Author Topic: CBO Report on Navy Ship Maintenance  (Read 184 times)

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Offline rangerrebew

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CBO Report on Navy Ship Maintenance
« on: December 12, 2025, 12:45:01 pm »
CBO Report on Navy Ship Maintenance
U.S. Naval Institute Staff
December 11, 2025 10:05 AM
The following is the Dec. 10, 2025, Congressional Budget Office report Maintenance Delays for Conventional Navy Ships.

From the report
The Navy has experienced chronic delays and labor overruns in maintenance on its large conventional ships (that is, ships that are not nuclear-powered). Those delays can affect deployment schedules and limit the operational readiness of the Navy’s fleet. In this report, the Congressional Budget Office analyzes maintenance events for two types of such ships—destroyers and amphibious warfare ships— from October 2010 to September 2024.

Maintenance for large conventional combat ships often takes longer than expected. CBO projects that DDG-51 class destroyers will spend an average of nine years, or more than a quarter of their planned service life, out of the fleet for maintenance. That is more than twice as long as estimated in their 2012 class maintenance plans.

Schedules for overhauls underestimate their duration, and changes to those schedules have not closed the gap. Maintenance events often take 20 percent to 100 percent longer than estimated in the Navy’s final schedules for those events. The Navy has raised its estimates, but the delays have continued to increase—especially for older ships, which have longer scheduled overhauls.

Maintenance delays are driven by many factors. Several likely causes of maintenance delays were reported by representatives of the Navy, the private shipyards that maintain the Navy’s conventional ships, or both:

https://news.usni.org/2025/12/11/cbo-report-on-navy-ship-maintenance
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