Lethe
Captain
Your conclusions rest on the assumption that Chinese nuclear-powered carriers are significantly more expensive than conventional ones. This contradicts what was posted by pop3.
GAO's analysis estimates a nuclear-powered carrier costs about twice as much as an equivalent conventional carrier to build:
Table 2
Life-Cycle Costs for a Conventionally
Powered Carrier and a Nuclear-Powered
Carrier (based on a 50-year service
life)
(Fiscal year 1997 dollars in billions)
Conventionally
powered Nuclear-
Cost category carrier powered carrier
------------------------------------- -------------- ---------------
Investment cost\a $2.916 $6.441
Ship acquisition cost 2.050 4.059
Midlife modernization cost 0.866 2.382
Operating and support cost 11.125 14.882
Direct operating and support cost 10.436 11.677
Indirect operating and support cost 0.688 3.205
Inactivation/disposal cost 0.053 0.899
Inactivation/disposal cost 0.053 0.887
Spent nuclear fuel storage cost n/a 0.013
======================================================================
Total life-cycle cost $14.094 $22.222
\a CVN investment cost includes all nuclear fuel cost; CV fuel is
included in operations and support activities.
Note that the additional "investment cost" for a nuclear-powered carrier such as nuclear fuel (no idea what else is in there) pushes the short-term nuclear:conventional cost ratio well above 2:1. I don't doubt that China can build carriers cheaper than USA, but it is not clear to me why the relative relationship between types would be substantially different.
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