Brazil Dilma Rousseff inspects 
project.
1:48 AM 14 December 2014

Rousseff and Minister of Defence Amorin listen to Brazilian Marine officers in front of a mock-up representing the shipyard where five submarines will be built in co-operation with France, in Itaguai, 70km from Rio de Janeiro

AFP Rio de Janeiro

Brazilian President Dilma Rousseff has inaugurated a naval shipyard that will oversee construction of a nuclear-powered submarine and four others to patrol Brazil’s long coastline and deep water oil reserves.

The project in southeastern Rio state, with the first vessel set for 2017 delivery, emerged from a $10bn partnership with France dating from a 2008 agreement signed by then leaders Luiz Lula da Silva and Nicolas Sarkozy.

“I am sure that every cent invested in the programme will prove worthwhile,” said Rousseff.

She noted that Brazil was progressing toward becoming part of a “select group” of countries along with Britain, China, France, Russia and the United States, whose navies have nuclear-propelled submarines at their disposal.

“We have a very precious heritage to protect, of which the sea is a part, with essential resources for our country’s development,” added Rousseff, who was accompanied to the launch by Defence Minister Celso Amorim.

She stressed that the navy has a constitutional duty to protect the nation’s sovereignty.
Brazil has about 8,500km of coastline.

The new submarines – the first one is 45% ready – will replace five that Brazil developed with Germany in the 1980s.

Brazilian constructor Odebrecht, French state defence firm DCNS and the Brazilian navy have been jointly developing the yard at Itaguai, some 70km south of Rio de Janeiro.

The 100m, 6,000-tonne nuclear vessel is slated for launch in 2025 after construction starts in 2017.

Its reactor and enriched uranium fuel have been developed with Brazilian technology.

All five conventional submarines will bear torpedoes loaded with conventional warheads.

Under the Brazilian constitution and the Treaty on the Non-Proliferation of Nuclear Weapons to which Brazil is a signatory, the country may not develop or equip its armed forces with nuclear weapons.

No comments: