Type 32 frigate program scrapped as UK embraces hybrid navy concept

Authorities

The Royal Navy has set out a major shift in its future force structure, replacing plans for the Type 32 frigate program with a “hybrid navy” approach built around a mix of crewed and uncrewed vessels.

According to the information published in the Defence Investment Plan (DIP), the previous force structure was built around “small numbers of large, crewed platforms with insufficient investment in autonomous vessels,” a model officials now describe as “both unaffordable and not what the modern threat demands.”

Under the new approach, both the Type 32 frigate concept and the Type 83 destroyer program will be replaced by a broader hybrid fleet architecture combining crewed surface combatants with autonomous and uncrewed systems.

The Royal Navy said the Hybrid Navy approach represents a “major transformation” in force design and procurement, and will be developed in collaboration with the NAD Group. The model is intended to prioritise modularity, scalability, and increased use of autonomous capabilities across the fleet.

The shift reflects a wider reassessment of future naval requirements, with increased emphasis on distributed maritime operations and the integration of uncrewed systems alongside traditional platforms.

The Type 32 program, first introduced as a future frigate concept, had remained at an early development stage. In December last year, the UK Ministry of Defense declined to provide any timeline for when the first Type 32 frigate might be commissioned, underlining that the program remains firmly in the concept phase.

The idea of the Type 32 frigate was first publicly introduced in 2020, with the concept gaining further definition in 2021 as part of broader discussions on the future shape of the Royal Navy. The concept phase formally began in 2022, with Type 32 envisaged as a flexible, export-friendly platform, potentially focused on autonomous systems, presence missions and partner navy cooperation.

Since then, however, progress has been largely invisible to the public. Unlike the Type 26 and Type 31 programs, both of which moved into defined procurement pathways, Type 32 did not have an agreed role set, design baseline, or funding envelope.

To remind, the Royal Navy plans to procure at least six Common Combat Vessels, as part of the system that will replace the current Type 45 destroyers. The vessels will be built for the Royal Navy under the Defence Investment Plan.

When in service, these CCVs will work alongside eight Type 26 and five Type 31 crewed frigates, as well as Type 91 uncrewed missile platforms, Type 92 uncrewed underwater sensing platforms, Type 93 Extra-Large Uncrewed Underwater Vehicles, and Type 94 uncrewed sensor platforms.

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