“Coast Guard takes delivery of 18th mission-ready HC-130J surveillance aircraft” –News Release

Feb. 4, 2026, Coast Guard takes delivery of 18th mission-ready HC-130J surveillance aircraft

Below is a press release. This is the first C-130J to go to CGAS Sacramento as the CG phases out the C-27s.
Wish they had said which other base would transition to C-130Js. I would assume the second will be in Atlantic Area. My guesses would be CGAS Clearwater or CGAS Borinquen.

Feb. 4, 2026

Coast Guard takes delivery of 18th mission-ready HC-130J surveillance aircraft

WASHINGTON — The Coast Guard is completing final delivery activities this week for its 18th fully missionized HC-130J long range surveillance aircraft, designated CGNR 2018, at L3Harris Integrated Mission Systems in Waco, Texas. The aircraft will support the transition of Air Station Sacramento, California, from C-27J aircraft to HC-130Js.

Three Coast Guard air stations currently operate the HC-130J: Elizabeth City, North Carolina; Kodiak, Alaska; and Barbers Point, Hawaii. The addition of CGNR 2018 marks a step toward expanding HC-130J operations to two additional air stations, beginning with Sacramento later this year.

The Coast Guard received $1.142 billion in the One Big Beautiful Bill Act (OBBBA) for procurement and acquisition of fixed-wing aircraft, including HC-130Js. The investment, combined with early delivery of CGNR 2018, enables the long-range surveillance fleet to expand operations.

L3Harris executes missionization of the baseline C-130J aircraft, integrating the Minotaur Mission System Suite, Coast Guard-specific multi-mode radar, sensors and communication systems. Additional capabilities, including enhanced approach and landing systems, expanded diagnostics and civil GPS, were integrated as part of a Block Upgrade 8.1 installation.

Including funds from OBBBA, the Coast Guard has appropriations for a total of 25 HC-130J aircraft, one HC-130J simulator, initial spare parts inventory and site activation for two additional air stations.

The HC-130J fleet serves as an on-scene command and control platform or surveillance platform, with the means to detect, classify and identify objects and share information with operational forces. The aircraft has a cruise speed of 320 knots, a range of 4,900 nautical miles and endurance of more than 20 hours.

The missionized HC-130J enables the Coast Guard to control, secure and defend the U.S. border and maritime approaches, facilitate commerce and respond to crises or contingencies.

Domestic Icebreakers

Back in May the Coast Guard issued a Request for Information (RFI) for two classes of small domestic icebreakers. The “Big Beautiful Bill” included $816 million for light and medium Icebreaking Cutters that were presumably included in the 17 new icebreakers that were reportedly funded by the bill.

Turns out the Acquisitions Directorate (CG-9) has a section devoted to domestic icebreakers. They are now referring to these as “Homeland Security Cutters–Light, Medium, and Heavy.

The “Heavy” will be about the size and capability of USCGC Mackinaw and will augment rather than replace Mackinaw.

The eleven planned “Mediums” will replace the nine 140 foot icebreaking tugs (WTGB).

The seven planned “Lights” (pictured above) will replace the 65 foot tugs (WYTL). There are currently six WYTLs in active service and five “In Service, Special”status.  It appears the “Light” will be the first to see completion.

The Coast Guard is developing a contract design to be included within its planned request for proposal. The Coast Guard will solicit a contract in 2026 to include completion of the production design and construction.

I have repeated below some of the information found on the CG-9 site below.

Homeland Security Cutter Light Icebreakers (HSC-L)

The Coast Guard’s Homeland Security Cutter-Light Icebreakers (HSC-L) program is modernizing its domestic icebreaking fleet by combining icebreaking and aids to navigation (ATON) functions into a single, versatile vessel. These vessels are designed to replace the aging 65-foot WYTL light icebreaking tugs, ensuring year-round support for the Marine Transportation System in the Coast Guard Northeast and East districts.
HSC-L’s new design reduces crew requirements, training demands, maintenance needs and sustainment costs while enhancing operational efficiency and mission readiness.

The Heavy, Medium, and Light designations don’t square with how the Coast Guard has been classifying icebreakers for the last few years. Additionally, the “Homeland Security Cutters” title is appropriate. It sounds too much like the National Security Cutter which might lead to confusion and it implies that other cutters are not “Homeland Security Cutters” which, really, they all are. I would call them:

  • Great Lakes Icebreaker (the Heavy)
  • Light Icebreaker (the Mediums)
  • Icebreaking buoy boat (the Light)

More descriptive.

Thanks to Walter for bring this to my attention. 

“Colombian Navy takes delivery of lead ship of new patrol vessel class” –Baird

Baird reports,

The Colombian Navy took delivery of a new offshore patrol vessel (OPV) on Saturday, January 31.

The future ARC 24 de Julio is the lead ship of a new class of OPVs to be built by Colombian shipyard Cotecmar.

It is a pretty typical OPV, a bit larger than a WMEC270:

  • Length: 93 meters (305 ft)
  • Beam: 14 meters (46 ft)
  • Draft: 3.9 meters (12.8 ft)

“5 out of 6 military branches have elevated GenAI.mil as their go-to enterprise AI platform” –Defense Scoop

A poster at the Pentagon, Dec. 12, 2025, lets employees know that a new artificial intelligence tool is available to use at the War Department, and that employees are highly encouraged to use it. (Credit: C. Todd Lopez, DOW)

Defense Scoop reports,

“Almost two months after the Pentagon deployed GenAI.mil on government desktops across its sprawling workforce, all but one of the military services have formally declared the asset to be their teams’ AI platform of choice.

“In response to questions from DefenseScoop on Monday, a Pentagon official said that there have been “1.1 million unique users” on GenAI.mil to date.”

Guess which armed service is not using this particular AI tool?

Not sure I would want a subordinate to rely too much on AI, but it is sure to be used. My limited experience is that AI tells me something I would have found by googling the question but it doesn’t give me the source of the information so I have less confidence.

Of course I have no experience with GenAI.mil, maybe it is better.

I am also uncomfortable with having Secretary Hegseth standing in for Uncle Sam. Are they going to take down the posters when we get a new Secretary? The poster would be inappropriate for use by the Coast Guard.

 

B-52s and a Coast Guard Cutter

U.S. Coast Guard Cutter Kimball (WMSL 756) conducts a passing exercise with the Royal Canadian Navy ship HMCS Regina while Kimball patrols the Bering Sea, July 18, 2024. During Kimball’s 122-day patrol, the crew also interacted with strategic partners in Victoria, Canada, strengthening relationships by focusing on shared interests in the Bering Sea and the expanding Artic region. U.S. Coast Guard photo by Ensign James Bongard.

The Indo-Pacific Defense Forum has a report on an exercise that indicates some degree of cooperation between the Coast Guard and the Air Force.

A key drill involved two B-52s simulating a long-range maritime strike. In a display of joint force precision, the bombers received targeting data from the U.S. Coast Guard cutter Kimball and U.S. Navy assets, allowing their crews to acquire targets from a significant distance and simulate a weapons engagement.

“Replacing the Polar Research Vessel Nathaniel B. Palmer” –SixtyDegreesNorth / With CG Icebreakers?

From SixtyDegreesNorth

SixtyDegreesNorth reviews the prospects for replacing the National Science Foundation’s leased Antarctic Research Ship, Nathaniel B. Palmer. Along the way, they suggest that the MPPS100 version of the Arctic Security Cutter appears to be a good candidate to fill this role.

USCGC Healy is already hosting scientific research in the Arctic, so such a role would not be unexpected.

The program name, “Arctic Security Cutter,” suggests these ships would not be used in Antarctica, but I doubt that will be the case.

The article also notes that while Healy is expected to receive a service life extension, it is only expected to add five years to the life of the ship. Having been commissioned in 2000, I presume that means she is expected to be decommissioned in 2035, so if the Coast Guard plans to retain an icebreaker configured for scientific research, it will likely have to  use one of the fourteen currently planned (three Polar Security Cutters, five Davie/Helsinki MPPS 100, and six Bollinger/RMC Multi-Purpose Icebreakers).

The report does seem to indicate that Davie and Helsinki have been awarded contracts for five ships, but while that is anticipated, I don’t think it has happened yet. It may have been pending acquisition of the shipyard in Texas where Davie is expected to build these ships. That deal only closed January 9, 2026.

Davie’s proposal for the USCG Arctic Security Cutter.

“Coast Guard Gearing Up to Absorb Massive Investment, Commandant said” –Seapower

Canadian Coast Guard Multi-Purpose Icebreaker (MPI). Source: Seaspan
This is also the design for the six Arctic Security Cutters recently contracted. 

The Navy League’s on line magazine, Seapower, reports,

Adm. Keven Lunday, commandant of the Coast Guard, testifying Jan. 29, 2026, before the Senate Committee on Commerce, Science, and Transportation, said the reconciliation law passed in 2025 was the “most significant investment in Coast Guard history.”

Lunday told the committee that with the expanded force bought with the reconciliation law, the service would need congressional support for consistent, sustained funding to operate it.

An earlier news release gave a more detailed list of what was included in the “Big Beautiful Bill,” but the Commandant is pointing out is that the Coast Guard will need significant additional funding to operate and maintain the additional units.

A frequently mentioned aspect of “Force Design 2028” is the assertion that the Coast Guard will need to grow by 15,000 members. I have been unable to ascertain where these 15,000 new coast guardsmen will go but the Commandant,

“…Lunday pointed out that 13,000 personnel will be needed to crew the 11 Arctic Security Cutters.”

Support personnel will be required in addition to crew, but that sounds excessive. For comparison, our large sea going buoy tenders of the USCGC Juniper class have a crew of 48, eight officers and 40 enlisted. The Great Lakes icebreaker, USCGC Mackinaw has a crew of 55, nine Officers, 46 Enlisted. The Arctic Security Cutters are larger, but the crew size required is related more to complexity rather than size, with super tankers having a crew no larger than the buoy tenders. The Canadians are planning on running their sister ships of the Arctic Security Cutters with a crew of 50 (see graphic above). The Arctic Security Cutters will operate helicopters and UAS and will probably be armed, but certainly the crew would be less than 100, or 1100 total for eleven ships. Will they really require 12000 support personnel?

“Great Lakes Icebreaking Update” –Sixty Degrees North

Canadian Coast Guard Multi-Purpose Icebreaker (MPI). Source: Seaspan
Note: The MPI image does not show the right propulsors; it will use Steerprop’s contra-rotating propulsors (CRP). Additionally according to Seaspan, the design could easily be upgraded to PC3. Confirmation from Seaspan and Aker Arctic.

Sixty Degrees North provides an excellent overview of what happened in the Great Lakes and St Lawrence Seaway including both the US and Canadian Coast Guards.

There is a particularly interesting paragraph,

“As I reported in the December U.S. Coast Guard Roundup, the U.S. Coast Guard is looking to expand its domestic (i.e. Great Lakes) icebreaking fleet by adding 18 new icebreaker— ten Homeland Security Cutter-Mediums (HSC-Ms) to replace the Bay-class, and seven Homeland Security Cutter-Light (HSC-Ls) to replace its aging 65-foot light icebreaking tugs (WYTLs) and 49-foot buoy utility stern loading boats (BUSLs). There is also a U.S. Coast Guard web page for a Homeland Security Cutter-Heavy (HSC-H), a vessel designed to augment the Great Lakes heavy icebreaker Mackinaw , although there is (as of today) no official Request for Information (RFI).”

The author also speculates,

Interestingly, the Canadian Coast Guard plans on replacing its older light icebreakers with the Multi-Purpose Icebreaker (previously called the Multi-Purpose Vessel). According to the Canada’s National Shipbuilding Strategy, the missions of the MPIs include:

  • icebreaking in the Arctic in moderate ice conditions
  • assisting with shipping and springtime flood control in the St. Lawrence waterway and Great Lakes regions
  • conducting missions involving search and rescue, emergency response, and security and protection
  • maintaining Canada’s marine navigation system, composed of approximately 17,000 aids to navigation

The U.S. Coast Guard is acquiring six Arctic Security Cutters that use the MPI design. It will be interesting to see if any of those vessels end up operating in the Great Lakes. (emphasis applied–Chuck)

These ships (pictured above) are larger and more powerful than USCGC Mackinaw, but are small enough to transit the St Lawrence lock system. Like many Canadian icebreakers, they also include a buoy tending capability.

 

Norway’s Standard Class Ships

Kongsberg proposal for Norway’s Standard class.

Norway has begun a program to replace “smaller patrol craft, minehunters, light corvettes, and other auxiliaries, spread out over twelve different classes” with two “Standard” classes for both their Navy and Coast Guard.  My guess is that five of the 18 “medium” size and five of the ten “offshore” vessels will go to the Norwegian Coast Guard which is a branch of the Norwegian Navy.

“The standardised vessels dedicated for Coastguard work will have certain modifications, but will also be capable of embarking the modular systems used by the Navy.”

We have two reports from Naval News, apparently news releases from two of the shipbuilders competing for the contract(s). The Ulstein report is much more detailed and is quoted above.

Artist impressions of ULSTEIN’ standard-class designs proposal to the Royal Norwegian Navy. Ulstein image.

Artist impressions of ULSTEIN’ standard-class design proposal to the Royal Norwegian Navy. Ulstein image.

This project is interesting as a joint navy/coast guard project, as a modular systems project, and as a exploitation of what looks to be designs based on offshore industry support ships.

If you were reading this blog back in 2012, you might remember that a Ulstein design offered by Vigor was one of the contenders for the OPC contract.

Vigor’s Ulstein OPC proposal.