The navy is looking at deploying 'ghost fleets' — warships that don't need crews
The Canadian military is weighing how many and what kind of «optionally-crewed» warships it will need in the future as drone technology and artificial intelligence change the face of naval combat, says the commander of the navy.
Vice-Admiral Angus Tophee told CBC News that while navies will always need large combat surface ships and submarines, Canada's allies have started to experiment with automated vessels.
The U.S. Navy has been testing unmanned surface vessels (USVs) for the past several years, and the concept has proved successful enough for the Americans to organize medium and large USVs into a squadron in the Pacific. A second such U.S. Navy unit, which will operate in tandem with traditionally crewed warships, is expected to be assembled this month.
The unmanned squadrons are informally called «ghost fleets.» Canada is only just beginning to study the concept.
«We haven't figured out what percentage we want,» Topshee said, referring to the balance between manned and unmanned vessels.
He said naval planners conducting a new fleet mix study are asking themselves a number of questions as they look at the different kinds of autonomous ships that could be available.
«What is the right mix for the future as we replace our maritime coastal defence vessels down the road?» he said. «What's the right capability for us to have? How do we augment the Canadian Surface Combatant» — the next generation of warships — «with the right mix of sensors?»
The study is looking beyond the remotely operated, explosive-packed speedboats that Ukraine has been using with great effect to attack the Russian Black Sea fleet. It's looking at larger vessels, such as the U.S. Navy's 145 tonne Sea Hunter minesweeper.
Computers drive and control the ship,