The Pakistan Navy’s (PN) first
of four Type-054AP guided-missile frigates (FFG) is expected to be
commissioned early next month at China's Hudong Zhonghua Shipyard in
Shanghai, following which the FFG will undertake its voyage to Pakistan,
with replenishment-related port-calls being made in Malaysia
and Singapore, and possibly in The Maldives and Sri Lanka as well.
The PN had on June 1, 2019
inked a contract with CSTC for procuring two additional 4,000-tonne
FFGs to add to the first two it had ordered exactly a year ago. The signing
ceremony took place at Pakistan’s Ministry of Defence Production in
Rawalpindi in the presence of the PN’s Deputy Chief of Naval Staff (Operations),
Rear Admiral Faisal Rasul Lodhi. All four FFGs will be delivered by
mid-2022. Designed by the China International Shipbuilding Corp
(CISC) Group’s 701 Institute, the FFGs will be built by
the Shanghai-based Hudong Zhonghua Shipbuilding Co.
The 4,000-tonne FFG’s
design is derived from that of the PLA Navy’s Type 054A FFG. It will have an
endurance of 21 days, length of 135 metres, range of 4,000 nautical miles (when
cruising at 18 Knots) and top speed of 26 Knots. It will have 32
vertical-launch system (VLS) cells containing the LY-80N surface-to-air
missiles (SAM), one 76mm HPJ-26 main naval gun, two 30mm HPJ-17 30mm
Type 1130 close-in guns, a 24-cell FL-3000N point-defence missile system
(PDMS), twin ET-52C triple-tube torpedo launchers, one mast-mounted
SR-2410C S-band active phased-array radar developed by the China Educational
Instrument & Equipment Corp (CEIEC), twin six-barrel Type 87 240mm
anti-submarine rocket launchers (with 36 rockets), twin Type 726-4 18-tube
decoy rocket launchers, and eight inclined launchers housing the Harba
anti-ship cruise missile (ASCM) variant of the Babur land-attack cruise missile
(which itself is a China-developed clone of the Ukraine-developed Korshun
cruise missile). However, it is expected that the ASCMs will be
inter-changeable with eight inclined launchers of the
290km-range P-282/CM-401 hypersonic land-attack missile.
All four FFGs will be optimised for anti-submarine fleet control missions. Each FFG will be powered by four SEMT Pielstick 16 PA6 STC diesel engines.
The SR-2410C radar can track up to 150 targets per rotation. Limitations include air targets over Mach 3 and at ranges of more than 150km. The radar has a fire-control capability to track anti-ship cruise missiles, but only at a maximum range of 60km. It is also capable of tracking moving ground vehicles and surface ships. This radar has already been installed on the Bangladesh Navy’s first two Type 056 guided-missile corvettes—BNS Shongram and BNS Prottasha.