Hanwha Ocean and Gibbs & Cox target naval capacity

Hanwha Ocean and Gibbs & Cox target naval capacity

Hanwha Ocean’s agreement with Gibbs & Cox links Korean yard capacity with US naval design experience, with production speed and sustainment built into the programme approach.


IN Brief:

  • Hanwha Ocean and Gibbs & Cox will work on naval ship designs aligned to US Navy requirements.
  • The partnership points to a distributed US–Korean supply-chain model for allied shipbuilding.
  • Speed of production and long-term sustainment sit at the centre of the industrial proposition.

Hanwha Ocean has signed a memorandum of understanding with Leidos Gibbs & Cox aimed at strengthening US and allied naval shipbuilding, combining Korean shipyard throughput with one of the most established naval design houses in the American market.

The agreement covers four areas of work: adapting Hanwha ship designs to US Navy standards and requirements, co-developing next-generation naval ship concepts for US and export markets, building a more resilient distributed supply chain across the US and South Korean industrial bases, and advancing ship designs intended for rapid production and long-term sustainment.

That combination reflects the pressures now shaping naval procurement. Build schedules, labour availability, supplier resilience, and support planning carry as much weight as headline platform capability.

Building for rate

Naval construction programmes depend on steady industrial rhythm. Steelwork, module assembly, outfit sequencing, combat-system integration, and dockside testing all suffer when yards are forced into stop-start production or when suppliers cannot match the build cadence.

A cross-border model can help only if design standards, quality assurance, and supplier timing are stable across both industrial bases. That requires much tighter coordination than a standard export arrangement.

Sustainment from the outset

The agreement also places long-term sustainment alongside initial production. Warship programmes generate years of value in support, upgrades, spares, digital modelling, and maintenance planning, and those requirements increasingly shape design choices early in the cycle.

For naval suppliers, the Hanwha–Gibbs & Cox partnership shows how allied shipbuilding competition is shifting. Design pedigree still matters, but production rate, supply-chain resilience, and through-life support are now central to the offer.