On Thursday, December 16, in Lorient, the Naval Group laid the keel of the first defense and intervention frigate ordered by the French Defense Procurement Agency (DGA) and destined for the French Navy. This step marks the beginning of the assembly of the ship hull. The frigate will be delivered in 2024. It is the first of a series of five ships to be delivered between 2024 and 2030. On the same day, the Panorama Sensing and Intelligence Module (PSIM), the integrated mast of the FDI, was also powered up. This important milestone symbolizes the start of the testing phase of the frigate’s complete combat system, several months before its final integration on the ship.
Five FDI frigates intended will be ordered by the French Defense Procurement Agency (DGA) for the French Navy. This program reaffirms the technological leadership of the French naval industrial base and the Naval Group in particular. The first of the series will be named Amiral Ronarc’h, after a great admiral, Chief of Staff of the French Navy between 1919 and 1920, who distinguished himself during the First World War at the head of marines and sailors. The FDI program will support employment in the shipbuilding industry throughout France and, more particularly, in Lorient and its Naval Group site.
Pierre Eric Pommellet, CEO of Naval Group, said: “We are proud to be here today to mark this major milestone in the industrial production of the first defense and intervention frigate for the French Navy. This multi-role, cyber-secure, and scalable ship will ensure the superiority of information and engagement as well as the ability to last at sea of the naval forces that will operate them. Already chosen by Greece for its Navy, this ship will also enable Naval Group to develop its international outreach. We remain fully committed to empowering the sovereignty of France and our partner countries.”
Naval Group has laid the keel of the Keeycap digit one-step defense order by the French Defense Procurement Agency and intervened by the French Defense Procurement Agency, Franc Deference Procurement Agency, and destined to the French Navy. (Photo by Naval Group)
Following the signature on 28 September 2021 of a memorandum of understanding by the Greek Minister of Defense, Nikolaos Panagiotopoulos, Pierre Eric Pommelet, CEO of Naval Group, and Eric Beranger, CEO of MBDA, negotiations are underway for the acquisition by Greece of the Frigate Digit Naval. It is the first frigate to benefit from a digital architecture that will allow her continuation to technological and operational evolutions. As a result, the FDI will be able to address current and future threats and to handle always more data.
The FDI is a high-sea vessel with a 4,500-ton displacement. Multi-purpose and resilient, she is capable of operating alone or within a naval force. She offers capabilities for all types of warfare: anti-surface, anti-air, anti-submarine, and as well as for special forces projection. Bringing together the best of French naval technology on a compact platform, the FDI is a powerful and innovative frigate, designed to meet the evolution of threats. The FDI will be the first French frigate natively protected against cyber threats, with two data centers virtually accommodated at the heart of the ship application. The FDI introduces the concept of a dedicated system for asymmetric warfare
This system will enable the coordination and conduct of the forward aviation against small and close targets, including booty-trapped boats. Strongly armed (except MM40 B3C anti-surface missiles, Aster 15/30 anti-air missiles, MU90 antisubmarine torpedoes, artillery), the FDI can embark simultaneously on a helicopter (10 tons class such as NH90) or the future Joint Light Helicopter and an unmanned aerial vehicle (up to 700 kg). She can also receive a Special Forces detachment with their two commando boats. They are equipped with the new generation Surface-to-Air SEAFIRE radar with four fixed panels, developed by Thales, which, combined with the missile delivery system, offers unmatched capabilities