Investigation into equipment cannibalisation in the Royal Navy

2 Nov 2017 12:32 PM

Equipment cannibalisation in the Royal Navy has doubled in the past 12 years. It can be effective to meet operational needs but can increase costs and create disruption.

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The National Audit Office yesterday published the findings from its investigation into equipment cannibalisation in the Royal Navy.

The Royal Navy operates ships, submarines and helicopters, which comprise complex systems made up of thousands of parts, to meet the United Kingdom’s defence requirements. The Navy needs additional parts to maintain and repair its equipment. When vessels require parts that are unavailable and no other solution is available, the Ministry of Defence (the Ministry) can authorise that they are taken from other equipment – a process known as equipment cannibalisation.

The key findings of the investigation are: