US sells two former aircraft carriers to shipbreaker for 1 cent each

Contract values reflect contracted company will benefit from subsequent sale of scrap steel and iron, says navy spox


Xinhua October 06, 2021
Sailors man the rails of the USS Carl Vinson, a Nimitz-class aircraft carrier, as it departs its home port in San Diego, California August 22, 2014. PHOTO: REUTERS

The US Navy has sold two former aircraft carriers, USS Kitty Hawk and USS John F Kennedy, to a Texas shipbreaking company for one cent each, the Naval Sea Systems Command said on Tuesday.

"The contract values reflect that the contracted company will benefit from the subsequent sale of scrap steel, iron, and non-ferrous metal ores," said Alan Baribeau, a spokesman for the Naval Sea Systems Command.

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Both warships are aging and defunct. For the Kitty Hawk, that likely means a tug boat tow from Bremerton, Washington, around the tip of South America; for the John F Kennedy, a sailing from the Philadelphia Navy Yard, according to a USA Today report.

The contract with International Shipbreaking Limited in Brownsville, Texas, for the tow, remediation, dismantling and recycling of the storied warships makes imminent their departures from the Navy's mothball fleet, said the report.

No timetable has been established for either ship's departure and dismantling, said the report.

 

COMMENTS (1)

SHAW S | 3 years ago | Reply THIS IS NOT FAIR.... THEY SHOULD HAVE GIVEN BOTH ACs TO HINDU-STAN AS SCRAP FOR 1CENT EACH AC THEN HINDU-STAN WOULD HAVE BOASTED TO HAVE 3 ACs AS SCRAP METAL
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