Aus to compensate French shipbuilder for cancelled submarine contract

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Canberra:  Aus to compensate French shipbuilder for cancelled submarine contract. The (AUS) Australian  government on Saturday agreed to compensate a French shipbuilder A$830 million after tearing up a submarine contract.

Prime Minister Anthony Albanese said the government will pay Naval Group A$830 million in compensation for the cancelled contract, saying the “fair and equitable” settlement would improve relations between the nations, reports Xinhua news agency.

French President Emmanuel Macron previously accused former Prime Minister Scott Morrison of lying about the future of the submarine deal.

“I intend to have an honest relationship with France and one that is based upon integrity and mutual respect,” Albanese, whose Labor Party defeated Morrison’s Coalition in May’s general election, told reporters.

“I’m looking forward to taking up President Macron’s invitation to me to visit Paris at the earliest opportunity, and we will make further announcements forthcoming about the dates in which that will occur.”

The Coalition government in 2016 awarded Naval Group, then DCNS, a contract to build a fleet of 12 new attack class submarines at a cost of A$50 billion, making it one of the biggest defence contracts in the Australian history.

Amid disputes over where the submarines would be built and delays the projected construction cost blew out to A$89 billion, with maintenance expected to cost a further A$145 billion through to 2080, the Coalition tore up the contract in 2021.

Albanese said the settlement took Australia’s total spend on the project to A$3.4 billion.

“It represents an extraordinary waste from a government that was always big on announcements but not good on delivering, and from a government that will be remembered as the most wasteful government in Australia’s history since federation,” he said.

 

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