Wait, how about Australia adopting a non-nuclear variant of the Suffren, before going nuclear ?
...
Nope, forgot that.

According to Turnbull this was actually an option.

The deal required that at least the first two boats be conventionally powered but allowed for a switch to an "Australianized" Suffren, nuclear powered boat along with a reduced total buy (8 rather than 12).

just catching up to all this, so Australia is insistent on it being nuclear..
besides the Suffren and Virginia, was the Astute considered/offered?

Australia's "insistence" on nuclear-powered subs was premised on a step change of defence focus from defence of Australia's littoral to operations anywhere in the world (in the first instance, in the South China Sea).
 
So what about the Suffren design? Well it was offered informally but never seriously considered...
It wasn't considered because Australia was set on buying conventionally powered subs despite that from a sizing, crewing, manufacturing point of view, it was ideal. Hence the Attack class conventionally powered version.

It remains a mystery why, despite having an option to build state of the art nuclear powered subs, probably prior to the 2030s, Morrison threw the whole deal overboard for AUKUS, second hand Virginias, hypothetical subs yet to be designed by the brits, and a massive increase in the US military presence in Australia.
 
It wasn't considered because Australia was set on buying conventionally powered subs despite that from a sizing, crewing, manufacturing point of view, it was ideal. Hence the Attack class conventionally powered version.

It remains a mystery why, despite having an option to build state of the art nuclear powered subs, probably prior to the 2030s, Morrison threw the whole deal overboard for AUKUS, second hand Virginias, hypothetical subs yet to be designed by the brits, and a massive increase in the US military presence in Australia.

in retrospect, what submarine solution do you think Australia should have gone for?
 
in retrospect, what submarine solution do you think Australia should have gone for?
Nuclear powered Suffrens. Difficulty then is that every 5-8 years, they gotta go back to France to be refueled unless/until Oz builds a nuclear shipyard. So you'd actually want more than 12, probably 14-16, to keep the numbers up while boats are being refueled.

But I think the AUKUS deal may be better for Oz in the long run. More industry, a nuclear shipyard in Oz to do the work locally, and all the high-paid highly skilled workers that the supporting industries require.
 
in retrospect, what submarine solution do you think Australia should have gone for?

If nuclear power is still considered an absolute requirement by the RAN then Suffren. It WAS the design selected by the RAN when Morrison blew up the plan, and the design work done already for the Attack class has done the lions share of integrating the AN/BSY-1 combat system into the design.

Refueling of the Suffren class LEU reactors is at around ten year intervals in line with the major overhaul cycle.

I think it's an open question whether they would need to be returned to France for refueling or not. Australia would have a decade to get the facilities together to accomplish the Suffren class' (simplified) refueling process at home after all.
 
The best plan was to change exactly nothing, and stick to conventional Attack design as it was.

The supreme irony being that Attack subs were essentially non-nuclear Barracuda / Suffren. Hence, a bunch of Attacks could, first, reliviate the Collins while partially training Australian crews to the coming Barracudas.
 
There is also the case for a mixed fleet, nuclear / non-nuclear - of otherwise rather similar submarines (since Attack and Barracuda are heavily related in design) : synergies, symbiosis... basically: use the non-nuclear subs for every mission where nuclear power isn't needed, extracting additional life from the most expensive nuclear subs.
 
just catching up to all this, so Australia is insistent on it being nuclear..
besides the Suffren and Virginia, was the Astute considered/offered?
Yes. In fact, before the United States ah, barged aboard the program, the original Anglo-Australian plan was for a Astute-based design with a US supplied combat system to allow full interoperability with the USN. Though as H_K notes, that had evolved into the mostly clean sheet SSNR design just before the Americans came onboard.
 
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