Australia selects Japan's Mitsubishi Heavy Industries for $6.5B warship
deal
[August 05, 2025] By
CHARLOTTE GRAHAM-McLAY
WELLINGTON, New Zealand (AP) — Australia said Tuesday it accepted a
Japanese company's bid for a lucrative and hotly contested contract to
build Australian warships, expected to be worth 10 billion Australian
dollars ($6.5 billion).
Mitsubishi Heavy Industries’ Mogami-class frigate won the deal over
rival Germany’s MEKO A-200 from Thyssenkrupp Marine Systems. Japan’s
government lobbied heavily for the deal after missing out on Australia’s
submarines contract to a French company in 2016.
“This is clearly the biggest defense industry agreement that will ever
have been struck between Japan and Australia,” Defense Minister Richard
Marles told reporters when he announced the deal Tuesday. “In fact, it’s
really one of the biggest defense exports that Japan has ever engaged
in.”
The fleet of 11 naval vessels will replace Australia’s ageing fleet of
ANZAC-class ships. Three of the frigates will be built in Japan, with
the first scheduled to be operational Australia in 2030, and the
remaining eight due for construction in Australia.
Australian news outlets reported that the German company’s bid had
emphasized their vessel’s cheaper price and their greater experience
building ships abroad. But Pat Conroy, Australia’s Minister for Defense
Industry, said the Mogami-class frigate was a “clear winner” when
assessed by “cost, capability and meeting our schedule of delivery.”

The vessels have a range of up to 10,000 nautical miles (18,520
kilometers) and 32 vertical launch cells capable of launching long-range
missiles. The frigates can operate with a crew of 90, compared to the
170 needed to operate the ANZAC-class ships.
Mitsubishi’s win was a boon for Japan’s defense industry, which has not
built naval vessels abroad before. Japan, whose only treaty ally is the
United States, considers Australia a semi-ally and has increasingly
sought to deepen bilateral military cooperation amid ongoing regional
tensions in the disputed South China Sea.
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Australia's Deputy Prime Minister Richard Marles, left, and Minister
for Defence Industry Pat Conroy address a press conference at
Parliament House in Canberra, Australia, Tuesday, August 5, 2025.
(Mick Tsikas/AAP Image via AP)

“We welcome the decision by the Australian government as a major step to
further elevate Japan’s national security cooperation with Australia,
which is our special strategic partner,” Japan’s Defense Minister Gen
Nakatani said Tuesday.
Nakatani said co-developing the frigate will allow the two countries to
train and operate with the same equipment and further improve
operability and efficiency. Japan set up a joint taskforce of government
and industry in an effort to win the bid.
Australian officials said work on a binding commercial contract with
Mitsubishi Heavy Industries and the government of Japan would now begin,
with a finalized agreement expected in 2026. They did not say how much
each ship would cost or confirm a total figure for the package, citing
ongoing negotiations.
But Conroy said the government had allowed AU$10 billion for the project
over the next 10 years. It forms part of the AU$55 billion that
Australia has budgeted for the navy’s entire surface combatant fleet
during the same period.
—-
Associated Press writer Mari Yamaguchi contributed from Tokyo.
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