Type 212A submarine


The Type 212A is a class of diesel-electric attack submarine developed by Howaldtswerke-Deutsche Werft AG for the German Navy, and the Italian Navy where it is known as the Todaro class. It features diesel propulsion and an additional air-independent propulsion system using Siemens proton-exchange membrane compressed hydrogen fuel cells. The submarines can operate at high speed on diesel power or switch to the AIP system for silent slow cruising, staying submerged for up to three weeks with little exhaust heat.
The Type 212 is the first fuel cell propulsion system equipped submarine series.

Development

At the beginning of the 1990s the German Navy was seeking a replacement for the Type 206 submarines. Initial study started on a Type 209 improved design, with AIP capability, called Type 212.
The final programme started in 1994 as the navies of Germany and Italy began working together to design a new conventional submarine, respectively to operate in the shallow and confined waters of the Baltic Sea and in the deeper waters of the Mediterranean Sea. The two different requirements were mixed into a common one and, because of significant updates to the design, the designation has been changed to Type 212A since then.
On 22 April 1996 a Memorandum of Understanding gave the start to the cooperation for building four vessels for the German Navy and four vessels for the Italian Navy. Its main aim was the construction of identical boats and the start of a collaboration in logistic and life-cycle support for the two navies.
The German government placed an initial order of four Type 212A submarines in 1998. The German Submarine Consortium built them at the shipyards of HDW and Thyssen Nordseewerke GmbH of Emden. Different sections of the submarines were constructed at both sites at the same time and then half of them were shipped to the respective other yard so that both HDW and Thyssen Nordseewerke assembled two complete submarines each.
In the same year the Italian government placed an order of two U212A submarines built by Fincantieri for the Italian Navy at Muggiano shipyard, designated as the Todaro class.
The German Navy ordered two additional, improved submarines in 2006, to be delivered from 2012 on, longer to give additional space for a new reconnaissance mast.
On 21 April 2008 the Italian Navy ordered the optional second batch of submarine, in the same configuration of the original ones. Some upgrading should involve materials and components of commercial derivation, as well as the software package of the CMS. The intention is to keep the same configuration of the first series and reduce maintenance costs.
The export-oriented Type 214 submarine succeeds the Type 209 submarine and shares certain features with the Type 212A, such as the AIP fuel cell propulsion.
Poland announced in December 2013 they would lease, rather than buy, two U212-A's, on account of not meeting "requirements of tactical and technical equipment developed by the military, including in particular the propulsion system, missile weapons and rescue system".
On 22 December 2015 Admiral Giuseppe De Giorgi, Commander in Chief of the Italian Navy, announced plans to build another two U212A submarines. In December 2022, an amended contract was signed for production of a third NFS Submarine based on the design of the previous two submarines. The third submarine is planned to be delivered at the end of 2030, while a contract for the fourth boat was anticipated in 2023.
In October 2016, during the celebration of the commissioning of U-36, the German Navy announced the intent to procure another batch of two U212As within the next decade.

Type 212CD

In February 2017, it was announced that the Royal Norwegian Navy would procure four submarines based on the Type 212. Initial plans envisaged service entry between 2025 and 2028, but the Norwegian 2020 Defence Plan later This "CD" variant of the Type 212 will consist of six submarines, with the German Navy ordering two new boats alongside the four Norwegian vessels. In March 2021 an agreement was reached between Norway and Germany to initiate the acquisition program, pending approval by the Bundestag. The contract for construction of the six boats was signed in July 2021 with delivery of the first boat to the Royal Norwegian Navy

Design

Partly owing to the "X" arrangement of the stern planes, the Type 212 is capable of operating in as little as of water. This is a long-standing requirement for German submarine designs, enabling them to pass a strategic point in the Baltic Sea submerged. This allows it to come closer to shore than most contemporary submarines. Commandos operating from the boat can surface
The prismatic hull cross-section and smoothly faired transitions from the hull to the sail improve the boat's stealth characteristics.

Air-independent propulsion

Although hydrogen-oxygen propulsion had been considered for submarines as early as World War I, the concept was not very successful until recently due to fire and explosion concerns. In the Type 212 this has been countered by storing the fuel and oxidizer in tanks outside the crew space, between the pressure hull and outer light hull. The gases are piped through the pressure hull to the fuel cells as needed to generate electricity, but at any given time there is only a very small amount of gas present in the crew space.
In October 2024 it was reported that a new lithium-ion battery system was developed by Thyssenkrupp Marine Systems, which will be installed and tested on a existing Type 212A submarine.

Weapons

The Type 212A is capable of launching the fiber optic-guided DM2A4 heavyweight torpedo, the WASS BlackShark torpedo and short-range missiles from its six torpedo tubes, which use a water ram expulsion system. Future capability may include tube-launched cruise missiles.
The short-range IDAS missile, primarily intended for use against air threats as well as small and medium-sized sea and near-land targets, is currently being developed by Diehl BGT Defence to be fired from Type 212's torpedo tubes. IDAS is fiber-optic guided and has a range of approximately. Four missiles fit in one torpedo tube, stored in a magazine. First deliveries of IDAS for the German Navy were scheduled from 2014 on.
A 30mm auto-cannon called Muräne to support diver operations and to give warning shots was being considered presumably sometime before 2014 and possibly still is, as well. The cannon, probably a version of the Rheinmetall RMK30, will be stored in a retractable mast and can be fired without the boat surfacing. The mast will, presumably from 2014 onwards, also be designed to contain three Aladin UAVs for reconnaissance missions. This mast is likely to be mounted on the second batch of Type 212 submarines for the German Navy.

Operations

In April 2006, the German Navy's U-32 sailed from the Baltic Sea to Naval Station Rota in Spain in two weeks, travelling without surfacing nor snorkelling.
The Italian Navy's S 526 Todaro was deployed, for over six months in 2008, to the United States for the CONUS 2008 exercise with the United States Navy.
The Italian Navy's S 527 Scirè was deployed, for over five months in 2009, to the United States for the CONUS 2009 exercise with the US Navy.
Between 1 September 2012 and 13 February 2013, the Italian Navy's S 526 Todaro was deployed to the Gulf of Aden, Arabian Sea, Gulf of Oman and the Indian Ocean for the first time.
In 2013, while on the way to participate in naval exercises in US waters, the German Navy's U-32 established a new record for non-nuclear submarines with 18 days in submerged transit without snorkelling.
On 15 October 2017, the German Navy's U-35 suffered damage to its rudder fins while conducting dives off the Norwegian coast.

List of boats

Potential operators

Canada has expressed interest in the 212CD.
Colombia expressed its interest for the ship in 2024.

General characteristics