HMCS Nanaimo (MM 702)
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HMCS ''Nanaimo'' is a that has served in the Canadian Forces and Royal Canadian Navy since 1997. ''Nanaimo'' is the third ship of her class. She is the second vessel to use the designation . She is assigned to Joint Task Force Pacific (formerly Maritime Forces Pacific) and is homeported at CFB Esquimalt.


Design and description

The ''Kingston'' class was designed to fill the minesweeper, coastal patrol and reserve training needs of the Canadian Forces, replacing the s, s and Royal Canadian Mounted Police coastal launches in those roles. In order to perform these varied duties the ''Kingston''-class vessels are designed to carry up to three Intermodal container, ISO containers with power hookups on the open deck aft in order to embark mission-specific payloads. The seven module types available for embarkation include four route survey, two mechanical minesweeping and one bottom inspection modules. The ''Kingston'' class Displacement (ship), displace and are Length overall, long overall with a Beam (nautical), beam and a Draft (hull), draught of . The coastal defence vessels are powered by four Jeumont-Schneider, Jeumont ANR-53-50 alternators coupled to four Wärtsilä UD 23V12 diesel engines creating . Two LIPS Z-drive azimuth thrusters are driven by two Jeumont CI 560L motors creating and the Z drives can be rotated 360°. This gives the ships a maximum speed of and a range of at . The ''Kingston'' class is equipped with a Kelvin Hughes navigational radar using the I band and a Kelvin Hughes 6000 surface search radar scanning the E and F bands. The vessels carry an AN/SQS-511 towed side scan sonar for minesweeping and a Remote-control Mine Hunting System (RMHS). The vessels are equipped with one Bofors 40 mm Automatic Gun L/60, Bofors 40 mm/60 calibre Mk 5C gun and two M2 Browning machine gun, M2 machine guns. The ''Kingston''-class coastal defence vessels have a complement of 37. The 40 mm gun was declared obsolete and removed from the vessels in 2014. Some of them ended up as museum pieces and on display at naval reserve installations across Canada.


Operational history

The ship's keel was Keel laying, laid down on 11 August 1995 by Halifax Shipyards, Halifax Shipyards Ltd. at Halifax, Nova Scotia and was Ship naming and launching, launched on 17 May 1996. ''Nanaimo'' was Ship commissioning, commissioned into the Canadian Forces on 10 May 1997 at Nanaimo, British Columbia and carries the Hull classification symbol (Canada), hull number MM 702. After commissioning, ''Nanaimo'' was assigned to the west coast. In June 2002, she participated in the naval exercise Exercise RIMPAC, RIMPAC 2002. As part of Operation Caribbe, she patrolled the eastern Pacific Ocean with sister ship in February 2014. The coastal defence vessel once again participated in RIMPAC in 2014, as part of the units operating off Southern California. After the 40 mm gun was declared obsolete in 2014, ''Nanaimo''s model was donated to the Vancouver Island Military Museum and positioned near the museum entrance. In February 2015, ''Nanaimo'' was deployed as part of Operation Caribbe. On 10 March, ''Nanaimo'' came across 50 packets of cocaine floating in the ocean. She returned to Canada on 15 April 2015. ''Nanaimo'' departed Esquimalt on 28 September 2017 and sailed to San Diego, California to embark a United States Coast Guard Law Enforcement Detachments, Law Enforcement Detachment (LEDET) before beginning patrols associated with Operation Caribbe in the Eastern Pacific on 16 October. On 31 October, ''Nanaimo'' intercepted a suspect vessel and her LEDET unit boarded the boat, seizing of cocaine. ''Nanaimo'' intercepted a further of cocaine in the following weeks. ''Nanaimo'' returned to Esquimalt on 15 December. In November 2018, ''Nanaimo'' and sister ship departed for the Eastern Pacific Ocean to participate in Operation Caribbe in November 2018. The two ships returned to Esquimalt on 17 December, with ''Edmonton'' successfully intercepting a drug shipment. ''Nanaimo'' deployed from Esquimalt with ''Whitehorse'' on 10 February 2020 for Operation Caribbe off western Central America for three months. The two ships were recalled from their mission early on 19 March due to the COVID-19 pandemic.


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External links


HMCS ''Nanaimo'' (MM 702) – official website
{{DEFAULTSORT:Nanaimo, HMCS Fleet of the Royal Canadian Navy Kingston-class coastal defence vessels 1996 ships Ships built in Nova Scotia