Tuesday, 02 January 2024 12:17 GMT

Brazil's Submarine Leap: From French Diesels To A Home-Grown Nuclear Boat


(MENAFN- The Rio Times) At a shipyard west of Rio de Janeiro, Brazil is finishing one chapter of its submarine gamble and opening a more ambitious one.

The navy has taken delivery of three diesel-electric submarines – Riachuelo, Humaitá and Tonelero – and launched the fourth, Almirante Karam, under a technology-transfer pact with France.

All four belong to the Brazilian version of the French Scorpène design. They are longer and heavier than the Chilean boats of the same class, carry modern F-21 torpedoes and anti-ship missiles, and give the fleet far more reach and discretion along Brazil's long coastline.

More important, they are being built at Itaguaí, the first submarine factory in South America, rather than imported ready-made. With the conventional phase maturing, the shipyard is pivoting to the real prize: Álvaro Alberto, Brazil's first nuclear-powered submarine.

Recent contracts with the French Naval Group, worth about €526 million and R$3.2 billion ($600 million), fund specialised systems and work at the LABGENE nuclear laboratory in São Paulo state, where a land-based prototype reactor is under construction.



The navy expects the boat to enter service in the early 2030s. Today only a handful of major powers operate nuclear-powered submarines.
Brazil's Submarine Program Signals Long-Term Power Shift at Sea
A Brazilian vessel able to stay submerged for months, roam across the“Blue Amazon” of offshore oil fields and sea lanes, and complicate any hostile planning would change calculations in the South Atlantic.

It would also anchor a domestic nuclear and naval-engineering ecosystem that takes decades to build and can be lost quickly if budgets are cut or politicised.

For neighbours such as Argentina, Chile, Peru and Colombia, the Itaguaí complex could eventually become a regional supplier of conventional submarines, just as Embraer turned Brazil into an aviation exporter.

Navy and shipyard footage on social media has turned the program into a visible symbol of national ambition. But that future depends on steady management, not grandstanding or short-term gestures.

For outsiders, this story matters because it shows how a middle-income democracy can quietly shift the balance at sea. Brazil is betting that serious, long-term investment in hard power will secure its trade routes and resources more than slogans ever could.

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The Rio Times

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