European Patrol Corvette

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Cost
  • Concept & Design Phase (Call 1) - 2021: €87 million with a max. EU contribution of €60 million[1][2]
  • Design certification & Prototype testing (Call 2) - 2023: €288.3 million with a max. EU contribution of €154.5 million[3][4]
In commissionProjected from 2030
Displacement<3,000 t[5]
Artist's rendering of EPC variants sailing (by Naviris)
Class overview
Cost
  • Concept & Design Phase (Call 1) - 2021: €87 million with a max. EU contribution of €60 million[1][2]
  • Design certification & Prototype testing (Call 2) - 2023: €288.3 million with a max. EU contribution of €154.5 million[3][4]
In commissionProjected from 2030
General characteristics
TypeCorvette
Displacement<3,000 t[5]
Length<110 m (360 ft 11 in)
Draft<5.5 m (18 ft 1 in)
PropulsionCODLAD, CODAD
Speed24 knots (44 km/h; 28 mph) or 26 knots (48 km/h; 30 mph)
ArmamentVaried depending on nation and role[6]
Aircraft carriedNH90-sized helicopter and/or UAVs

The Modular and Multirole Patrol Corvette (MMPC), previously named European Patrol Corvette (EPC), is a Permanent Structured Cooperation (PESCO) project that was adopted by the European Council on 12 November 2019. The objective is to design and develop a new class of surface combatants. The project originally involved Italy and France, the former being the coordinator. The two countries would soon be joined by Greece as well as Spain, and gradually, by several other European countries such as Denmark, Norway and Romania.[6][7][8][9]

In 2022, it was indicated that the project would receive a further €200 million from the EU's European Defence fund (EDF).[10][11]

The ships will have a conventional hull of different dimensions, armament and propulsion systems.

While early thinking had suggested that up to three variants of the ship were to be considered,[12] the concept subsequently evolved into two versions:

  • Combat variant (FCM, reported Italian preference): 3D radar and combat management systems, short to medium range surface-to-air missiles (SAM), anti-torpedo countermeasures, envisaged top speed: 25–26 knots (46–48 km/h; 29–30 mph);
  • Long-range patrol variant (LRM, reported French preference): 3D radar and combat management systems, short to medium range SAMs, envisaged top speed: 24 knots (44 km/h; 28 mph)[13]

A 2024 report noted that the main differences between the LRM and FCM versions would encompass the propulsion, sensors, and weaponry configurations. The FCM variant was to include additional anti-ship missiles and countermeasures against torpedoes and drones. Both variants would have the capacity to accommodate helicopters. Key to the design was a modular concept in order to "increase standardisation across European navies, allowing interoperability and adaptability in joint missions and enhancing EU military autonomy in economic, technological, and security domains". In November 2024, Navantia (Spain), Fincantieri (Italy), and Naval Group (France) signed a consortium agreement for the second phase of the project. The consortium is expected to be joined by the Greek engineering company HYDRUS.[14][15]

The participating member states aim to potentially sign a contract as early as 2025 and expect the keel laying of the first ship to take place in 2026 and delivery to start in 2030.[5][16]

Participants

States:

Main companies:

Expected users

See also

References

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