
Cash-strapped Government trying to flog half-built warships amid claims it can't afford to finish them
THE Government is trying to flog half-built warships amid claims it can-not afford to finish them.
Military top brass invited Norway to buy £1billion frigates HMS Belfast and Birmingham, which are midway through construction.
2
Selling half-built warships would give Defence Secretary John Healey and the Treasury breathing space to find the time to pay for them, a source said
Credit: Alamy
Selling them would give
But they added that the Navy would have to wait years to get its promised eight vessels if Norway jumped the queue.
They said: "The Royal Navy only has eight frigates, the smallest number in its history.
'It desperately needs these new Type 26 frigates as soon as possible.
READ MORE ON THE ROYAL NAVY
'But the MoD budget is under so much pressure that selling the half-built hulls to Norway would give the Treasury breathing space to find the time to pay for them.'
It comes after the Strategic Defence Review warned the Navy needed a 'cheaper, simpler fleet'.
The MoD said Norway was 'one of the UK's most important allies'.
A Norwegian source said: 'The government of Norway is in the final phases of making a decision, but no date has been set.'
Most read in The Sun
Proud Scots workers watch latest Royal Navy frigate roll out at Babcock Rosyth shipyard
2
The Government is trying to flog half-built warships amid claims it can-not afford to finish them
Credit: Paul Edwards - The Sun
Hashtags

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles


Irish Independent
2 hours ago
- Irish Independent
Ireland added to ‘monitoring list' of countries watched closely around US dollar manipulation
No major US trading partner manipulated its currency in 2024, the Treasury Department said on Thursday in the first semi-annual currency report of President Donald Trump's new administration, although its "monitoring list" of countries warranting close attention grew to nine with the addition of Ireland and Switzerland. Countries that meet two of the criteria - a trade surplus with the US of at least $15 billion, a global account surplus above 3pc of GDP and persistent, one-way net foreign exchange purchases - are automatically added to the list. Ireland and Switzerland were added due to their large trade and current account surpluses with the US. The Swiss National Bank on Friday denied being a currency manipulator, but said it would continue to act in Switzerland's interests as the strong Swiss franc helped push inflation into negative terrain last month. "The SNB does not engage in any manipulation of the Swiss franc," it said. "It does not seek to prevent adjustments in the balance of trade or to gain unfair competitive advantages for the Swiss economy." Treasury said China, Japan, South Korea, Taiwan, Singapore, Vietnam, Germany, Ireland and Switzerland were on its monitoring list for extra foreign exchange scrutiny. While it did not label China a currency manipulator for now despite "depreciation pressure" facing its currency, the yuan, Treasury issued a stern warning to China, saying it "stands out among our major trading partners in its lack of transparency around its exchange rate policies and practices." "This lack of transparency will not preclude Treasury from designating China if available evidence suggests that it is intervening through formal or informal channels to resist (yuan) appreciation in the future," Treasury said in a statement. Trump in his first term labelled China a manipulator in August 2019, a move made then - as now - amid heightened US-China trade tensions. The Treasury Department dropped the designation in January 2020 as Chinese officials arrived in Washington to sign a trade deal with the US. Thursday's report was released hours after Trump spoke with China's leader Xi Jinping for the first time since returning to the White House amid an even more tense trade standoff between the world's two largest economies, and more recently a battle over critical minerals. The countries struck a 90-day deal on May 12 to roll back some of the triple-digit, tit-for-tat tariffs they had placed on each other since Trump's January inauguration. The latest report covers the final full year of the administration of Trump's predecessor, Democrat Joe Biden, who over his four-year term never labelled any trading partner a currency manipulator but raised similar concerns over China's behaviour and lack of transparency. Last year was marked generally by broad-based dollar strengthening, with the greenback gaining 7pc in 2024 against a basket of major trading partners' currencies. That dynamic made it less likely that Treasury would find evidence of consistent one-way actions by countries to weaken their currencies for competitive advantage, since most currencies were broadly weakening anyway, Treasury officials said. That could change over the course of this year, with the dollar already down by roughly 9pc since Trump returned to the White House and launched a trade war that has global investors rethinking their commitments to US assets. In the current environment, it might be more tempting for countries to step in to try to prevent or reverse the continued strengthening of their currencies, and Treasury officials said they would be watching closely for such behaviour. In the case of China more specifically, Treasury officials said they were looking at broadening their surveillance to include monitoring of the activities of sovereign wealth and state pension funds for any indication these entities were acting on Beijing's behest in the foreign exchange market. They said there was no current evidence of that but it had been a tactic used by others in the past.


Business Post
3 hours ago
- Business Post
UK house prices ‘fell 0.4%' in May
German exports fell by 1.7 per cent month-on-month in April, after a 1.1 per cent... British Gas owner, Centrica, has signed a ten year deal with Norwegian gas supplier... a Microsoft-backed start-up which filed for bankruptcy on Monday, owes... UK mortgage lender Halifax have said that average house prices fell by 0.4 per cent... Circle Internet Group had one of the splashiest debuts in years, with shares surging... US job growth likely slowed considerably in May as businesses struggled with headwinds... Salesforce has announced that its board of directors declared a quarterly cash dividend...


Business Post
3 hours ago
- Business Post
Microsoft-backed Builder.ai ‘owes money to corporate spies and lawyers'
German exports fell by 1.7 per cent month-on-month in April, after a 1.1 per cent... British Gas owner, Centrica, has signed a ten year deal with Norwegian gas supplier... a Microsoft-backed start-up which filed for bankruptcy on Monday, owes... UK mortgage lender Halifax have said that average house prices fell by 0.4 per cent... Circle Internet Group had one of the splashiest debuts in years, with shares surging... US job growth likely slowed considerably in May as businesses struggled with headwinds... Salesforce has announced that its board of directors declared a quarterly cash dividend...