Multi Role Vehicle-Protected
The Multi Role Vehicle-Protected is a programme to deliver future wheeled utility and logistics vehicles for the British Army.
The vehicle formed part of the projected future equipment for the army as envisaged in the Army 2020 programme, the name given to the restructuring of the British Army in light of the Strategic Defence and Security Review 2010.
Background
The MRV-P programme originated from the Operational Utility Vehicle System. This plan would:provide a robust, easily supported system, comprising operational utility vehicles that are able to carry light cargo
or small groups of personnel, integrate as many special-to-role systems as possible and which can operate
in diverse climatic and topographical conditions worldwide, in order to support and contribute to land
and littoral manoeuvre operations’.
However, as reported by the National Audit Office in its 2011 Major Reports, the Operational Utility Vehicle System was cancelled in 2011 and the requirement was re-scoped to form the MRV-P programme. The concept phase supposedly was completed by early spring 2015.
Characteristics of the MRV-P
A Public Sector Tenders tenders report stated that:Multi Role Vehicle Protected is a Cat A project intended to meet the requirement for a protected deployable platform employed by all Force Elements, at all scales of effort, in a wide range of environments, and on all parts of the battlefield except for the direct fire zone. The MRV-P should bring commonality to the fleet and reduce the logistic footprint for utility vehicles by 2020.
The requirement was further explained in a presentation by then Brigadier PS Rafferty. The presentation explained that MRV-P vehicles would deploy in the Divisional Support Area in future British Army divisions. MRV-P would have four variants: command and liaison with a four-person seating, a command and control variant that could expand and deploy statically and fit up to six personnel, a logistics transport variant for two personnel and a troop carrier variant with a driver, commander and six dismounts. The presentation further stated that the MRV-P variants would replace the following vehicles in the British Army once they reached their out-of-service dates, although this has yet to be confirmed:
- Ocelot/Foxhound
- Husky
- Panther
- WMIK
- Vector