Threads / Defence Industrial Strategy / A theme we heard repeatedly emphasised during our inquiry w…
Committee Material Published 27 Jan 2023 ↗ View on Parliament

A theme we heard repeatedly emphasised during our inquiry was the importance of a regular ‘drumbeat’ of orders to provide a consistent workload that could help industry plan for the future. Stakeholders from all parts of the sector stressed that shipbuilding is an industry that operates on long timescales and which required significant forward planning. We were told that in the past shipbuilding in the UK had suffered from a pattern of ‘feast and famine’, with a sporadic and unpredictable pat...

A theme we heard repeatedly emphasised during our inquiry was the importance of a regular ‘drumbeat’ of orders to provide a consistent workload that could help industry plan for the future. Stakeholders from all parts of the sector stressed that shipbuilding is an industry that operates on long timescales and which required significant forward planning. We were told that in the past shipbuilding in the UK had suffered from a pattern of ‘feast and famine’, with a sporadic and unpredictable pattern of orders, which had discouraged investment in the industry, increased costs and programme risk, and made shipbuilding a less attractive career opti Type: conclusion | Number: 41 | Response status: accepted Government response: The MOD fully recognises the importance of maintaining a regular drumbeat of orders across the Shipbuilding industry. The NSbS is clear that we do not want a return to the “boom and bust” cycles of historic Naval demand, but to provide a more sustainable demand signal