

 
Navy Ford (CVN-78) Class Aircraft Carrier 
Program: Background and Issues for Congress 
Updated December 22, 2020 
Congressional Research Service 
https://crsreports.congress.gov 
RS20643 
 
  
 
Navy Ford (CVN-78) Class Aircraft Carrier Program: Background and Issues for Congress 
 
Summary 
The aircraft carriers CVN-78, CVN-79, CVN-80, and CVN-81 are the first four ships in the 
Navy’s new Gerald R. Ford (CVN-78) class of nuclear-powered aircraft carriers (CVNs). The 
Navy’s proposed FY2021 budget requests $2,714.1 million (i.e., about $2.7 billion) in 
procurement funding for CVN-78 class ships, including $71.0 million for CVN-78, $997.5 
million for CVN-80, and $1,645.6 million for CVN-81. 
CVN-78 (Gerald R. Ford) was procured in FY2008. The Navy’s proposed FY2021 budget 
estimates the ship’s procurement cost at $13,316.5 million (i.e., about $13.3 billion) in then-year 
dollars. The ship was commissioned into service on July 22, 2017. The Navy is currently working 
to complete construction, testing, and certification of the ship’s 11 weapons elevators and to 
correct other technical problems aboard the ship. 
CVN-79 (John F. Kennedy) was procured in FY2013. The Navy’s proposed FY2021 budget 
estimates the ship’s procurement cost at $11,397.7 million (i.e., about $11.4 billion) in then-year 
dollars. The ship is being built with an improved process that incorporates lessons learned from 
the construction of CVN-78. CVN-79 is scheduled for delivery to the Navy in September 2024. 
CVN-80 (Enterprise) was procured in FY2018. The Navy’s proposed FY2021 budget estimates 
the ship’s procurement cost at $12,321.3 million (i.e., about $12.3 billion) in then-year dollars. 
The ship is scheduled for delivery to the Navy in March 2028. 
CVN-81 (Doris Miller) is treated in this report as a ship that was procured in FY2019, consistent 
with congressional action on the Navy’s FY2019 budget. The Navy’s FY2021 budget submission 
shows CVN-81 as a ship that was procured in FY2020. The Navy’s FY2021 budget submission 
estimates the ship’s procurement cost at $12,450.7 million (i.e., about $12.5 billion) in then-year 
dollars. The ship is scheduled for delivery to the Navy in February 2032. 
CVN-80 and CVN-81 are being procured under a two-ship block buy contract that was authorized 
by Section 121(a)(2) of the John S. McCain National Defense Authorization Act for Fiscal Year 
2019 (H.R. 5515/P.L. 115-232 of August 13, 2018). The use of the two-ship block buy contract 
reduced the combined estimated procurement cost of the two ships. 
Oversight issues for Congress for the CVN-78 program include the following: 
  the potential impact of the COVID-19 situation on the execution of U.S. military 
shipbuilding programs, including the CVN-78 program; 
  a delay in CVN-78’s first deployment due to the need to complete work on the 
ship’s weapons elevators and correct other technical problems aboard the ship; 
  whether the Navy in its FY2020 budget request has accurately priced the work on 
the CVN-78 program that it is proposing to fund in FY2021; 
  cost growth in the CVN-78 program, Navy efforts to stem that growth, and Navy 
efforts to manage costs so as to stay within the program’s cost caps; 
  additional CVN-78 program issues that were raised in a December 2019 report 
from the Department of Defense’s (DOD’s) Director of Operational Test and 
Evaluation (DOT&E) and a May 2019 Government Accountability Office (GAO) 
report on DOD weapon systems; and 
  the procurement of aircraft carriers after CVN-81.
Congressional Research Service 
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Contents 
Introduction ..................................................................................................................................... 1 
Background ..................................................................................................................................... 1 
Current Navy Aircraft Carrier Force ......................................................................................... 1 
Statutory Requirements for Numbers of Carriers and Carrier Air Wings ................................. 1 
Requirement to Maintain Not Less Than 11 Carriers ......................................................... 1 
Requirement to Maintain a Minimum of Nine Carrier Air Wings ...................................... 2 
Navy Force-Level Goal ............................................................................................................. 2 
Current 12-Carrier Force-Level Goal within 355-Ship Plan of December 2016 ................ 2 
Potential New Goal of 8 to 11 Large Carriers and Up to 6 Light Carriers Under 
New Battle Force 2045 Plan ............................................................................................ 3 
Incremental Funding Authority for Aircraft Carriers ................................................................ 4 
Aircraft Carrier Construction Industrial Base ........................................................................... 4 
Gerald R. Ford (CVN-78) Class Program ................................................................................ 4 
Overview ............................................................................................................................. 4 
CVN-78 (Gerald R. Ford) ................................................................................................... 5 
CVN-79 (John F. Kennedy) ................................................................................................ 5 
CVN-80 (Enterprise) ........................................................................................................... 6 
CVN-81 (Doris Miller) ....................................................................................................... 6 
Two-Ship Block Buy Contract for CVN-80 and CVN-81 .................................................. 6 
Program Procurement Cost Cap .......................................................................................... 7 
Program Procurement Funding ........................................................................................... 7 
Changes in Estimated Unit Procurement Costs Since FY2008 Budget .............................. 8 
Issues for Congress for FY2021 .................................................................................................... 10 
Potential Impact of COVID-19 Situation ................................................................................ 10 
Delay in CVN-78’s Deployment Due to Weapon Elevators and Other Challenges................. 11 
Overview ............................................................................................................................ 11 
Weapons Elevators ............................................................................................................. 11 
Other Technical Challenges .............................................................................................. 12 
Change in Program Manager ............................................................................................ 12 
Navy Efforts to Address Technical Challenges ................................................................. 13 
Potential Oversight Questions ........................................................................................... 16 
Pricing of Proposed FY2021 Work on CVN-78 Program ....................................................... 16 
Cost Growth and Managing Costs within Program Cost Caps ............................................... 16 
Overview ........................................................................................................................... 16 
CVN-78 ............................................................................................................................. 18 
CVNs 79, 80, and 81 ......................................................................................................... 19 
Issues Raised in December 2019 DOT&E and June 2020 GAO Reports ............................... 23 
December 2019 DOT&E Report ...................................................................................... 23 
June 2020 GAO Report ..................................................................................................... 26 
Procurement of Aircraft Carriers after CVN-81 ...................................................................... 28 
Overview ........................................................................................................................... 28 
Potential New Goal of 8 to 11 Large Carriers and Up to Six Light Carriers under 
New Battle Force 2045 Plan .......................................................................................... 28 
Shock Trial .............................................................................................................................. 30 
Legislative Activity for FY2021 .................................................................................................... 30 
Summary of Congressional Action on FY2021 Funding Request .......................................... 30 
Congressional Research Service 
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FY2021 National Defense Authorization Act (H.R. 6395/S. 4049) ........................................ 30 
House ................................................................................................................................ 30 
Senate ................................................................................................................................ 31 
Conference ........................................................................................................................ 31 
FY2021 DOD Appropriations Act (H.R. 7617/S. XXXX/Division C of H.R. 133) ............... 32 
House ................................................................................................................................ 32 
Senate ................................................................................................................................ 33 
Conference ........................................................................................................................ 33 
 
Figures 
Figure 1. USS Gerald R. Ford (CVN-78) ....................................................................................... 5 
  
Tables 
Table 1. Procurement Funding for CVNs 78, 79, 80, and 81 Through FY2028 ............................. 8 
Table 2. Changes in Estimated Procurement Costs of CVNs 78, 79, 80, and 81 ............................ 9 
Table 3. Congressional Action on FY2021 Procurement Funding Request .................................. 30 
  
Appendixes 
Appendix A. Background Information on Two-Ship Block Buy for CVN-80 and CVN-81 ........ 34 
Appendix B. Shock Trial ............................................................................................................... 38 
 
Contacts 
Author Information ........................................................................................................................ 39 
 
Congressional Research Service 
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Introduction 
This report provides background information and potential oversight issues for Congress on the 
Gerald R. Ford (CVN-78) class nuclear-powered aircraft carrier (CVN) aircraft carrier program. 
The Navy’s proposed FY2021 budget requests $2,714.2 million (i.e., about $2.7 billion) in 
procurement funding for the program. Congress’s decisions on the CVN-78 program could 
substantially affect Navy capabilities and funding requirements and the shipbuilding industrial 
base. 
For an overview of the strategic and budgetary context in which the CVN-78 class program and 
other Navy shipbuilding programs may be considered, see CRS Report RL32665, Navy Force 
Structure and Shipbuilding Plans: Background and Issues for Congress, by Ronald O'Rourke.1 
Background 
Current Navy Aircraft Carrier Force 
The Navy’s current aircraft carrier force consists of 11 CVNs,2 including 10 Nimitz-class ships 
(CVNs 68 through 77) that entered service between 1975 and 2009, and one Gerald R. Ford 
(CVN-78) class ship that was commissioned into service on July 22, 2017.3  
Statutory Requirements for Numbers of Carriers and 
Carrier Air Wings 
Requirement to Maintain Not Less Than 11 Carriers  
10 U.S.C. 8062(b) requires the Navy to maintain a force of not less than 11 operational aircraft 
carriers.4 The requirement for the Navy to maintain not less than a certain number of operational 
aircraft carriers was established by Section 126 of the FY2006 National Defense Authorization 
Act (H.R. 1815/P.L. 109-163 of January 6, 2006), which set the number at 12 carriers. The 
requirement was changed from 12 carriers to 11 carriers by Section 1011(a) of the FY2007 John 
Warner National Defense Authorization Act (H.R. 5122/P.L. 109-364 of October 17, 2006).5 
                                                 
1 See also CRS Report R43838, Renewed Great Power Competition: Implications for Defense—Issues for Congress, by 
Ronald O'Rourke, and CRS Report R44891, U.S. Role in the World: Background and Issues for Congress, by Ronald 
O'Rourke and Michael Moodie. 
2 The Navy’s last remaining conventionally powered carrier (CV), Kitty Hawk (CV-63), was decommissioned on 
January 31, 2009. 
3 The commissioning into service of CVN-78 on July 22, 2017, ended a period during which the carrier force had 
declined to 10 ships—a period that began on December 1, 2012, with the inactivation of the one-of-a-kind nuclear-
powered aircraft carrier Enterprise (CVN-65), a ship that entered service in 1961. 
4 10 U.S.C. 8062 was previously numbered as 10 U.S.C. 5062. It was renumbered as 10 U.S.C. 8062 by Section 807 of 
the John S. McCain National Defense Authorization Act for Fiscal Year 2019 (H.R. 5515/P.L. 115-232 of August 13, 
2018), which directed a renumbering of sections and titles of Title 10 relating to the Navy and Marine Corps. (Sections 
806 and 808 of P.L. 115-232 directed a similar renumbering of sections and titles relating to the Air Force and Army, 
respectively.) 
5 As mentioned in footnote 3, the carrier force dropped from 11 ships to 10 ships between December 1, 2017, when 
Enterprise (CVN-65) was inactivated, and July 22, 2017, when CVN-78 was commissioned into service. Anticipating 
the gap between the inactivation of CVN-65 and the commissioning of CVN-78, the Navy asked Congress for a 
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Navy Ford (CVN-78) Class Aircraft Carrier Program: Background and Issues for Congress 
 
Requirement to Maintain a Minimum of Nine Carrier Air Wings 
10 U.S.C. 8062(e), which was added by Section 1042 of the FY2017 National Defense 
Authorization Act (S. 2943/P.L. 114-328 of December 23, 2016), requires the Navy to maintain a 
minimum of nine carrier air wings.6 
Navy Force-Level Goal 
Current 12-Carrier Force-Level Goal within 355-Ship Plan of December 2016 
In December 2016, the Navy released a force-level goal for achieving and maintaining a fleet of 
355 ships, including 12 aircraft carriers7—one more than the minimum of 11 carriers required by 
10 U.S.C. 8062(b). 
Given the time needed to build a carrier and the projected retirement dates of existing carriers, 
increasing the carrier force from 11 ships to 12 ships on a sustained basis would take a number of 
years.8 Under the Navy’s FY2020 30-year shipbuilding plan, carrier procurement would shift 
from 5-year centers (i.e., one carrier procured each five years) to 4-year centers after the 
procurement of CVN-82 in FY2028, and a 12-carrier force would be achieved on a sustained 
basis in the 2060s.9 
                                                 
temporary waiver of 10 U.S.C. 8062(b) to accommodate the period between the two events. Section 1023 of the 
FY2010 National Defense Authorization Act (H.R. 2647/P.L. 111-84 of October 28, 2009) authorized the waiver, 
permitting the Navy to have 10 operational carriers between the inactivation of CVN-65 and the commissioning of 
CVN-78. 
6 10 U.S.C. 8062(e) states the following: 
The Secretary of the Navy shall ensure that- 
(1) the Navy maintains a minimum of 9 carrier air wings until the earlier of- 
(A) the date on which additional operationally deployable aircraft carriers can fully support a 10th 
carrier air wing; or 
(B) October 1, 2025; 
(2) after the earlier of the two dates referred to in subparagraphs (A) and (B) of paragraph (1), the 
Navy maintains a minimum of 10 carrier air wings; and 
(3) for each such carrier air wing, the Navy maintains a dedicated and fully staffed headquarters. 
7 For more on the 355-ship force-level goal, see CRS Report RL32665, Navy Force Structure and Shipbuilding Plans: 
Background and Issues for Congress, by Ronald O'Rourke.  
8 Procuring carriers on 3-year centers would achieve a 12-carrier force on a sustained basis by about 2030, unless the 
service lives of one or more existing carriers were substantially extended. Procuring carriers on 3.5-year centers (i.e., a 
combination of 3- and 4-year centers) would achieve a 12-carrier force on a sustained basis no earlier than about 2034, 
unless the service lives of one or more existing carriers were substantially extended. Procuring carriers on 4-year 
centers would achieve a 12-carrier force on a sustained basis by about 2063—almost 30 years later than under 3.5-year 
centers—unless the service lives of one or more existing carriers were substantially extended. (Source for 2063 date in 
relation to four-year centers: Congressional Budget Office (CBO), in a telephone consultation with CRS on May 18, 
2017.) 
9 The projected size of the carrier force in the Navy’s FY2020 30-year (FY2020-FY2049) shipbuilding plan reflected 
the Navy’s now-withdrawn FY2020 budget proposal to not fund the RCOH for the aircraft carrier CVN-75 (Harry S. 
Truman), and to instead retire the ship around FY2024. With the withdrawal of this budget proposal, the projected size 
of the carrier force became, for the period FY2022-FY2047, one ship higher than what is shown in the Navy’s FY2020 
budget submission. The newly adjusted force-level projection, reflecting the withdrawal of the proposal to retire CVN-
75 around FY2024, were as follows: The force is projected to include 11 ships in FY2020-FY2021, 12 ships in 
FY2022-FY2024, 11 ships in FY2025-FY2026, 10 ships in FY2027, 11 ships in FY2028-FY2039, 10 ships in FY2040, 
11 ships in FY2041, 10 ships in FY2042-FY2044, 11 ships in FY2045, 10 ships in FY2046-FY2047, 9 ships in 
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Potential New Goal of 8 to 11 Large Carriers and Up to 6 Light Carriers Under 
New Battle Force 2045 Plan 
The Navy and the Department of Defense (DOD) since 2019 have been working to develop a new 
Navy force-level goal to replace the current 355-ship force-level goal. The conclusion of this 
work and the release of its results to Congress have been delayed repeatedly since late 2019. 
Press reports in mid-2020 suggested that DOD at that time was leaning toward a new Navy force-
level goal that included, among other things, nine large, nuclear-powered carriers (CVNs).10 
On October 6, 2020, in remarks made in Washington, DC, Secretary of Defense Mark Esper 
provided some details on the Trump Administration’s new Navy force-level goal, which it calls 
Battle Force 2045. This new force-level goal, which would replace the existing 355-ship force-
level goal, calls for achieving a fleet of more than 500 manned and unmanned ships by 2045, 
including 355 manned ships prior to 2035.11 In his remarks, Esper stated that Battle Force 2045 
will include 8 to 11 CVNs and up to 6 light aircraft carriers, some of which could be based on the 
design for the Navy’s new LHA-class amphibious assault ships, which look like medium-sized 
aircraft carriers.12 It is possible that some of these light carriers could be existing LHAs that 
would be released from duty as amphibious ships and repurposed as light aircraft carriers. Esper 
stated 
Under our proposal, Battle Force 2045 will possess the following characteristics…. 
…  nuclear  powered  carriers  will  remain  our  most  visible  deterrent,  with  the  ability  to 
project  power  and  execute  sea  control  missions  across  the  globe.  And  to  continue 
enhancing their survivability and lethality, we are developing the air wing of the future, 
capable of engaging at extended ranges. 
At  the  same  time,  we  continue  to  examine  options  for  light  carriers  that  support  short 
takeoff  or  vertical  landing  aircraft.  One  model  we  are  considering  is  the  USS  America 
[LHA-class ship] that is equipped with more than a dozen F-35Bs. Light carriers provide 
additional presence and capacity to carry out day-to-day missions and free up supercarriers 
for more critical high-end fights.  
While  we anticipate that additional study  will be required to  assess the proper high-low 
mix of carriers, eight to 11 nuclear powered carriers—carriers will be necessary to execute 
a high end conflict and maintain our global presence, with up to six light carriers joining 
them…. 
… [Battle Force 2045] will possess unmanned ship-based aircraft of all types. The Navy 
must  develop  and  deploy  carrier-based  unmanned  aircraft  of  all  types.  This  includes 
fighters, refuelers, early warning [aircraft], and electronic attack aircraft. While this was 
not analyzed in detail in the study [that was done to develop Battle Force 2045], we will 
continue to assess the proper mix [of aircraft types] and [aircraft] range needed to overcome 
tomorrow's threats.13 
                                                 
FY2048, and 10 ships in FY2049. 
10 For further discussion, see CRS Report RL32665, Navy Force Structure and Shipbuilding Plans: Background and 
Issues for Congress, by Ronald O'Rourke. 
11 For more on the Battle Force 2045 plan, see CRS Report RL32665, Navy Force Structure and Shipbuilding Plans: 
Background and Issues for Congress, by Ronald O'Rourke. 
12 For more on the LHA program, see CRS Report R43543, Navy LPD-17 Flight II and LHA Amphibious Ship 
Programs: Background and Issues for Congress, by Ronald O'Rourke. 
13 Department of Defense, “Secretary Of Defense Remarks at CSBA [Center for Strategic and Budgetary Assessments] 
on the NDS [National Defense Strategy] and Future Defense Modernization Priorities,” transcript of remarks, October 
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Incremental Funding Authority for Aircraft Carriers 
In recent years, Congress has authorized DOD to use incremental funding for procuring certain 
Navy ships, most notably aircraft carriers.14 Under incremental funding, some of the funding 
needed to fully fund a ship is provided in one or more years after the year in which the ship is 
procured.15 
Aircraft Carrier Construction Industrial Base 
All U.S. aircraft carriers procured since FY1958 have been built by Huntington Ingalls 
Industries/Newport News Shipbuilding (HII/NNS), of Newport News, VA. HII/NNS is the only 
U.S. shipyard that can build large-deck, nuclear-powered aircraft carriers. The aircraft carrier 
construction industrial base also includes roughly 2,000 supplier firms in 46 states.16 
Gerald R. Ford (CVN-78) Class Program 
Overview 
The Gerald R. Ford (CVN-78) class carrier design (Figure 1) is the successor to the Nimitz-class 
carrier design. The Ford-class design uses the basic Nimitz-class hull form but incorporates 
several improvements, including features permitting the ship to generate more aircraft sorties per 
day, more electrical power for supporting ship systems, and features permitting the ship to be 
operated by several hundred fewer sailors than a Nimitz-class ship, reducing 50-year life-cycle 
operating and support (O&S) costs for each ship by about $4 billion compared to the Nimitz-class 
design, the Navy estimates. Navy plans call for procuring at least four Ford-class carriers—CVN-
78, CVN-79, CVN-80, and CVN-81. 
                                                 
6, 2020. 
14 The provisions providing authority for using incremental funding for procuring CVN-78 class carriers are as follows: 
Section 121 of the FY2007 John Warner National Defense Authorization Act (H.R. 5122/P.L. 109-364 of October 17, 
2006) granted the Navy the authority to use four-year incremental funding for CVNs 78, 79, and 80. Under this 
authority, the Navy could fully fund each of these ships over a four-year period that includes the ship’s year of 
procurement and three subsequent years. 
Section 124 of the FY2012 National Defense Authorization Act (H.R. 1540/P.L. 112-81 of December 31, 2011) 
amended Section 121 of P.L. 109-364 to grant the Navy the authority to use five-year incremental funding for CVNs 
78, 79, and 80. Since CVN-78 was fully funded in FY2008-FY2011, the provision in practice originally applied to 
CVNs 79 and 80, although as discussed in the footnote to Table 1, the Navy made use of the authority in connection 
with an FY2020 reprogramming action that reprogrammed $86.0 million of funding into FY2012 for CVN-78. 
Section 121 of the FY2013 National Defense Authorization Act (H.R. 4310/P.L. 112-239 of January 2, 2013) amended 
Section 121 of P.L. 109-364 to grant the Navy the authority to use six-year incremental funding for CVNs 78, 79, and 
80. Since CVN-78 was fully funded in FY2008-FY2011, the provision in practice applies to CVNs 79 and 80. 
Section 121(c) of the John S. McCain National Defense Authorization Act for Fiscal Year 2019 (H.R. 5515/P.L. 115-
232 of August 13, 2018) authorized incremental funding to be used for making payments under the two-ship block buy 
contract for the construction of CVN-80 and CVN-81. This provision does not limit the total number of years across 
which incremental funding may be used to procure either ship. 
15 For more on full funding and incremental funding, see CRS Report RL31404, Defense Procurement: Full Funding 
Policy—Background, Issues, and Options for Congress, by Ronald O'Rourke and Stephen Daggett, and CRS Report 
RL32776, Navy Ship Procurement: Alternative Funding Approaches—Background and Options for Congress, by 
Ronald O'Rourke. 
16 Source for figures of 2,000 supplier firms in 46 states: Jennifer Boykin, president of HII/NNS, as quoted in Marcus 
Weisgerber, “US Navy Places First 2-Carrier Order in Three Decades,” Defense One, January 31, 2019. 
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CVN-78 (Gerald R. Ford) 
CVN-78, which was named Gerald R. Ford in 2007,17 was procured in FY2008. The Navy’s 
proposed FY2021 budget estimates the ship’s procurement cost at $13,316.5 million (i.e., about 
$13.3 billion) in then-year dollars. The ship was commissioned into service on July 22, 2017. The 
Navy is currently working to complete construction, testing, and certification of the ship’s 11 
weapons elevators and to correct other technical problems aboard the ship. 
Figure 1. USS Gerald R. Ford (CVN-78) 
 
Source: U.S. U.S. Navy photograph. 
CVN-79 (John F. Kennedy) 
CVN-79, which was named John F. Kennedy on May 29, 2011,18 was procured in FY2013. The 
Navy’s proposed FY2021 budget estimates the ship’s procurement cost at $11,397.7 million (i.e., 
about $11.4 billion) in then-year dollars. The ship is being built with an improved shipyard 
                                                 
17 §1012 of the FY2007 defense authorization act (H.R. 5122/P.L. 109-364 of October 17, 2006) expressed the sense of 
Congress that CVN-78 should be named for President Gerald R. Ford. On January 16, 2007, the Navy announced that 
CVN-78 would be so named. CVN-78 and other carriers built to the same design are consequently referred to as Ford 
(CVN-78) class carriers. For more on Navy ship names, see CRS Report RS22478, Navy Ship Names: Background for 
Congress, by Ronald O'Rourke. 
18 See “Navy Names Next Aircraft Carrier USS John F. Kennedy,” Navy News Service, May 29, 2011, accessed online 
on June 1, 2011, at http://www.navy.mil/search/display.asp?story_id=60686. See also Peter Frost, “U.S. Navy’s Next 
Aircraft Carrier Will Be Named After The Late John F. Kennedy,” Newport News Daily Press, May 30, 2011. CVN-79 
is the second ship to be named for President John F. Kennedy. The first, CV-67, was the last conventionally powered 
carrier procured for the Navy. CV-67 was procured in FY1963, entered service in 1968, and was decommissioned in 
2007. 
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fabrication and assembly process that incorporates lessons learned from the construction of CVN-
78. The ship is scheduled for delivery to the Navy in September 2024. 
CVN-80 (Enterprise) 
CVN-80, which was named Enterprise on December 1, 2012,19 was procured in FY2018. The 
Navy’s proposed FY2021 budget estimates the ship’s procurement cost at $12,335.1 million (i.e., 
about $12.3 billion) in then-year dollars. The Navy’s proposed FY2021 budget estimates the 
ship’s procurement cost at $12,321.3 million (i.e., about $12.3 billion) in then-year dollars. The 
ship is scheduled for delivery to the Navy in March 2028. 
CVN-81 (Doris Miller) 
CVN-81 was named Doris Miller on January 20, 2020, for an African American enlisted sailor 
who received the Navy Cross for his actions during the Japanese attack on Pearl Harbor on 
December 7, 1941.20 CVN-81 is treated in this report as a ship that was procured in FY2019, 
consistent with congressional action on the Navy’s FY2019 budget. The Navy’s FY2021 budget 
submission shows CVN-81 as a ship that was procured in FY2020.21 Prior to the awarding of the 
two-ship block buy contract for CVN-80 and CVN-81 that is discussed in the next section, CVN-
81 was scheduled to be procured in FY2023. The Navy’s FY2021 budget submission estimates 
CVN-81’s procurement cost at $12,450.7 million (i.e., about $12.5 billion) in then-year dollars. 
The ship is scheduled for delivery to the Navy in February 2032. 
Two-Ship Block Buy Contract for CVN-80 and CVN-81 
CVN-80 and CVN-81 are being procured under a two-ship block buy contract that was authorized 
by Section 121(a)(2) of the John S. McCain National Defense Authorization Act for Fiscal Year 
2019 (H.R. 5515/P.L. 115-232 of August 13, 2018). The provision permitted the Navy to add 
CVN-81 to the existing contract for building CVN-80 after DOD made certain certifications to 
Congress. DOD made the certifications on December 31, 2018, and the Navy announced the 
award of the contract on January 31, 2019. 
Compared to the estimated procurement costs for CVN-80 and CVN-81 in the Navy’s FY2019 
budget submission, the Navy estimated under its FY2020 budget submission that the two-ship 
block buy contract will reduce the cost of CVN-80 by $246.6 million and the cost of CVN-81 by 
$2,637.3 million, for a combined reduction of $2,883.9 million (i.e., about $2.9 billion).22 (DOD 
characterized the combined reduction as “nearly $3 billion.”23) Using higher estimated baseline 
                                                 
19 The Navy made the announcement of CVN-80’s name on the same day that it deactivated the 51-year-old aircraft 
carrier CVN-65, also named Enterprise. (“Enterprise, Navy’s First Nuclear-Powered Aircraft Carrier, Inactivated,” 
Navy News Service, December 1, 2012; Hugh Lessig, “Navy Retires One Enterprise, Will Welcome Another,” Newport 
News Daily Press, December 2, 2012.) CVN-65 was the eighth Navy ship named Enterprise; CVN-80 is to be the 
ninth. 
20 For further discussion of the naming of CVN-81 for Doris Miller, see CRS Report RS22478, Navy Ship Names: 
Background for Congress, by Ronald O'Rourke. 
21 For additional discussion of CVN-81’s year of procurement, see CRS Report RL32665, Navy Force Structure and 
Shipbuilding Plans: Background and Issues for Congress, by Ronald O'Rourke. 
22 Source: CRS calculation based on costs for single-ship purchases as presented in Navy’s FY2019 budget submission 
and costs for two-ship purchase as presented in the Navy’s FY2020 budget submission. 
23 Source: Navy information paper on estimated cost savings of two-ship carrier buy provided to CRS by Navy Office 
of Legislative Affairs on June 20, 2019. 
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costs for CVN-80 and CVN-81 taken from a December 2017 Navy business case analysis, the 
Navy estimated under its FY2020 budget submission that the two-ship contract will reduce the 
cost of CVN-80 by about $900 million and the cost of CVN-81 by about $3.1 billion, for a 
combined reduction of about $4.0 billion.24 These figures are all expressed in then-year dollars, 
meaning dollars that are not adjusted for inflation. For additional background information on the 
two-ship block buy contract, see Appendix A. 
Program Procurement Cost Cap 
Congress has established and subsequently amended procurement cost caps for CVN-78 class 
aircraft carriers.25 
Program Procurement Funding 
Table 1 shows procurement funding for CVNs 78, 79, 80, and 81 through FY2028, the final year 
of funding programmed for CVN-81. As shown in the table, the Navy’s proposed FY2021 budget 
requests $2,714.1 million (i.e., about $2.7 billion) in procurement funding for CVN-78 class 
ships, including $71.0 million for CVN-78, $997.5 million for CVN-80, and $1,645.6 million for 
CVN-81. 
                                                 
24 Navy information paper provided to CRS by Navy Office of legislative Affairs on June 20, 2019. 
25 The provisions that established and later amended the cost caps are as follows: 
Section 122 of the FY2007 John Warner National Defense Authorization Act (H.R. 5122/P.L. 109-364 of October 17, 
2006) established a procurement cost cap for CVN-78 of $10.5 billion, plus adjustments for inflation and other factors, 
and a procurement cost cap for subsequent Ford-class carriers of $8.1 billion each, plus adjustments for inflation and 
other factors. The conference report (H.Rept. 109-702 of September 29, 2006) on P.L. 109-364 discusses Section 122 
on pages 551-552. 
Section 121 of the FY2014 National Defense Authorization Act (H.R. 3304/P.L. 113-66 of December 26, 2013) 
amended the procurement cost cap for the CVN-78 program to provide a revised cap of $12,887.0 million for CVN-78 
and a revised cap of $11,498.0 million for each follow-on ship in the program, plus adjustments for inflation and other 
factors (including an additional factor not included in original cost cap). 
Section 122 of the FY2016 National Defense Authorization Act (S. 1356/P.L. 114-92 of November 25, 2015) further 
amended the cost cap for the CVN-78 program to provide a revised cap of $11,398.0 million for each follow-on ship in 
the program, plus adjustment for inflation and other factors, and with a new provision stating that, if during 
construction of CVN-79, the Chief of Naval Operations determines that measures required to complete the ship within 
the revised cost cap shall result in an unacceptable reduction to the ship’s operational capability, the Secretary of the 
Navy may increase the CVN-79 cost cap by up to $100 million (i.e., to $11.498 billion). If such an action is taken, the 
Navy is to adhere to the notification requirements specified in the cost cap legislation. 
Section 121(a) of the FY2018 National Defense Authorization Act (H.R. 2810/P.L. 115-91 of December 12, 2017) 
further amended the cost cap for the CVN-78 program to provide a revised cap of $12,568.0 million for CVN-80 and 
subsequent ships in the program, plus adjustment for inflation and other factors. (The cap for CVN-79 was kept at 
$11,398.0 million, plus adjustment for inflation and other factors.) The provision also amended the basis for adjusting 
the caps for inflation, and excluded certain costs from being counted against the caps. 
Section 121 of the FY2020 National Defense Authorization Act (S. 1790/P.L. 116-92 of December 20, 2019) further 
amended the cost cap for the CVN-78 program to provide revised caps of $13,224.0 million for CVN-78, $11,398.0 
million for CVN–79, $12,202.0 million for CVN–80, and $12,451.0 million for CVN–81. The provision directs the 
Navy to exclude from these figures costs for CVN–78 class battle spares, interim spares, and increases attributable to 
economic inflation after December 1, 2018. 
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Table 1. Procurement Funding for CVNs 78, 79, 80, and 81 Through FY2028 
(Millions of then-year dollars, rounded to nearest tenth) 
FY 
CVN-78 
CVN-79 
CVN-80 
CVN-81 
Total 
FY01 
21.7 (AP) 
0 
0 
0 
21.7 
FY02 
135.3 (AP) 
0 
0 
0 
135.3 
FY03 
395.5 (AP) 
0 
0 
0 
395.5 
FY04 
1,162.9 (AP) 
0 
0 
0 
1,162.9 
FY05 
623.1 (AP) 
0 
0 
0 
623.1 
FY06 
618.9 (AP) 
0 
0 
0 
618.9 
FY07 
735.8 (AP) 
52.8 (AP) 
0 
0 
788.6 
FY08 
2,685.0 (FF) 
123.5 (AP) 
0 
0 
2,808.5 
FY09 
2,687.0 (FF) 
1,210.6 (AP) 
0 
0 
3,895.2 
FY10 
851.3 (FF) 
482.9 (AP) 
0 
0 
1,334.2 
FY11  
1,848.1 (FF) 
902.5 (AP) 
0 
0 
2,677.7 
FY12  
86.0 (FF)** 
554.8 (AP) 
0 
0 
554.8 
FY13 
0 
491.0 (FF) 
0 
0 
491.0 
FY14  
588.1 (CC) 
917.6 (FF) 
0 
0 
1,505.7 
FY15 
663.0 (CC) 
1,219.4 (FF) 
0 
0 
1,882.4 
FY16 
123.8 (CC) 
1,569.5 (FF) 
862.4 (AP) 
0 
2,555.7 
FY17  
0 
1,241.8 (FF) 
1,370.8 (AP) 
0 
2,612.6 
FY18 
20.0 (CC) 
2,557.4 (FF) 
1,569.6 (FF) 
0 
4,147.0 
FY19 
0 
0 
930.2 (FF) 
643.0 (FF) 
1,573.2 
FY20 
0 
0 
1,062.0 (FF) 
1,214.5 (FF) 
2,276.5 
FY21 (requested) 
71.0 (CC) 
0 
997.5 (FF) 
1,645.6 (FF) 
2,714.1 
FY22 (programmed) 
0 
74.0 (CC) 
1,014.1 (FF) 
1,307.0 (FF) 
2,395.1 
FY23 (programmed) 
0 
0 
1,166.1 (FF) 
760.0 (FF) 
1,926.1 
FY24 (programmed) 
0 
0 
1,047.9 (FF) 
667.0 (FF) 
1,714.9 
FY25 (programmed) 
0 
0 
2,300.6 (FF) 
591.0 (FF) 
2,891.6 
FY26 (projected) 
0 
0 
0 
2,171.0 (FF) 
2,171.0 
FY27 (projected) 
0 
0 
0 
1,851.0 (FF) 
1,851.0 
FY28 (projected) 
0 
0 
0 
1,600.7 (FF) 
1,600.7 
Total 
13,316.5 
11,397.7 
12,321.3 
12,450.7 
49,486.2 
Source: Table prepared by CRS based on Navy’s FY2021 budget submission. 
Notes: Figures may not add due to rounding. “AP” is advance procurement funding; “FF” is ful  funding; “CC” is 
cost-to-complete funding (i.e., funding to cover cost growth), which is sometimes abbreviated in Navy 
documents as CTC. The funding figures shown in the CVN-78 column reflect reprogramming under the FY2021 
budget submission of $161.5 mil ion of additional funding into FY2009, FY2011, and FY2012. Regarding the ** 
notation for the FY2012 funding figure for CVN-78, even though FY2012 is after FY2011 (CVN-78’s original final 
year of ful  funding), the Navy characterizes the $86.0 mil ion reprogrammed into FY2012 as ful  funding rather 
than cost-to-complete funding on the grounds that in the years since FY2011, as discussed earlier in this report 
(see footnote 14), the authority to use incremental funding for procuring aircraft carriers has been expanded by 
Congress to permit more than the four years of incremental funding that were permitted at the time that CVN-
78 was initially funded. 
Changes in Estimated Unit Procurement Costs Since FY2008 Budget 
Table 2 shows changes in the estimated procurement costs of CVNs 78, 79, 80, and 81 since the 
budget submission for FY2008—the year of procurement for CVN-78. 
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Navy Ford (CVN-78) Class Aircraft Carrier Program: Background and Issues for Congress 
 
Table 2. Changes in Estimated Procurement Costs of CVNs 78, 79, 80, and 81 
(As shown in FY2008-FY2020 budgets, in millions of then-year dollars) 
Budget 
CVN-78 
CVN-79 
CVN-80 
CVN-81 
Est. 
Est. 
Est. 
Schedule
Est. 
proc. 
Scheduled 
proc. 
Scheduled 
proc. 
d FY of 
proc. 
Scheduled 
 
cost 
FY of proc. 
cost 
FY of proc. 
cost 
proc. 
cost 
FY of proc. 
FY08 
10,488.9 
FY08 
9,192.0 
FY12 
10,716.8 
FY16 
n/a 
FY21 
FY09 
10,457.9 
FY08 
9,191.6 
FY12 
10,716.8 
FY16 
n/a 
FY21 
FY10 
10,845.8 
FY08 
n/a 
FY13 
n/a 
FY18 
n/a 
FY23 
FY11 
11,531.0 
FY08 
10,413.1 
FY13 
13,577.0 
FY18 
n/a 
FY23 
FY12 
11,531.0 
FY08 
10,253.0 
FY13 
13,494.9 
FY18 
n/a 
FY23 
FY13 
12,323.2 
FY08 
11,411.0 
FY13 
13,874.2 
FY18 
n/a 
FY23 
FY14 
12,829.3 
FY08 
11,338.4 
FY13 
13,874.2 
FY18 
n/a 
FY23 
FY15 
12,887.2 
FY08 
11,498.0 
FY13 
13,874.2 
FY18 
n/a 
FY23 
FY16 
12,887.0 
FY08 
11,347.6 
FY13 
13,472.0 
FY18 
n/a 
FY23 
FY17 
12,887.0 
FY08 
11,398.0 
FY13 
12,900.0 
FY18 
n/a 
FY23 
FY18 
12,907.0 
FY08 
11,377.4 
FY13 
12,997.6 
FY18 
n/a 
FY23 
FY19 
12,964.0 
FY08 
11,341.4 
FY13 
12,601.7 
FY18 
15,088.0 
FY23 
FY20 
13,084.0 
FY08 
11,327.4 
FY13 
12,335.1 
FY18 
12,450.7 
FY19 
FY21 
13,316.5 
FY08 
11,397.7 
FY13 
12,321.3 
FY18 
12,450.7 
FY19 
Annual % change 
FY08 to FY09 
-0.3 
 
0% 
 
0% 
 
n/a 
 
FY09 to FY10 
+3.7 
 
n/a 
 
n/a 
 
n/a 
 
FY10 to FY11 
+6.3 
 
n/a 
 
n/a 
 
n/a 
 
FY09 to FY11 
 
 
 
 
+26.7% 
 
 
 
FY11 to FY12 
0% 
 
-1.5% 
 
-0.1% 
 
n/a 
 
FY12 to FY13 
+6.9% 
 
+11.3% 
 
+2.8% 
 
n/a 
 
FY13 to FY14 
+4.1% 
 
-0.6% 
 
0% 
 
n/a 
 
FY14 to FY15 
+0.5% 
 
+1.4% 
 
0% 
 
n/a 
 
FY15 to FY16 
0% 
 
-1.3% 
 
-2.9% 
 
n/a 
 
FY16 to FY17 
0% 
 
+0.4% 
 
-4.2% 
 
n/a 
 
FY17 to FY18 
+0.2% 
 
-0.2% 
 
+0.7% 
 
n/a 
 
FY18 to FY19 
+0.4% 
 
-0.3% 
 
-3.0% 
 
n/a 
 
FY19 to FY20 
+0.9% 
 
-0.1% 
 
-2.1% 
 
-17.5% 
 
FY20 to FY21 
+1.8% 
 
+0.6% 
 
-0.1% 
 
0% 
 
Cumulative % change through FY21 
Since FY08 
+27.0% 
 
+24.0% 
 
+15.0% 
 
n/a 
 
Since FY13 
+8.1% 
 
-0.1% 
 
-11.2% 
 
n/a 
 
Since FY18 
+3.2% 
 
+0.2% 
 
-5.2% 
 
n/a 
 
Since FY19 
+2.7% 
 
+0.5% 
 
-2.2% 
 
-17.5% 
 
Source: Table prepared by CRS based on FY2008-FY2020 Navy budget submissions. n/a means not available. 
Notes: The FY2010 budget submission did not show estimated procurement costs or scheduled years of 
procurement for CVNs 79 and 80. The scheduled years of procurement for CVNs 79 and 80 shown here for the 
FY2010 budget submission are inferred from the shift to five-year intervals for procuring carriers that was 
announced by Secretary of Defense Gates in his April 6, 2009, news conference regarding recommendations for 
the FY2010 defense budget. 
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Navy Ford (CVN-78) Class Aircraft Carrier Program: Background and Issues for Congress 
 
Issues for Congress for FY2021 
Potential Impact of COVID-19 Situation 
One issue for Congress concerns the potential impact of the COVID-19 situation on the execution 
of U.S. military shipbuilding programs, including the CVN-78 program. 
An August 13, 2020, press report stated 
The Navy’s top acquisition official said the service is reassessing the timeline for the future 
aircraft carrier USS John F. Kennedy (CVN-79) due to both the COVID-19 pandemic and 
the switch from a dual to single-phase delivery plan. 
James Geurts told reporters during a phone press roundtable Wednesday [August 12] that 
“obviously we are watching with some concern, the workforce levels at all our shipyards, 
but  in  particular  at  Newport  News  there,  given  the  relatively  high  number  of  cases  in 
there.”… 
Geurts said the Navy is trying to understand the impacts from both COVID and moving to 
a single-phase delivery for CVN-79 and then “understanding the opportunity that going to 
a single phase delivery puts together and then leveraging that opportunity to build a more 
efficient schedule from here on out for that ship.”26 
Another August 13, 2020, press report stated 
Geurts told reporters during a telephone news conference that he was particularly worried 
about Newport News Shipbuilding, the Huntingtin Ingalls Industries (HII) yard in Virginia, 
“given the relatively high number of cases in there”…. 
The USN is trying to assess what the impacts of the workforce reductions will mean to the 
schedule of the aircraft carrier John F. Kennedy (CVN 79), the Ford-class ship recently 
launched at Newport News Shipbuilding…. 
After  the  media  call,  Geurts  told  Janes,  “While  we  still  are  seeing  major  reductions  in 
labour hours in CVN 79 versus CVN 78, we are also looking for opportunities to mitigate 
some of the Covid impacts as we shift to a single-phase delivery plan for that ship. Single-
phase delivery will allow us to adjust some of the manpower and trade skill phasing to take 
into account the Covid impacts to date. We are working on those adjustments.”27 
For additional discussion of the potential impact of the COVID-19 situation on the execution of 
U.S. military shipbuilding programs, see CRS Report RL32665, Navy Force Structure and 
Shipbuilding Plans: Background and Issues for Congress, by Ronald O'Rourke. 
                                                 
26 Rich Abott, “Navy Reassessing CVN-79 Schedule Due To Pandemic And Phase Change,” Defense Daily, August 13, 
2020. 
27 Michael Fabey, “Covid-19: Virus Impacts Force US Navy Schedule Reassessments for Carrier Kennedy and Other 
Programmes,” Jane’s Navy International, August 13, 2020. 
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Navy Ford (CVN-78) Class Aircraft Carrier Program: Background and Issues for Congress 
 
Delay in CVN-78’s Deployment Due to Weapon Elevators and 
Other Challenges 
Overview 
One oversight issue for Congress concerns a delay in CVN-78’s first deployment due to the need 
to complete the construction, testing, and certification of the ship’s weapons elevators and to 
correct other technical problems aboard the ship. Challenges in completing the construction, 
testing, and certification of CVN-78’s weapon elevators were first reported in November 2018,28 
and the issue has been a matter of continuing oversight attention since then. 
Weapons Elevators 
The ship’s 11 weapons elevators—referred to as Advanced Weapons Elevators (AWEs)—move 
missiles and bombs from the ship’s weapon magazines up to the ship’s flight deck, so that they 
can be loaded onto aircraft that are getting ready to take off from the ship. A lack of working 
weapons elevators can substantially limit an aircraft carrier’s ability to conduct combat 
operations. The Navy has struggled since November 2018 to meet promises it has repeatedly 
made to the defense oversight committees to get the elevators completed, tested, and certified. 
For much of 2019, the Navy continued to report that 2 of the 11 weapon elevators were 
completed, tested, and certified.29 On October 23, 2019, the Navy reported that the figure had 
increased to 4 of 11.30 On April 22, 2020, the Navy announced that the fifth elevator had been 
                                                 
28 See Anthony Capaccio, “U.S. Navy’s Costliest Carrier Was Delivered Without Elevators to Lift Bombs,” 
Bloomberg, November 2, 2018. 
29 Sam LaGrone, “Carrier Ford Will Only Have Two Weapon Elevators Ready When it Leaves Shipyard,” USNI News, 
October 9, 2019. See also Anthony Capaccio, “On Costliest U.S. Warship Ever, Navy Can’t Get Munitions on Deck,” 
Bloomberg, July 30, 2019. (The article was also published by Bloomberg with the title “Flawed Elevators on $13 
Billion Carrier Miss Another Deadline.”) Ben Werner, “Navy Says More Experts Coming to Work Ford Carrier 
Elevator Delays,” USNI News, July 5, 2019; Navy Research, Development and Acquisition Public Affairs Office, 
“Navy Full Court Press on USS Gerald R. Ford Weapons Elevators,” Navy News Service, July 1, 2019; Mark D. Faram, 
“The Navy’s New Plan to Fix Ford’s Elevators Failures,” Navy Times, July 1, 2019; Paul McLeary, “Navy Calls In 
Outsiders To Fix Troubled Ford Carrier,” Breaking Defense, July 1, 2019; Ben Werner and Sam LaGrone, “USS 
Gerald R. Ford Weapons Elevator Certifications Will Extend Pat October,” USNI News, May 29, 2019. See also Paul 
McLeary, “Will Trump Fire SecNav? Super Carrier USS Ford Suffers New Setback,” Breaking Defense, May 29, 
2019; Rich Abott, “Ford Elevator Work Prioritized And Extending Past October,” Defense Daily, June 3, 2019; Megan 
Eckstein, “Navy Building a Land-Based Test Site for Ford-Class Weapons Elevators, But Timing Won’t Help CVN-
78,” USNI News, May 31, 2019. 
For earlier press reports, see Anthony Capaccio, “U.S. Navy’s Costliest Carrier Was Delivered Without Elevators to 
Lift Bombs,” Bloomberg, November 2, 2018; Anthony Capaccio, “Flawed Bomb Elevators Leave Inhofe Leery of 
Buying Two Carriers,” Bloomberg, December 5, 2019; Megan Eckstein, “SECNAV to Trump: Ford Carrier Weapons 
Elevators Will Be Fixed by Summer, or ‘Fire Me,’” USNI News, January 8, 2019; USS Gerald R. Ford Public Affairs, 
“USS Gerald R. Ford Accepts First Advanced Weapons Elevator,” Navy News Service, January 16, 2019; Christopher 
Woody, “The Navy’s Newest Aircraft Carrier Got a Long-Missing Piece of Gear in December, Helping to Solve a 
Problem the Navy Secretary Has Bet His Job on Fixing,” Business Insider, January 20, 2019; Richard Sisk, “Navy 
Finally Has One Weapons Elevator Working on Its Newest Carrier,” Military.com, January 22, 2019; Mark D. Faram, 
“Once Beleaguered by Critics, the Ford Gets a Lift,” Navy Times, January 23, 2019; USS Gerald R. Ford (CVN 78) 
Public Affairs, “USS Gerald R. Ford Accepts Second Advanced Weapons Elevator,” Navy News Service, March 6, 
2019; Mark D. Faram, “Why the Once-Maligned Flattop Ford Is Finally Getting a Lift (or 11),” Navy Times, March 7, 
2019; Rich Abott, “Carrier Elevator Test Site Will Procure New Elevator, Ford Accepts Second Elevator,” Defense 
Daily, March 7, 2019; Rich Abott, “Navy To Build Land-Based Carrier Elevator Test Site,” Defense Daily, February 
21, 2019. 
30 Wesley Morgan, “Navy Secretary Accuses Congressional Critics of ‘Disinformation’ on Ford Carrier,” Politico Pro, 
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Navy Ford (CVN-78) Class Aircraft Carrier Program: Background and Issues for Congress 
 
certified, that the sixth was scheduled to be certified in the fourth quarter of FY2020, and that the 
remaining five are scheduled to be certified by the time that the ship undergoes Full Ship Shock 
Trials (FSSTs) in the third quarter of FY2021.31 On July 23, 2020, the Navy announced that the 
sixth elevator had been certified.32 In November 2020, it was reported that the seventh elevator is 
scheduled to be certified before the end of calendar year 2020, and that the remaining four would 
be completed by the end of April 2021.33 The Navy states that lessons learned in building, testing, 
and certifying CVN-78’s AWEs will be applied to the AWEs of subsequent CVN-78 class 
carriers.34 In November 2020, it was reported that HII/NNS had formed a single team to fix and 
install the elevators on both CVN-78 and CVN-79.35 
Other Technical Challenges 
In addition to challenges in building, testing, and certifying the ship’s weapon elevators, the Navy 
reportedly has been working to address problems with other systems on the ship, including its 
propulsion and electrical systems. Technical issues regarding the weapon elevators and other ship 
systems have delayed the ship’s first deployment to 2022 at the earliest, which would be about 
five years after the ship was commissioned into service.36 The delay in the ship’s first deployment 
is lengthening a period during which the Navy is attempting to maintain policymaker-desired 
levels of carrier forward deployments with its 10 other carriers—a situation that can lead to 
operational strains on those 10 carriers and their crews. 
Change in Program Manager 
A July 2, 2020, press report stated 
                                                 
October 23, 2019. See also Sam LaGrone, “Carrier Ford May Not Deploy Until 2024, 3rd Weapons Elevator Certified,” 
USNI News, October 22, 2019; Anthony Capaccio, “Trump Lets Navy’s Chief Off the Hook Over an Offer to ‘Fire 
Me,’” Bloomberg, November 2, 2019. 
31 Program Executive Office Aircraft Carriers Public Affairs, “Fifth Advanced Weapons Elevator certified aboard USS 
Gerald R. Ford (CVN 78),” Navy News Service, April 22, 2020. See also Megan Eckstein, “Ford’s 5th Weapons 
Elevator Done With Testing; All 11 Should Be Done By Next Summer’s Shock Trials,” USNI News, April 16, 2020. 
On January 16, 2020, a Navy official reportedly stated that work on all 11 elevators will be completed by May 2021, 
although the official acknowledged that there is some risk in that schedule. (Mallary Shelbourne, “Navy Confident 
CVN-78 Will Have All Weapons Elevators by May 2021,” Inside Defense, January 16, 2020.) 
32 Gina Harkins, “Supercarrier Ford Could Soon Have More Than Half of Its Weapons Elevators Working,” 
Military.com, June 19, 2020. 
33 Mallory Shelbourne, “USS Gerald R. Ford Making Steady Progress Ahead of Deployment,” USNI News, November 
24, 2020. 
34 See, for example, David B. Larter, “US Navy Makes Progress on Aircraft Carrier Ford’s Bedeviled Weapons 
Elevators,” Defense News, July 23, 2020; Mallory Shelbourne, “Navy Verifies USS Gerald R. Ford’s Sixth Advanced 
Weapons Elevator,” USNI News, July 23, 2020; Rich Abott, “Navy Certifies Second [Lower-Stage] Ford Magazine 
Elevator,” Defense Daily, July 23, 2020; Gina Harkins, “Navy Carrier Ford Now Has 6 Working Weapons Elevators,” 
Military.com, July 24, 2020. 
35 Michael Fabey, “Newport News Shipbuilding Forms One Team for Ford-class Weapons Elevators,” Jane’s, 
November 23, 2020. 
36 An October 25, 2019, press report stated that Navy officials “are taking a hard look at what’s next and if there’s 
enough time for Ford to meet remaining milestones and necessary to deploy sometime in 2022—which as of now is 
still the target….” (Mark D. Faram, “Carrier Ford Underway For Tests as Navy Mulls Future Schedule,” Defense & 
Aerospace Report, October 25, 2019.) 
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Navy Ford (CVN-78) Class Aircraft Carrier Program: Background and Issues for Congress 
 
The Navy removed its program manager for the first-in-class USS Gerald R. Ford (CVN-
78), as Navy acquisition chief James Geurts looks to boost performance in the new carrier 
program. 
Capt.  Ron  Rutan  has  been  moved  from  the  program  office  to  the  Naval  Sea  Systems 
(NAVSEA)  staff,  and  Capt.  Brian  Metcalf  has  taken  over  the  program  office.  Metcalf 
previously served as the San Antonio-class amphibious transport dock (LPD-17) program 
manager and was working as the executive assistant to the commander of NAVSEA prior 
to his reassignment to the CVN-78 program office (PMS 378). 
“Readiness of USS Gerald R. Ford (CVN-78) is the Navy’s top priority, and the progress 
the team made during the Post Shakedown Availability (PSA) met requirements while the 
subsequent eight months of CVN 78’s post-delivery test and trials (PDT&T) period has 
been impressively ahead of plan. Even in the face of a global pandemic, the team has kept 
a lightning pace, and we will continue to do so, for our Navy and our nation, until USS 
Gerald R. Ford completes her post-delivery obligations and is fully available and ready for 
tasking by the Fleet,” NAVSEA spokesman Rory O’Connor told USNI News. 
Still, he said, “with 10 months left in PDT&T, followed by full-ship shock trials in [Fiscal 
Year 2021], we must ensure that the team takes the opportunity to recharge and allow for 
fresh eyes on upcoming challenges as required. While there is no perfect time for leadership 
transitions, it is prudent to bring in renewed energy now to lead the CVN 78 team through 
the challenges ahead. Capt. Metcalf’s proven program management acumen and extensive 
waterfront experience will be a tremendous asset to the CVN 78 team in the months ahead.” 
Metcalf took command of the program office on July 1. 
O’Connor reiterated that there was no specific incident or causal factor that led to Geurts’ 
decision to remove Rutan from the office and bring Metcalf in, but rather it was reflective 
of the program’s performance over time.37 
Navy Efforts to Address Technical Challenges 
In a December 6, 2019, memorandum, then-Acting Secretary of the Navy Thomas Modly stated 
that one of his five immediate objectives would be to “put all hands on deck to make [CVN-78] 
ready as a warship as soon as practically possible.”38 In a December 20, 2019, memorandum, 
Modly elaborated on this effort, stating that “With the successful completion of CVN 78’s Post 
Shakedown Availability and subsequent Independent Steaming Events, finishing work [on the 
ship] and delivering this capability to the fleet as quickly and effectively as possible is one of my 
highest priorities.” The memorandum established a series of specific tasks to be completed by 
certain dates, stated that “The Program Executive Office (PEO) Aircraft Carriers, RADM [Rear 
Admiral] Jim Downey, will be accountable for this Vector as supported activity,” and stated that 
“Our first ‘Make Ford Ready’ summit will occur on January 9, 2020, with every stakeholder in 
government and industry present.”39  
A January 30, 2020, press report stated 
                                                 
37 Megan Eckstein, “Navy Removes Ford Carrier Program Manager, Citing Performance Over Time,” USNI News, July 
2, 2020. See also Geoff Ziezulewicz, “Navy Fires Program Manager for Troubled Ford Aircraft Carrier,” Navy Times, 
July 7, 2020. 
38 Thomas B. Modly, memorandum for distribution, subject “SecNav [Secretary of the Navy] Vector 1,” December 6, 
2019, p. 1. 
39 Thomas B. Modly, memorandum for distribution, subject “SecNav [Secretary of the Navy] Vector 3,” December 20, 
2019. 
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Navy Ford (CVN-78) Class Aircraft Carrier Program: Background and Issues for Congress 
 
Over the past several months, the US Navy has been on a full-court press to show the world 
that its newest $14 billion super carrier isn’t a dud. 
Once sarcastically referred to as “Building 78,” senior leaders are stressing that the ship is 
well on its way to becoming a game-changing warship.  
Earlier  this  week,  Navy  acquisition  chief  Hondo  Geurts  accompanied  a  small  group  of 
reporters  to  the  ship,  the  latest  batch  of  journalists  to  be  given  free  access  to  the  ship’s 
leadership and crew. 
Geurts,  Ford’s  commanding  officer,  Capt.  JJ  “Yank”  Cummings,  and  his  officers  and 
sailors clearly telegraphed that the ship has indeed turned a corner thanks to a lot of hard 
work.  
Cumming’s first-class leadership has inspired the Ford team and imbued it with a can-do 
spirit to distance the ship’s troubled past and focus on its bright future. 
Geurts has focused on setting the conditions for long-term success by working with and 
incentivizing  major  contractors  whether  shipbuilder  Huntington  Ingalls  Industries  to 
catapult and arresting gear maker General Atomics to radar maker Raytheon and thousands 
of others to bend to the task. 
It is welcome news given delays getting the ship into the fleet has had a cascading effect, 
raising concerns whether the aging Nimitz and Eisenhower will have to remain in service 
longer. 
It is equally welcome that the Navy is finally realized the benefits of talking openly about 
its  challenges  and  progress.  The  former  lockdown  on  information  only  fueled  rumor, 
speculation and lawmaker and journalists’ ire. Worse, it gave the appearance that the Navy 
was doing nothing to solve the Ford’s problems, only engaging fully a few months ago.  
Yes, Ford is expensive, late and over budget. She is also coming into service at a time when 
there is a robust debate about whether carriers constitute a critical capability or vulnerable 
liability. [Then-]Acting Navy Secretary Tom Modly has been candid about his concerns 
about  the  vulnerability  of  the  current  carrier  fleet—arguing  that  a  new  design  may  be 
necessary after the fourth of the class, the Doris Miller is delivered. 
That said, Modly has also made clear it’s vital the Navy get the Ford-class right. He’s right. 
For the foreseeable future, big-deck aircraft carriers will be critical national capability and 
capital asset around which the US Navy will be organized until the service determine what 
new kind of smaller ship would be knitted into a more distributed architecture…. 
Ford  has  made  dramatic  progress  over  the  past  months  because  of  a  prolonged  post-
shakedown availability that tackled engine, catapult, arresting gear and radar challenges. 
Sailors  working  closely  with  contractors  and  their  Naval  Sea  Systems  Command 
teammates were instrumental by applying their experience, innovative spirit and good old 
fashioned  hard  work. (Of 2,700 aboard Ford, 2,200 are crew and the remaining 500 are 
Navy personnel and contractors, 100 from HII alone.) 
It’s  this  approach  that  is  systemically  resolving  the  ship’s  elevator  problems.  Sailors 
identified design and production problems, realigning guides, relocating and recalibrating 
limit switches to get three certified so far and another four by year’s end.40 
On February 27, 2020, Navy leaders testified that 
With the successful completion of CVN 78’s Post Shakedown Availability and subsequent 
Independent Steaming Events, finishing our work and delivering this capability to the fleet 
                                                 
40 Vago Muradian, “Learning Ford’s Lessons—Fast,” Defense & Aerospace Report, January 30, 2020. See also David 
B. Larter, “The Carrier Ford Is Trying to Shake Years of Controversy and Find Its Groove,” Defense News, January 30, 
2020. 
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as quickly and effectively as  possible  is one  of DON’s  [the  Department of the  Navy’s] 
highest priorities. The Navy has learned with each test and is consistently bringing each of 
the  innovative  systems  online.  FORD  is  currently  undergoing  final  air  compatibility 
testing, bringing the entire carrier air wing onboard and progressing towards her maiden 
deployment.41 
A September 14, 2020, press report stated 
The U.S. Navy is working to improve the reliability of the new aircraft launch and recovery 
systems as the service pushes its newest and most expensive aircraft carrier toward its first 
deployment, the head of Naval Air Forces Atlantic said Sept. 12. 
Rear Adm. John Meier told a virtual audience at the annual Tailhook symposium that while 
reliability concerns were at the top of the agenda, the carrier Ford is on track to be ready 
for tasking in 2022. 
“The issue we are working closely on is building out of the gate reliability, making sure 
[the Electromagnetic Aircraft Launch System] and [Advanced Arresting Gear] has the right 
sparing, parts and equipment in the event that something breaks,” Meier said. "But its also 
making sure we have the right procedures and methodologies so those things don’t break. 
“We’re still not where we want to be, but we’ve made great strides and we’re getting better 
every year.”42 
A November 24, 2020, press report stated 
USS Gerald R. Ford (CVN-78) has been in and out of port for more than a year as the Navy 
continues to wring out the bugs from the new technologies on the next-generation carrier. 
While  progress  is  steady,  the  program  still  has  several  milestones  to  achieve  before  it’s 
ready for its inaugural deployment. 
Ford is slated to finish its post-delivery test and trials period and certify all of its weapons 
elevators, which have caused delays to the ship’s schedule, before starting full-ship shock 
trials in May. 
During a USNI News trip last week aboard Ford, crew members were optimistic about the 
possibilities the first-in-class carrier holds for the Navy’s future and the progress the crew 
has made in recent at-sea periods. But with a few more months to go in the testing stage, 
the crew is still working to increase the reliability of multiple new technologies aboard the 
ship…. 
After facing criticism from lawmakers in both parties over delays to the lead ship, officials 
say Ford’s time at sea over the last year has allowed sailors to experiment with the new 
systems—like the  Advanced  Weapons Elevators,  Advanced Arresting Gear (AAG), and 
Electromagnetic  Aircraft  Launch  System  (EMALS)—while  also  beginning  to  practice 
strike group operations. 
“These are enormous undertakings. There’s been some problems. There’s been some cost 
issues. Most of that’s history,” Rear Adm. James Downey, the Navy’s program executive 
officer for aircraft carriers, told reporters aboard Ford last week…. 
                                                 
41 Statement of the Honorable Thomas B. Modly, Acting Secretary of the Navy, Admiral Michael M. Gilday, Chief of 
Naval Operations, [and] General David H. Berger, Commandant of the U.S. Marine Corps, on [the] Fiscal Year 2021 
Department of the Navy Budget before the House Armed Services Committee, February 27, 2020, p. 29. 
42 David B. Larter, “Here’s When the US Navy Thinks the Carrier Ford Will Be Ready to Deploy,” Defense News, 
September 14, 2020. 
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Downey  said  he  could  not  pinpoint  an  exact  timeframe  for  Ford’s  first  deployment,  but 
Commander of Naval Air Force Atlantic Rear Adm. John Meier in September said Ford is 
on track to deploy in 2022. 
“I can’t tell you the deployment date is this or that. The issue is we’re about 15 percent 
ahead of our  maintenance,  modernization and  ship completion schedule,” Downey said. 
“And now we’ve pulled up [i.e., accelerated the schedule for testing] command and control 
activities. That’s where we are overall.”43 
Potential Oversight Questions 
Potential oversight questions for Congress include the following: 
  Why did the Navy accept delivery of CVN-78 from the shipbuilder and 
commission the ship into service if most or all of its weapon elevators were not 
completed, tested, and certified? 
  What steps has the Navy taken since CVN-78 was delivered to the Navy on May 
31, 2017, to keep Congress informed of challenges regarding the ship’s weapon 
elevators and other ship systems? 
  Why is it taking so long to complete, test, and certify the weapon elevators? 
  How much is it costing to complete, test, and certify the weapon elevators, and 
will the Navy include all of this cost in the ship’s total reported procurement 
cost? 
  When will the ship start its first deployment, and how much of a delay will that 
represent compared to the ship’s original schedule for starting its first 
deployment? 
  How much additional operational stress is the delay in CVN-78’s first 
deployment placing on the Navy’s 10 other aircraft carriers? 
  What steps is the Navy taking to ensure that a similar situation does not arise 
regarding the construction and initial deployments of CVN-79, CVN-80, and 
CVN-81? 
Pricing of Proposed FY2021 Work on CVN-78 Program 
Another issue for Congress is whether the Navy has accurately priced the work it is proposing to 
do on the CVN-78 program in FY2021, particularly with regard to completing work on CVN-78 
and implementing the two-carrier contract for CVN-80 and CVN-81. 
Cost Growth and Managing Costs within Program Cost Caps 
Overview 
Another issue for Congress concerns cost growth in the CVN-78 program, Navy efforts to stem 
that growth, and Navy efforts to manage costs so as to stay within the program’s cost caps. The 
issue has been a continuing oversight issue for Congress several years. Congress in recent years 
                                                 
43 Mallory Shelbourne, “USS Gerald R. Ford Making Steady Progress Ahead of Deployment,” USNI News, November 
24, 2020. 
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has passed legislation on the issue that is in addition to the earlier-mentioned legislation that 
established and amended cost caps for the ships.44 
As shown in Table 2, the estimated procurement costs of CVN-78, CVN-79, and CVN-80 have 
grown 27.0%, 24.0%, and 15.0%, respectively, since the submission of the FY2008 budget. As 
shown in Table 1, cost growth on CVN-78 required the Navy to program $1,394.9 million in 
cost-to-complete (CC) procurement funding for the ship in FY2014-FY2016 and FY2018,45 to 
request another $71.0 million in CC funding for CVN-78 for FY2021, and to program another 
$74 million in CC funding for CVN-79 for FY2022. 
As also shown in Table 2, however, cost growth on CVN-78, CVN-79, and CVN-80 has slowed 
since FY2013 and FY2014: 
  while the estimated cost of CVN-78 grew considerably between the FY2008 
budget (the budget in which CVN-78 was procured) and the FY2014 budget, 
since the FY2014 budget, it has grown by only a small amount (3.8%); 
  while the estimated cost of CVN-79 grew considerably between the FY2008 
budget and the FY2013 budget (in part because the procurement date for the ship 
was deferred by one year in the FY2010 budget),46 since the FY2013 budget it 
has declined by a small amount (0.11%); and 
  while the estimated cost of CVN-80 grew considerably between the FY2008 
budget and the FY2013 budget (in part because the procurement date for the ship 
was deferred by two years in the FY2010 budget),47 since the FY2013 budget it 
has declined by 11.2%. 
                                                 
44 This additional legislation includes: 
Section 128 of the FY2016 National Defense Authorization Act (S. 1356/P.L. 114-92 of November 25, 2015), which 
established a limitation on availability of funds for CVN–79 until certain conditions were met; 
Section 126 of the FY2017 National Defense Authorization Act (S. 2943/P.L. 114-328 of December 23, 2016), which 
established a limitation on availability of funds for procurement of CVN–80 until certain conditions were met; 
Section 121(b) of the FY2018 National Defense Authorization Act (H.R. 2810/P.L. 115-91 of December 12, 2017), 
which provided for a waiver on the limitation of availability of funds for CVN–79; and 
Section 122 of the FY2020 National Defense Authorization Act (S. 1790/P.L. 116-92 of December 20, 2020), which 
modified the above-listed Section 126 of P.L. 114-328 regarding an annual report on cost targets for CVN-78 class 
carriers. 
45 The Navy’s FY2021 budget submission reflects the reprogramming of $161.5 million of additional funding for 
CVN-78 into FY2009, FY2011, and FY2012, including $86.0 million reprogrammed into FY2012. As discussed earlier 
in the note to Table 1, even though FY2012 is after FY2011 (CVN-78’s original final year of full funding), the Navy 
characterizes the $86.0 million reprogrammed into FY2012 as full funding rather than cost-to-complete funding on the 
grounds that in the years since FY2011, as discussed earlier in this report (see footnote 14), the authority to use 
incremental funding for procuring aircraft carriers has been expanded by Congress to permit more than the four years 
of incremental funding that were permitted at the time that CVN-78 was initially funded. 
46 Deferring the ship’s procurement from FY2012 to FY2013 put another year of inflation into the ship’s estimated cost 
in then-year dollars (which are the type of dollars shown in Table 2), and may have reduced production learning curve 
benefits in shifting from production of CVN-78 to production of CVN-79. 
47 Deferring the ship’s procurement from FY2016 to FY2018 put additional years of inflation into the ship’s estimated 
cost in then-year dollars (which are the type of dollars shown in Table 2), and may have reduced production learning 
curve benefits in shifting from production of CVN-79 to production of CVN-80. 
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CVN-78 
Past Sources of Cost Growth 
A primary source of past cost growth on CVN-78 appears to have been an unrealistically low 
original cost estimate for the ship in the FY2008 budget submission, which might have reflected 
an underestimate of the intrinsic challenges of building the then-new Ford-class design compared 
to those of building the previous and well understood Nimitz-class design.48 
In addition to this general cause of past cost growth, additional and more-specific past risks of 
cost growth for CVN-78 included certain new systems to be installed on the ship whose 
development, if delayed, could delay the ship’s completion. These included a new type of aircraft 
catapult called the Electromagnetic Launch System (EMALS), a new aircraft arresting system 
called the Advanced Arresting Gear (AAG), and the ship’s primary radar, called the Dual Band 
Radar (DBR). Congress followed these and other sources of risk of cost growth on CVN-78 for 
years. 
Press Reports 
An October 25, 2019, press report stated 
The Navy’s most expensive vessel is getting even costlier, as the service says it needs to 
add as  much as $197  million  more to correct deficiencies  with the USS Gerald R. Ford 
aircraft carrier. 
That includes completing the installation and certification of 11 elevators to lift munitions 
and other equipment from below decks that were supposed to be ready more than two years 
ago. 
                                                 
48 The Congressional Budget office (CBO) in 2008 and GAO in 2007 questioned the accuracy of the Navy’s cost 
estimate for CVN-78. CBO reported in June 2008 that it estimated that CVN-78 would cost $11.2 billion in constant 
FY2009 dollars, or about $900 million more than the Navy’s estimate of $10.3 billion in constant FY2009 dollars, and 
that if “CVN-78 experienced cost growth similar to that of other lead ships that the Navy has purchased in the past 10 
years, costs could be much higher still.” CBO also reported that, although the Navy publicly expressed confidence in its 
cost estimate for CVN-78, the Navy had assigned a confidence level of less than 50% to its estimate, meaning that the 
Navy believed there was more than a 50% chance that the estimate would be exceeded. (Congressional Budget Office, 
Resource Implications of the Navy’s Fiscal Year 2009 Shipbuilding Plan, June 9, 2008, p. 20.) GAO reported in 
August 2007 that 
Costs for CVN 78 will likely exceed the budget for several reasons. First, the Navy’s cost estimate, 
which underpins the budget, is optimistic. For example, the Navy assumes that CVN 78 will be 
built with fewer labor hours than were needed for the previous two carriers. Second, the Navy’s 
target cost for ship construction may not be achievable. The shipbuilder’s initial cost estimate for 
construction was 22 percent higher than the Navy’s cost target, which was based on the budget. 
Although the Navy and the shipbuilder are working on ways to reduce costs, the actual costs to 
build the ship will likely increase above the Navy’s target. Third, the Navy’s ability to manage 
issues that affect cost suffers from insufficient cost surveillance. Without effective cost 
surveillance, the Navy will not be able to identify early signs of cost growth and take necessary 
corrective action. 
(Government Accountability Office, Defense Acquisitions[:] Navy Faces Challenges Constructing 
the Aircraft Carrier Gerald R. Ford within Budget, GAO-07-866, August 2007, summary page. See 
also Government Accountability Office, Defense Acquisitions[:] Realistic Business Cases Needed 
to Execute Navy Shipbuilding Programs, Statement of Paul L. Francis, Director, Acquisition and 
Sourcing Management Team, Testimony Before the Subcommittee on Seapower and Expeditionary 
Forces, Committee on Armed Services, House of Representatives, July 24, 2007 (GAO-07-943T), 
p. 15.) 
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The  previously  undisclosed  notification  to  Congress  is  on  top  of  an  extra  $120  million 
identified in May 2018 to correct earlier deficiencies. The move last year caused the carrier 
to  breach  a  $12.9  billion  cost  cap  set  by  Congress  in  an  effort  to  stop  spiraling  cost 
increases. The new request takes the carrier’s estimated cost to $13.22 billion. 
The latest funding is needed “to correct deficiencies identified during testing to ensure the 
safety of the ship and personnel and to deliver an operational ship to the fleet,” Captain 
Danny Hernandez, a Navy spokesman, said in a statement…. 
More money also is needed to pay for “additional labor to address and correct technical 
issues,  completing  deferred  work,”  and  “there  are  also  time  charges  associated  with  a 
longer repair period,” the Pentagon comptroller said in an Oct. 7 document to Congress 
requesting  permission  for  the  Navy  to  shift  $40  million  from  prior-year  programs.  The 
remaining  $157  million  would  come  from  funds  this  fiscal  year  and  2021,  Hernandez 
said.49 
An October 28, 2019, press report stated 
A congressionally-imposed cost cap remains in place on the Ford, however, and the Navy 
in late September received permission to add $197 million to the ship’s acquisition cost, 
for  a  new  total  of  $13.224  billion.  The  new  monies  were  needed,  the  Navy  said  in  a 
statement, “in order to correct deficiencies identified during testing, to ensure the safety of 
the ship and personnel, and to deliver an operational ship to the fleet.” 
The additional money also includes more for work on the elevators. The new money will 
come from the current 2019 budget and the future fiscal 2020 and 2021 budgets.50 
An October 30, 2019, press report stated that Secretary of the Navy Richard Spencer, at a press 
roundtable on that date, 
said  he  has  “medium  confidence”  that  a  recent  $197  million  reprogramming  request  to 
Congress to fund more Ford fixes will be enough, simply because “first of classes is tough.” 
“I’d be remiss if I said that was the last, to be very frank. I’d rather have the option to say 
we’re going to come for more than saying no we’re capped off now. I feel good on what 
we’re finally learning on the end of this birthing process,” Spencer said.51 
CVNs 79, 80, and 81 
Confidence Levels 
The Navy states that it is working to control cost growth on CVNs 79, 80, and 81. Even so, the 
Navy states that its confidence levels for its estimated procurement costs (not including costs for 
class-wide spare parts) for CVNs 79, 80, and 81 were 36%, 22%, and 20% as of June 2019, 
respectively, meaning that the Navy as of June 2019 estimated that the risk of future cost growth 
on CVNs 79, 80, and 81 were 64%, 78%, and 80%, respectively.52 
                                                 
49 Anthony Capaccio, “Navy’s $13 Billion Carrier Needs Another $197 Million in Fixes,” Bloomberg, October 25, 
2019. 
50 Christopher P. Cavas, “Heady Days for US Navy’s Carrier Program,” Defense & Aerospace Report, October 28, 
2019. 
51 Rich Abott, “SECNAV: Ford Issues Due To Cost Cap, Explains Timeline,” Defense Daily, October 30, 2019. See 
also Megan Eckstein, “SECNAV Spencer: Carrier Ford Challenges Tied to Costs Caps, Requirements Process,” USNI 
News, October 30, 2019; Paul McCleary, “SecNav Again Blasts Huntington Ingalls On Ford Carriers,” Breaking 
Defense, October 30, 2019. 
52 Source: Navy information paper provided to CRS by Navy Office of legislative Affairs on June 20, 2019. 
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October 2019 CBO Report 
An October 2019 CBO report on the potential cost of the Navy’s 30-year shipbuilding plan states 
the following regarding the CVN-78 program: 
The Navy’s current estimate of the total cost of the USS Gerald R. Ford, the lead ship of 
the CVN-78 class, is $13.1 billion in nominal dollars appropriated over the period from 
2001 to 2018. CBO used the Navy’s inflation index for naval shipbuilding to convert that 
figure to $16.2 billion in 2019 dollars, or 25 percent more than the corresponding estimate 
when the ship was first authorized in 2008. Neither the Navy’s nor CBO’s estimate includes 
the $5 billion in research and development costs that apply to the entire class. 
Because construction of the lead ship is finished, CBO used the Navy’s estimate for that 
ship to estimate the cost of successive ships in the  class. But not all of the cost risk has 
been  eliminated;  in  particular,  the  ship’s  power  systems,  advanced  arresting  gear  (the 
system used to recover fixed-wing aircraft landing on the ship), and weapons elevators are 
not  yet  working  properly.  It  is  not  clear  how  much  those  problems  will  cost  to  fix,  but 
current Navy estimates suggest that it will be several tens of millions of dollars or more. 
CBO does not have enough information to independently estimate those final repair costs. 
The next carrier after the CVN-78 is the CVN-79, the John F. Kennedy, which is expected 
to be completed in 2024 and deployed in 2026. Funding for the ship began in 2007, the 
Congress officially authorized its construction in 2013, and the planned appropriations for 
it  were  completed  in  2018.  The  Navy  estimates  that  the  ship  will  cost  $11.3  billion  in 
nominal dollars (or $11.9 billion in 2019 dollars). The Navy’s 2014 selected acquisition 
report  on  the  CVN-79  states  that  “the  Navy  and  shipbuilder  have  made  fundamental 
changes in the manner in which the CVN 79 will be built to incorporate lessons learned 
from CVN 78 and eliminate the key contributors to cost performance challenges realized 
in  the  construction  of  CVN  78.”  Nevertheless,  the  Navy  informed  CBO  that  there  is  a 
greater  than  60  percent  chance  that  the  ship’s  final  cost  will  be  more  than  the  current 
estimate. Although CBO expects the Navy to achieve a considerable cost reduction in the 
CVN-79 compared with the CVN-78, as is typical with the second ship of a class, CBO’s 
estimate is higher than the Navy’s. Specifically, CBO estimates that the ship will cost $12.4 
billion in nominal dollars (or $12.9 billion in 2019 dollars), about 9 percent more than the 
Navy’s estimate. 
In 2018, the Congress authorized the third carrier of the  class, the Enterprise (CVN-80). 
Appropriations for that ship began in 2016 and are expected to be complete by 2025. In 
2019, the Congress authorized the Navy to purchase materials jointly for the CVN-80 and 
the next ship, the CVN-81, to save money by buying in greater quantity. It also authorized 
the  Navy  to  change  the  sequencing  involved  in  building  the  ships  to  gain  greater 
efficiencies  in  their  construction.  Although  that  legislative  action  is  known  as  a  “two-
carrier  buy,”  the  Navy  would  not  be  building  both  ships  at  exactly  the  same  time. 
Purchasing the two ships together would accelerate the CVN-81’s construction by only one 
year compared with buying the ships individually as envisioned in the 2019 shipbuilding 
plan. 
In  the  2020  budget,  the  Navy  estimated  that  the  CVN-80  would  cost  $12.3  billion  in 
nominal dollars (or $11.4 billion in 2019 dollars). That represents a savings of $300 million 
compared with the Navy’s estimate in the 2019 budget. In contrast, CBO estimates that the 
CVN-80  would  cost  $13.6  billion  in  nominal  dollars  (or  $12.4  billion  in  2019  dollars), 
about 9 percent more than the Navy’s estimate. In information provided to CBO as part of 
the 2019 budget presentation, the Navy indicated that there was a greater than 60 percent 
chance that the ship’s final cost will be more than it estimated; in contrast, with the 2020 
budget, the Navy puts that figure at 78 percent. Thus, it is not clear whether the service’s 
2020  estimates  incorporate  savings  stemming  from  a  two-carrier  buy  or  simply  an 
acceptance of increased risk of future cost growth. 
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With respect to the CVN-81, the pattern is similar. In the 2019 budget, the Navy estimated 
the CVN-81 at $15.1 billion in nominal dollars. In the 2020 budget with the two-carrier 
buy, the Navy estimated the cost of the ship at $12.6 billion in nominal dollars (or $10.5 
billion in 2019 dollars), for a savings of $2.5 billion. However, the Navy also told CBO 
that there is an 80 percent chance that the final cost will be higher than the current estimate, 
compared with the roughly 40 percent chance indicated in the 2019 budget. CBO estimates 
that  the  CVN-81  would  cost  $14.4  billion  in  nominal  dollars  (or  $11.9  billion  in  2019 
dollars), or 14 percent more than the Navy’s estimate. 
Overall,  the  Navy  estimates  an  average  cost  of  $12.7  billion  (in  2019  dollars)  for  the  7 
carriers (CVN-81 through CVN-87) in the 2020 shipbuilding plan. CBO’s estimate is $13.0 
billion per ship….53 
CVN-79 
Navy officials have stated that they are working to control the cost of CVN-79 by equipping the 
ship with a less expensive primary radar,54 by turning down opportunities to add features to the 
ship that would have made the ship more capable than CVN-78 but would also have increased 
CVN-79’s cost, and by using a build strategy for the ship that incorporates improvements over the 
build strategy that was used for CVN-78. These build-strategy improvements, Navy officials have 
said, include the following items, among others: 
  achieving a higher percentage of outfitting of ship modules before modules are 
stacked together to form the ship; 
  achieving “learning inside the ship,” which means producing similar-looking ship 
modules in an assembly line-like series, so as to achieve improved production 
learning curve benefits in the production of these modules; and 
  more economical ordering of parts and materials including greater use of batch 
ordering of parts and materials, as opposed to ordering parts and materials on an 
individual basis as each is needed. 
An August 5, 2020, press report stated 
The Navy vowed that a runaway budget wouldn’t be allowed again after the USS Gerald 
Ford, the first in a new class of aircraft carriers, cost a record $13.3 billion. Now, the price 
for the second ship is creeping up. 
The  service’s  estimate  for  shipbuilder  Huntington  Ingalls  Industries  Inc.  to  design  and 
construct the USS John F. Kennedy has increased to $3.58 billion, up 7% from the $3.35 
billion contract awarded in 2015, according to the carrier program’s Selected Acquisition 
Report for fiscal 2021. 
That underscores previous  warnings that the  fully outfitted carrier may exceed an $11.4 
billion cost cap imposed by Congress. The contractor is falling short by a key measure of 
labor efficiency, the Navy said in the report obtained by Bloomberg News. 
Its workforce performed 91 cents of work for every Navy dollar spent in the last year, down 
from the more acceptable level of 95 cents per dollar over the same timeframe, according 
to the report. 
                                                 
53 Congressional Budget Office, An Analysis of the Navy’s Fiscal Year 2020 Shipbuilding Plan, October 2019, pp. 17-
19. 
54 See, for example, Megan Eckstein, “PEO Carriers: CVN-79 Will Have a New Radar, Save $180M Compared to 
[CVN-78’s] Dual Band Radar,” USNI News, March 17, 2015; Christopher P. Cavas, “Dual Band Radar Swapped Out 
In New Carriers,” Defense News, March 17, 2015; Christopher P. Cavas, “New US Carrier Radar Enters the Picture,” 
Defense News, March 23, 2015. 
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Huntington Ingalls also is falling short of a Navy goal to reduce cumulative labor hours by 
at least 18% from the first ship. With the vessel 69% complete, the Kennedy is performing 
at a 16% improvement over the Ford at the same point, Captain Danny Hernandez, a Navy 
spokesman, said in an email. 
Hernandez said the cost report’s figures stem in part from changes such as improvements 
in warfare capability and lessons learned from the Ford’s recent post-delivery “shakedown” 
sea  trials.  There  are  additional  costs  “from  congressional  direction”  requiring  that  the 
Kennedy be capable of deploying with F-35 jets by mid-2025, he said. 
The cost increases are also “due to delays relating to electrical, sheet metal, painting and 
platform engineering work,” the Navy said in the Selected Acquisition Report. The JFK is 
expected to be delivered in 2024…. 
But the report warned that “if the current cost performance continues, then the budget will 
be  exhausted  prior  to  the  completion”  of  the  carrier.  That  could  force  the  Defense 
Department to make the case to lawmakers for easing the cost cap. 
Beci Brenton, a spokeswoman for Newport News, Virginia-based Huntington Ingalls, said 
the  carrier’s  construction  is  about  72%  complete.  The  company  “continues  to  see  the 
benefits  associated  with  significant  build  strategy  changes  and  incorporation  of  lessons 
learned” from its predecessor. 
“We  track  cost  and  schedule  trends  continuously  and  share  that  information  with  our 
customer,” the Navy, Brenton said.55 
A November 7, 2019, press report states 
It was a joyous day for Mike Butler and his enormous crew of shipyard workers who have 
labored for the past four years to build America’s next super carrier. 
The program director for CVN-79, the future aircraft carrier John F. Kennedy, donned a 
hardhat and briefed assembled members of the press on Oct. 29, eager to tout the progress 
he and his colleagues made. 
“Today we’re going to flood the dock, it’s the first time the ship will be in the water since 
we started construction, since we started in August 2015,” Butler said. “It will take about 
10 hours. Dock holds about 160 million gallons of water, so it will take some time to get 
in here. … And we’re flooding the dock about three months ahead of schedule, so that’s a 
great accomplishment for our folks.” 
Kennedy  is  about  1,300  tons  heavier  than  the  aircraft  carrier  Gerald  R.  Ford  was  at  the 
same point in its life span, and Butler said that’s an indication of Kennedy’s solid progress. 
“There was a significant amount of change and improvements in how we built this ship 
that are helping us build this ship cheaper than we have on CVN-78,” he said, referring to 
the Ford. 
For Butler and his workforce at Huntington Ingalls Industries’ Newport News, Virginia, 
shipyard, the Kennedy is a chance to right the ship and demonstrate the yard can learn from 
its challenges with Ford, even as the first-in-class aircraft carrier has become embroiled in 
yet another controversy over delays.… 
“The  main  thing  we  did  was  shift  more  work  earlier  in  the  process,”  Butler  said.  “We 
moved a lot of work traditionally done on the ship to our final assembly platen, and that 
moved it to an area more conducive to better efficiency and better cost. We got a lot of that 
work done earlier than we had done before. 
                                                 
55 Anthony Capaccio, “Next Carrier’s Cost Creeps Up After First One Hit $13.3 Billion,” Bloomberg, August 5, 2020. 
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“That allows us to build larger super-lifts and put more outfitting in before we erected them 
on the ship.” 
The new approach at Newport News has been empowered by digital renderings that allow 
workers to build out spaces with a greater level of detail before piecing together the ship. 
“The main difference is with the product model, early on with the 3D-designed product 
model—without that we could not have moved so much work earlier. For example, with 
Nimitz class, we had a lot of hole cuts in bulkheads for piping and electrical to pass through. 
On Nimitz class, most of that was cut on the ship. Here, we cut virtually all those holes in 
the  shop.  We  mounted  a  lot  of  equipment  in  the  shop.  We  could  have  never  done  that 
without the product model. 
“And without the product model, we would have never been able to do the digital work 
packages and things that we are able to do electronically.” 
One of the major issues facing Newport News has been its relatively inexperienced labor 
force. Many of the older, most skilled workers are retiring. That, coupled with a reduction 
in the Navy’s overall shipbuilding needs in past decades, has put pressure on the remaining 
pool of skilled labor from which shipyards like Newport News can draw. 
That’s prompted hiring of new workers and training of a new generation of skilled workers 
in places such as Connecticut’s General Dynamics Electric Boat and in Hampton Roads, 
Virginia.  However,  the  delays  associated  with  training  new  workers  who  perform  tasks 
more slowly than a more experienced workforce can impact the final cost of a ship, either 
sticking the Navy with a higher bill or taking a bite out of company profits, depending on 
how a contract is structured. 
“Big picture is that it’s not really a challenge [having a  green workforce],” Butler said. 
“We’ve hired about 8,000 people in the last couple of years. Of course, that means we have 
to bring them in and train them to be shipbuilders, which takes some time, but there is an 
advantage to having a new and younger workforce. 
“Especially as we move to more digital, electronic work packages. The younger workforce 
is much more adept at that, and it’s working very well.”56 
Issues Raised in December 2019 DOT&E and June 2020 
GAO Reports 
Another oversight issue for Congress concerns CVN-78 program issues raised in a December 
2019 report from DOD’s Director, Operational Test and Evaluation (DOT&E)—DOT&E’s 
annual report for FY2019—and the 2020 edition of the Government Accountability Office’s 
(GAO’s) annual report surveying selected DOD weapon acquisition programs, which was 
published in June 2020. 
December 2019 DOT&E Report 
Regarding the CVN-78 program, the December 2019 DOT&E report stated the following in part: 
Assessment 
• As noted in previous annual reports, the test schedule has been aggressive. This year, the 
planned schedule slipped over a year. The recent extension in Planned Ship Availability 
                                                 
56 David B. Larter, “Amid the Latest Ford Controversy, a Green Workforce Is Making Rapid Progress on Its Sister 
Ship,” Defense News, November 7, 2019. 
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delayed both phases of initial operational testing until FY22, and pushed the ship’s first 
deployment to FY23. 
Reliability 
• Four of CVN 78’s new systems stand out as being critical to flight operations: EMALS, 
AAG, DBR, and AWE. Overall, the poor reliability demonstrated by AAG and EMALS 
and  the  uncertain  reliability  of  DBR  and  AWE  could  further  delay  CVN  78  IOT&E. 
Reliability  estimates  derived  from  test  data  for  EMALS  and  AAG  are  discussed  in 
following subsections. Since CVN 78 spent FY19 in the shipyard for PSA, the Navy has 
not conducted additional aircraft launches or recoveries from the ship. For DBR and AWE, 
only engineering reliability estimates have been provided. 
EMALS57 
• Through the first 747 shipboard launches, EMALS suffered 10 critical failures. This is 
well  below  the  requirement  for  Mean  Cycles  Between  Critical  Failures,  where  a  cycle 
represents the launch of one aircraft. The Navy identified 9 unique Incident Reports (IRs) 
that resulted in the 10 critical failures for EMALS. Of the nine IRs, one fix was installed 
during PSA and is in place to support flight operations during CVN 78’s Post Delivery 
Test and Trials (PDT&T). Four IRs will be corrected commencing in late FY20. The four 
remaining  IRs  occurred  only  once  during  pre-PSA  operations,  are  deemed  low  priority, 
and will be monitored during future flight operations. 
•  The  reliability  concerns  are  exacerbated  by  the  fact  that  the  crew  cannot  readily 
electrically isolate EMALS components during flight operations due to the shared nature 
of the Energy Storage Groups and Power Conversion Subsystem inverters on board CVN 
78. The process for electrically isolating equipment is time-consuming; spinning down the 
EMALS  motor/generators  takes  1.5  hours  by  itself.  The  inability  to  readily  electrically 
isolate equipment precludes EMALS maintenance during flight operations. 
AAG 
• The Program Office redesigned major components that did not meet system specifications 
during  land-based  testing.  Through  the  first  747  attempted  shipboard  landings,  AAG 
suffered 10 operational mission failures, including one incident to the engine that supports 
the  barricade.  The  Navy  identified  7  unique  IRs  that  caused  the  10  operational  mission 
failures for AAG. Of the seven, six fixes have been installed and will be in place to support 
flight  operations  during  CVN  78’s  PDT&T.  The  one  remaining  IR  occurred  once,  is 
deemed low priority, and will be monitored during future flight operations. 
• This reliability estimate  falls  well below the  re-baselined reliability growth curve  and 
well below the requirement for Mean Cycles Between Operational Mission Failures, where 
a cycle represents the recovery of one aircraft. 
• The reliability concerns are magnified by the current AAG design that does not allow 
electrical  isolation  of  the  Power  Conditioning  Subsystem  equipment  from  high  power 
buses, limiting corrective maintenance on below-deck equipment during flight operations. 
Combat System 
                                                 
57 For additional discussion regarding the reliability of EMALS, see Sam LaGrone, “USS Gerald Ford EMALS 
Launching System Suffers Fault During Testing Period,” USNI News, June 8 (updated June 12), 2020; Rich Abott, 
“Ford EMALS Went Down During Testing At Sea,” Defense Daily, June 8, 2020; Mallory Shelbourne, “EMALS 
Aboard Ford Went Out, Interrupting Flight Operations,” Inside Defense, June 9, 2020; Gina Harkins, “Navy Carrier 
Ford's High-Tech EMALS Catapult System Breaks During Sea Trials,” Military.com, June 11, 2020; Mallory 
Shelbourne, “Geurts: Navy Still Working to Diagnose Problem That Caused EMALS Failure on Ford,” Inside Defense, 
June 18, 2020; Megan Eckstein, “Navy Unsure If Recent EMALS Fault Was Equipment or Procedure Problem, But 
Workaround Has Been Validated,” USNI News, June 19, 2020. 
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• The CVN 78 SDTS events revealed good performance of the SSDS Mark 2 command 
decision system due to its ability to manage the combat system tracks, manage and apply 
the  ship’s  engagement  doctrine,  and  schedule  intercepts  and  launch  missiles  against 
incoming subsonic anti-ship cruise missile (ASCM) surrogates. 
• In the most recent CVN 78 SDTS developmental test event, the MFR and CEC failed to 
maintain  detections  and  tracks  for  one  of  the  threat  surrogates  in  the  multi-target  raid; 
however, that raid presented a scenario that was more challenging to the combat system 
than originally planned. 
•  In  developmental  testing  on  SDTS,  the  SLQ-32(V)6  electronic  surveillance  system 
demonstrated  poor  performance  that  prompted  the  Navy  to  delay  additional  operational 
tests until those problems could be corrected. Similar problems were previously reported 
in DOT&E’s September 2016 SLQ-32(V)6 SEWIP Block 2 IOT&E Report. 
• The  Navy continues to address known deficiencies  with the  DBR Air Traffic  Control 
(ATC), but the resolution of those problems will not be known until CVN 78 returns to sea. 
In at-sea testing before the PSA, DBR was plagued by extraneous false and close-in dual 
tracks  adversely  affecting  ATC  performance,  and  Navy  analysis  noted  that  DBR 
performance needs to be improved to support carrier ATC center certification. 
SGR 
• CVN  78 is unlikely to achieve  its SGR requirement.  The  target  threshold is based on 
unrealistic  assumptions  including  fair  weather  and  unlimited  visibility,  and  that  aircraft 
emergencies, failures of shipboard equipment, ship maneuvers, and manning shortfalls will 
not affect flight operations. During the 2013 operational assessment, DOT&E conducted 
an analysis of past aircraft carrier operations in major conflicts. The analysis concludes that 
the CVN 78 SGR requirement is well above historical levels. 
• DOT&E plans to assess CVN 78 performance during IOT&E by comparing it to the SGR 
requirement, as well as to the demonstrated performance of the Nimitz-class carriers. 
• Poor reliability of key systems that support sortie generation on CVN 78 could cause a 
cascading series of delays during flight operations that would affect CVN 78’s ability to 
generate sorties. The poor or unknown reliability of these critical subsystems represents 
the most risk to the successful completion of CVN 78 IOT&E. 
Manning 
• Based on current expected manning, the berthing capacity for officers and enlisted will 
be exceeded by approximately 100 personnel with some variability in the estimates. This 
also leaves no room for extra personnel during inspections, exercises, or routine face-to-
face turnovers. 
• Planned ship manning requires filling 100 percent of the billets. This is not the Navy’s 
standard practice on other ships, and the personnel and training systems may not be able to 
support  100  percent  manning.  Additionally,  workload  estimates  for  the  many  new 
technologies, such as catapults, arresting gear, radar, and weapons and aircraft elevators 
are not yet well understood. 
Electromagnetic Compatibility 
•  Developmental  testing  identified  significant  electromagnetic  radiation  hazard  and 
interference problems. The Navy continues to characterize and develop mitigation plans 
for the problems, but some operational limitations and restrictions are expected to persist 
into  IOT&E  and  deployment.  The  Navy  will  need  to  develop  capability  assessments  at 
differing levels of system utilization in order for commanders to make informed decisions 
on system employment. 
Live Fire Test & Evaluation 
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•  The  potential  vulnerability  of  CVN  78’s  new  critical  systems  to  underwater  threat-
induced shock has not yet been fully characterized. The program continued shock testing 
on EMALS, AAG, and the AWE components during CY19 but because of a scarcity of 
systems, alternatives to component shock testing of DBR components are being pursued 
and  shock  testing  will  likely  not  be  completed  before  the  FSST.  The  Vulnerability 
Assessment Reports delivered to date provide an assessment of the ship’s survivability to 
air-delivered threat engagements. The classified findings in the report identify the specific 
equipment that most frequently would lead to mission capability loss. In FY20, the Navy 
is  scheduled  to  deliver  additional  report  volumes  that  will  assess  vulnerability  to 
underwater threats and compliance with Operational Requirements Document survivability 
criteria. 
Recommendations 
The Navy should: 
1. Continue to characterize the electromagnetic environment on board CVN 78 and develop 
operating procedures to maximize system effectiveness and maintain safety. As applicable, 
the Navy should utilize the lessons learned from CVN 78 to inform design modifications 
for CVN 79 and future carriers. 
2. Fund all remaining SDTS events and explore the possibility of leaving the MFR on the 
SDTS past 2QFY20 to allow for completion of the CVN 78 self-defense test program. 
3. Fund the CVN 78 lead ship combat system operational testing and the M&S required to 
support assessment of the CVN 78 PRA requirement. 
4. Implement the required software updates to multiple combat system elements to allow 
cueing from external sources necessary to conduct one of the SDTS test events.58 
June 2020 GAO Report 
The June 2020 GAO report, which covers some issues previously discussed in this CRS report, 
stated the following: 
Technology Maturity, Design Stability, and Production Readiness 
This year the Navy reported that all 12 of the Ford Class’s critical technologies were fully 
mature,  an  increase  from  the  nine  technologies  that  were  mature  at  delivery.  However, 
while the Navy assessed the advanced weapons elevators as mature, it ended the first post-
delivery maintenance period in October 2019 with only four of the 11 elevators certified 
to operate. Further, none of the elevators that operate between the main deck and the lower 
decks are currently operational, which means the elevators are still not capable of bringing 
munitions  to  the  flight  deck.  The  Navy  is  working  with  the  shipbuilder  to  complete  all 
elevator work by Spring 2021—an 18-month delay from the schedule we reported last year. 
The Navy also constructed a land-based site to test the performance and reliability of the 
elevators, which is expected to be ready in early 2021. 
Despite maturing its critical technologies, the Navy is still struggling to demonstrate the 
reliability of key systems, including the electromagnetic aircraft launch system (EMALS); 
Advanced  Arresting  Gear  (AAG);  and  dual  band  radar  (DBR).  The  Navy  is  continuing 
shipboard testing for these systems but has delayed operational testing by 18 months while 
it  revises  the  test  schedule  to  coordinate  test  schedules  and  complete  deployment 
preparations. Although the Navy is testing EMALS and AAG on the ship with aircraft, the 
reliability of those systems remains a concern. If these systems cannot function safely by 
                                                 
58 Department of Defense, Director, Operational Test & Evaluation, FY2019 Annual Report, December 20, 2019, pp. 
125-126. 
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the time operational testing begins, CVN 78 will not be able to demonstrate it can rapidly 
deploy aircraft—a key requirement for these carriers. 
Challenges  in  maturing  CVN  78’s  critical  technologies  has  led  to  their  redesign  or 
replacement on later ships in some cases. CVN 79 repeats the CVN 78 design with some 
modifications  and  replaces  DBR  with  the  Enterprise  Air  Surveillance  Radar  (EASR), 
which is in development. The Navy plans to procure two EASR units for CVNs 79 and 80 
and install the CVN 79 unit during that ship’s second phase of delivery. CVNs 80 and 81 
will repeat the design of CVN 79. 
Software and Cybersecurity 
Software  development  for  CVN  78’s  critical  technologies  is  managed  through  separate 
program  offices.  For  example,  a  separate  program  office  manages  AAG  and  EMALS, 
which rely on a mix of commercial and custom software. According to program officials, 
the Navy assessed these systems for cybersecurity vulnerabilities in August and October 
2019. According to CVN 78 program officials, other ship systems have also undergone, or 
are scheduled to undergo, cybersecurity penetration or adversarial testing. The program is 
scheduled to complete an evaluation for potential cybersecurity vulnerabilities connected 
with section 1647 of the National Defense Authorization Act for Fiscal Year 2016 in May 
2022. 
Other Program Issues 
In  September  2019,  the  Navy  increased  the  CVN  78  cost  cap  by  $197  million  to  $13.2 
billion in part to correct deficiencies in the advanced weapons elevators. This is the Navy’s 
third adjustment to the cost cap since 2017. CVN 78’s procurement costs increased by over 
$2.7 billion from its initial cost cap. Continuing technical deficiencies mean the Navy may 
still require more funding to complete this ship. 
Further, the Navy is unlikely to obtain planned cost savings and construction efficiencies 
on the next three ships in the Ford class. We previously reported on the optimistic cost and 
labor  assumptions  for  CVN  79,  based  on  a  projected  18  percent  labor  hour  reduction 
compared to hours to construct CVN 78. In 2019 the shipbuilder increased the estimated 
cost at completion due to using more labor hours for CVN 79 than expected. In addition, 
the Navy awarded a contract to buy two carriers simultaneously—CVNs 80 and 81—based 
on  the  assumption  that  this  strategy  will  save  the  Navy  over  $4  billion.  However,  the 
Navy’s cost analysis showed that CVN 80 and 81 have a high likelihood of experiencing 
cost overruns, and it is uncertain whether the Navy can achieve the expected savings. The 
Navy assumed a further reduction in labor hours compared to CVN 79—about 25 percent 
fewer labor hours than CVN 78—will contribute to cost savings for these ships. 
Program Office Comments 
We provided a draft of this assessment to the program office for review and comment. The 
program office provided technical comments, which we incorporated where appropriate. 
The  program  office  stated  that  CVN  78  is  in  an  18-month  post-delivery  testing  phase; 
completed  over  2,000  aircraft  launches  and  recoveries  since  delivery  in  May  2017;  and 
completed numerous test events and certifications.  According to the program office, the 
Navy certified four elevators and plans to certify two more in April and September of 2020, 
and five remaining elevators are on track for certification in fiscal year 2021. The program 
stated that the Navy launched CVN 79 2 months ahead of schedule in December 2019, and 
construction is 70 percent complete. It also said Navy leadership approved a change for 
CVN 79 from a two-phase acquisition to a single phase delivery strategy and released a 
request  for  proposals  for  this  new  approach  in  January  2020.  Additionally,  the  program 
stated that the Navy awarded the CVNs 80 and 81 detail design and construction contract 
in January 2019 and projected savings of over $4 billion compared to a single ship contract; 
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CVN 80 construction is 3 percent complete and scheduled for delivery in 2028; and CVN 
81 has begun material procurement and is scheduled for delivery in 2032.59 
Procurement of Aircraft Carriers after CVN-81 
Overview 
Another oversight issue for Congress concerns the procurement of aircraft carriers after CVN-81. 
The Navy’s FY2020 30-year shipbuilding plan calls for procuring the next carrier in FY2028, and 
for that carrier to be a CVN, which would make it CVN-82. The question of whether the Navy 
should shift at some point from procuring CVNs like the CVN-78 class to procuring smaller and 
perhaps nonnuclear-powered aircraft carriers has been a recurrent matter of discussion and Navy 
study over the years, and is currently an active discussion in the Navy. 
Advocates of smaller carriers traditionally have argued that they are individually less expensive 
to procure, that the Navy might be able to employ competition between shipyards in their 
procurement (something that the Navy cannot do with large-deck, nuclear-powered carriers like 
the CVN-78 class, because only one U.S. shipyard, HII/NNS, can build aircraft carriers of that 
size), and that today’s aircraft carriers concentrate much of the Navy’s striking power into a 
relatively small number of expensive platforms that adversaries could focus on attacking in time 
of war. 
Supporters of CVNs traditionally have argued that smaller carriers, though individually less 
expensive to procure, are less cost-effective in terms of dollars spent per aircraft embarked or 
aircraft sorties that can be generated, that it might be possible to use competition in procuring 
certain materials and components for large-deck, nuclear-powered aircraft carriers, and that 
smaller carriers, though perhaps affordable in larger numbers, would be individually less 
survivable in time of war than CVNs. 
Section 128(d) of the FY2016 National Defense Authorization Act (S. 1356/P.L. 114-92 of 
November 25, 2015) required the Navy to submit a report on potential requirements, capabilities, 
and alternatives for the future development of aircraft carriers that would replace or supplement 
the CVN–78 class aircraft carrier. The report, which was conducted for the Navy by the RAND 
Corporation, was delivered to the congressional defense committees in classified form in July 
2016. An unclassified version of the report was then prepared and issued in 2017 as a publicly 
released RAND report.60 The question of whether to shift to smaller aircraft carriers was also 
addressed in three studies on future fleet architecture that were required by Section 1067 of the 
FY2016 National Defense Authorization Act (S. 1356/P.L. 114-92 of November 25, 2015). 
Potential New Goal of 8 to 11 Large Carriers and Up to Six Light Carriers 
under New Battle Force 2045 Plan 
Statements from Navy officials reported in the press beginning in February 2019 suggested that 
the Navy and DOD have been considering moving to a new aircraft carrier/naval aviation force 
architecture that might supplement today’s CVNs with smaller and perhaps nonnuclear-powered 
                                                 
59 Government Accountability Office, Defense Acquisitions Annual Assessment[:] Drive to Deliver Capabilities Faster 
Increases Importance of Program Knowledge and Consistent Data for Oversight, GAO-20-439, June 2020, p. 120. 
60 Bradley Martin and Michael McMahon, Future Aircraft Carrier Options, Santa Monica, CA, RAND Corporation, 
2017, 87 pp. 
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aircraft carriers.61 According to these press reports, one option for a smaller carrier is the so-called 
Lighting Carrier, a term referring to an LHA-type amphibious assault ship equipped with an air 
wing consisting largely of F-35B Joint Strike Fighter (JSFs). (The alternate name for the F-35 is 
the Lighting II. The B variant of the F-35, which is currently being procured for the Marine 
Corps, is short takeoff, vertical landing [STOVL] variant that can be operated off of ships with 
flight decks that are shorter than the flight decks of CVNs.) The Navy and Marine Corps have 
conducted experiments with the Lightning Carrier concept.62 Another option for a smaller carrier 
is one whose air wing would consist mostly or entirely of unmanned aerial vehicles (UAVs). The 
Navy in recent years has periodically studied the potential of UAV carriers. 
As discussed earlier in this report, the Navy and the Department of Defense (DOD) since 2019 
have been working to develop a new Navy force-level goal to replace the current 355-ship force-
level goal. Press reports in mid-2020 suggested that DOD at that time was leaning toward a new 
Navy force-level goal that included, among other things, nine large, nuclear-powered carriers 
(CVNs). 
As also discussed earlier in this report, on October 6, 2020, in remarks made in Washington, DC, 
Secretary of Defense Mark Esper provided some details on the Trump Administration’s new 
Navy force-level goal, which it calls Battle Force 2045. This new force-level goal calls for 
achieving a fleet of more than 500 manned and unmanned ships by 2045, including 355 manned 
ships prior to 2035. In his remarks, Esper stated that Battle Force 2045 will include 8 to 11 CVNs 
and up to 6 light aircraft carriers, some of which could be based on the LHA design. It is possible 
that some of these light carriers could be existing LHAs that would be released from duty as 
amphibious ships and repurposed as light aircraft carriers. 
A reduction in the force-level goal for CVNs from the current statutory goal of 12 ships to 8 to 11 
ships could lead to one or more of the following: 
  accelerated retirements for one or more Nimitz-class carriers that have already 
received their mid-life nuclear refueling overhauls (which are called Refueling 
Complex Overhauls, or RCOHs); 
  the cancellation of one or more planned RCOHs for Nimitz-class carriers that 
have not yet received RCOHs, and the consequent early retirement of one or 
more of these ships; 
  a deferral or cancellation of the procurement of CVN-82, which under the Navy’s 
FY2020 30-year shipbuilding plan was scheduled for FY2028; and/or 
  the deferral or cancellation of the construction of CVN-81, which could require 
modifying the current two-ship construction contract for CVN-80 and CVN-81. 
                                                 
61 See Rich Abott, “Navy Starts Looking At Carriers After CVN-81,” Defense Daily, February 15, 2019; Richard R. 
Burges, “Secretary: Navy Discussing Next-Gen Carrier Concepts, Including ‘Lightning Carrier,’” Seapower, October 
24, 2019; Wesley Morgan, “Navy Secretary Accuses Congressional Critics of ‘Disinformation’ on Ford Carrier,” 
Politico Pro, October 23, 2019; Otto Kreisher, “Spencer Lauds Tight Integration of Navy, Marine Forces in ‘Great 
Power Competition,’” Seapower, October 27, 2019; Sam LaGrone, “Navy Still Mulling Post-F-35C Aviation 
Combatant; Could be Mix of Manned, Unmanned Aircraft,” USNI News, December 5, 2019; Gina Hawkins, “Acting 
SecNav Hints at Fewer Aircraft Carriers in Next Ship-Count Plan,” Military.com, January 29, 2020; Sam LaGrone, 
“Future of U.S. Carrier Fleet Key Issue as New Force Structure Moves Through Pentagon,” USNI News, January 29, 
2020; Rich Abott, “Modly: Future Carrier Force Unclear, All Options On The Table,” Defense Daily, January 30, 2020. 
62 See, for example, Megan Eckstein, “Marines Test ‘Lightning Carrier’ Concept, Control 13 F-35Bs from Multiple 
Amphibs,” USNI News, October 23, 2019. 
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Shock Trial 
An earlier oversight issue for Congress for the CVN-78 program was whether to conduct the 
shock trial for the CVN-78 class in the near term, on the lead ship in the class, or years later, on 
the second ship in the class. For background information on that issue, see Appendix B. 
Legislative Activity for FY2021 
Summary of Congressional Action on FY2021 Funding Request 
Table 3 summarizes congressional action on the FY2021 procurement funding request for the 
CVN-78 program. 
Table 3. Congressional Action on FY2021 Procurement Funding Request 
Millions of dollars, rounded to nearest tenth.  
Authorization 
Appropriation 
 
Request 
HASC 
SASC 
Conf. 
HAC 
SAC 
Conf. 
CVN-78 
71.0 
71.0 
71.0 
71.0 
71.0 
71.0 
71.0 
CVN-79 
0 
0 
0 
0 
0 
0 
0 
CVN-80 
997.5 
907.5 
997.5 
907.5 
904.8 
997.5 
958.9 
CVN-81 
1,645.6 
1,465.6 
1,645.6 
1,606.4 
1,606.4 
1,645.6 
1,606.4 
Total above 
2,714.1 
2,444.1 
2,714.1 
2,584.9 
2,582.2 
2,714.1 
2,565.4 
Source: Table prepared by CRS based on Navy’s FY2021 budget submission, committee and conference 
reports, and explanatory statements on FY2021 National Defense Authorization Act and FY2020 DOD 
Appropriations Act. 
Notes: HASC is House Armed Services Committee; SASC is Senate Armed Services Committee; HAC is 
House Appropriations Committee; SAC is Senate Appropriations Committee; Conf. is conference agreement. 
FY2021 National Defense Authorization Act (H.R. 6395/S. 4049) 
House 
The House Armed Services Committee, in its report (H.Rept. 116-442 of July 9, 2020) on H.R. 
6395, recommended the funding levels shown in the HASC column of Table 3. The 
recommended reductions of $90.0 million for CVN-80 and $180.0 million for CVN-81 are for “ 
Full funding early to need.” (Page 344) 
Section 1042 of H.R. 6395 as reported by the committee states 
SEC. 1042. PROHIBITION ON RETIREMENT OF NUCLEAR POWERED AIRCRAFT 
CARRIERS BEFORE FIRST REFUELING. 
Section 8062 of title 10, United States Code, is amended by adding at the end the following 
new subsection: 
‘‘(f) A nuclear powered aircraft carrier may not be retired before its first refueling.’’. 
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Senate 
The Senate Armed Services Committee, in its report (S.Rept. 116-236 of June 24, 2020) on S. 
4049, recommended the funding levels shown in the SASC column of Table 3.  
Section 126 of S. 4049 as reported by the committee states 
SEC.  126.  TREATMENT  OF  SYSTEMS  ADDED  BY  CONGRESS  IN  FUTURE 
PRESIDENT’S BUDGET REQUESTS. 
A  procurement  quantity  of  a  system  authorized  by  Congress  in  a  National  Defense 
Authorization Act for a given fiscal year that is subsequently appropriated by Congress in 
an  amount  greater  than  the  quantity  of  such  system  included  in  the  President’s  annual 
budget request submitted to Congress under section 1105 of title 31, United States Code, 
for such fiscal year shall not be included as a new procurement quantity in future annual 
budget requests. 
Regarding Section 126, S.Rept. 116-236 states 
Treatment  of  weapon  systems  added  by  Congress  in  future  President’s  budget 
requests (sec. 126) 
The committee recommends a provision that would preclude the inclusion in future annual 
budget  requests  of  a  procurement  quantity  of  a  system  previously  authorized  and 
appropriated by the Congress that was greater than the quantity of such system requested 
in the President’s budget request. 
The  committee  is  concerned  that  by  presenting  CVN–81  as  a  ship  that  was  procured  in 
fiscal year 2020 (instead of as a ship that was procured in fiscal year 2019), LPD–31 as a 
ship requested for procurement in fiscal year 2021 (instead of as a ship that was procured 
in fiscal year 2020), and LHA–9 as a ship projected for procurement in fiscal year 2023 
(instead of as a ship that was procured in fiscal year 2020), the Department of Defense, in 
its fiscal year 2021 budget submission, is disregarding or mischaracterizing the actions of 
Congress regarding the procurement dates of these three ships. (Page 11)  
Section 127 of S. 4049 as reported by the committee states 
SEC. 127. REPORT ON CARRIER WING COMPOSITION. 
(a) REPORT.—Not later than May 1, 2021, the Secretary of the Navy, in consultation with 
the Chief of Naval Operations and Commandant of the Marine Corps, shall submit to the 
congressional defense committees a report on the optimal  composition of the carrier air 
wing in 2030 and 2040, as well as alternative force design concepts. 
(b)  ELEMENTS.—The  report  required  under  subsection  (a)  shall  include  the  following 
elements: 
(1)  An  analysis  and  justification  used  to  reach  the  50-50  mix  of  4th  and  5th  generation 
aircraft for 2030. 
(2) An analysis and justification for the optimal mix of carrier aircraft for 2040. 
(3)  A  plan  for  incorporating  unmanned  aerial  vehicles  and  associated  communication 
capabilities to effectively implement the future force design. 
Conference 
The conference report (H.Rept. 116-617 of December XX, 2020) on H.R. 6395 recommends the 
funding levels shown in the authorization conference column of Table 3. The recommended 
reduction of $90.0 million for CVN-80 and the recommended reduction of $39.174 million for 
CVN-81 are for “Full funding early to need.” (PDF page 4276 of 4517) 
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Section 126 of the conference version of H.R. 6395 states 
SEC. 126. TREATMENT IN FUTURE BUDGETS OF THE PRESIDENT OF SYSTEMS 
ADDED BY CONGRESS. 
In the event the procurement quantity for a system authorized by Congress in a National 
Defense  Authorization  Act  for  a  fiscal  year,  and  for  which  funds  for  such  procurement 
quantity are appropriated by Congress in the Shipbuilding and Conversion, Navy account 
for  such  fiscal  year,  exceeds  the  procurement  quantity  specified  in  the  budget  of  the 
President, as submitted to Congress under section 1105 of title 31, United States Code, for 
such  fiscal  year,  such  excess  procurement  quantity  shall  not  be  specified  as  a  new 
procurement quantity in any budget of the President, as so submitted, for any fiscal year 
after such fiscal year. 
Regarding Section 126, H.Rept. 116-617 states 
Treatment in future budgets of the President of systems added by Congress (sec. 126) 
The Senate amendment contained a provision (sec. 126) that would preclude the inclusion 
in  future  annual  budget  requests  of  a  procurement  quantity  of  a  system  previously 
authorized  and  appropriated  by  the  Congress  that  was  greater  than  the  quantity  of  such 
system requested in the President’s Budget request. 
The House bill contained no similar provision. 
The House recedes with an amendment that would limit the effect of this provision to the 
Shipbuilding and Conversion, Navy account. (PDF page 3734 of 4517) 
Section 1054 of the conference version of H.R. 6395 states 
SEC. 1054. PROHIBITION ON RETIREMENT OF NUCLEAR POWERED AIRCRAFT 
CARRIERS BEFORE FIRST REFUELING. 
Section 8062 of title 10, United States Code, is amended by adding at the end the following 
new subsection: 
‘‘(f) A nuclear powered aircraft carrier may not be retired before its first refueling.’’. 
H.Rept. 116-617 also states 
Report on carrier wing composition 
The Senate amendment contained a provision (sec. 127) that would direct the Secretary of 
the  Navy,  in  consultation  with  the  Chief  of  Naval  Operations  and  Commandant  of  the 
Marine Corps, to submit a report to the congressional defense committees, not later than 
May 1, 2021, on the optimal compositions of the carrier air wing in 2030 and 2040, as well 
as alternative force design concepts. 
The House bill contained no similar provision. 
The Senate recedes. (PDF page 3752 of 4517) 
FY2021 DOD Appropriations Act (H.R. 7617/S. XXXX/Division C of 
H.R. 133) 
House 
The House Appropriations Committee, in its report (H.Rept. 116-453 of July 16, 2020) on H.R. 
7617, recommended the funding levels shown in the HAC column of Table 3. The recommended 
reductions of $92.744 million for CVN-80 and $39.174 million for CVN-81 are for “Hardware 
procurements early to need.” (Page 184)  
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Senate 
The Senate Appropriations Committee, in the explanatory statement for S. XXXX that the 
committee released on November 10, 2020, recommended the funding levels shown in the SAC 
column of Table 3. 
Conference 
The explanatory statement for the final version of the FY2021 DOD Appropriations Act (Division 
C of the final version of H.R. 133, the Consolidated Appropriations Act, 2021) provides the 
funding levels shown in the appropriation conference column of Table 3. The reductions of 
$38.611 million for CVN-80 and $39.174 million for CVN-81 are for “Hardware procurements 
early to need.” (PDF page 203 of 469) 
 
 
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Appendix A. Background Information on Two-Ship 
Block Buy for CVN-80 and CVN-81 
This appendix presents additional background information on the two-ship block buy contract for 
CVN-80 and CVN-81. 
The option for procuring two CVN-78 class carriers under a two-ship block buy contract had 
been discussed in this CRS report since April 2012.63 In earlier years, the discussion focused on 
the option of using a block buy contract for procuring CVN-79 and CVN-80. In more recent 
years, interest among policymakers focused on the option of using a block buy contract for 
procuring CVN-80 and CVN-81. 
On March 19, 2018, the Navy released a request for proposal (RFP) to Huntington Ingalls 
Industries/Newport News Shipbuilding (HII/NNS) regarding a two-ship buy of some kind for 
CVN-80 and CVN-81. A March 20, 2018, Navy News Service report stated the following: 
The Navy released a CVN 80/81 two-ship buy Request for Proposal (RFP) to Huntington 
Ingalls Industries—Newport News Shipbuilding (HII-NNS) March 19 to further define the 
cost savings achievable with a two-ship buy. 
With lethality and affordability a top priority, the Navy has been working with HII-NNS 
over the last several months to estimate the total savings associated with procuring CVN 
80 and CVN 81 as a two-ship buy. 
“In keeping with the National Defense Strategy, the Navy developed an acquisition strategy 
to  combine  the  CVN  80  and  CVN  81  procurements  to  better  achieve  the  Department’s 
objectives of building a more lethal force with greater performance and affordability,” said 
James F. Geurts, Assistant Secretary of the Navy, Research Development and Acquisition. 
“This  opportunity  for  a  two-ship  contract  is  dependent  on  significant  savings  that  the 
shipbuilding  industry  and  government  must  demonstrate.  The  Navy  is  requesting  a 
proposal from HII-NNS in order to evaluate whether we can achieve significant savings.” 
The two-ship buy is a contracting strategy the Navy has effectively used in the 1980s to 
procure  Nimitz-class  aircraft  carriers  and  achieved  significant  acquisition  cost  savings 
compared  to  contracting  for  the  ships  individually.  While  the  CVN  80/81  two-ship  buy 
negotiations transpire, the Navy is pursuing contracting actions necessary to continue CVN 
80 fabrication in fiscal year (FY) 2018 and preserve the current schedule. The Navy plans 
to award the CVN 80 construction contract in early FY 2019 as a two-ship buy pending 
Congressional approval and achieving significant savings.64 
Section 121(a)(2) of the John S. McCain National Defense Authorization Act for Fiscal Year 2019 
(H.R. 5515/P.L. 115-232 of August 13, 2018) permitted the Navy, after DOD made certain 
certifications to Congress, to add CVN-81 to the existing contract for building CVN-80. DOD 
provided the required certification on December 31, 2018. On January 31, 2019, the Navy 
                                                 
63 See the section entitled “Potential Two-Ship Block Buy on CVN-79 and CVN-80” in the April 4, 2012, version of 
CRS Report RS20643, Navy Ford (CVN-78) Class Aircraft Carrier Program: Background and Issues for Congress, by 
Ronald O'Rourke. In more recent years, this section was modified to discuss the option in connection with CVN-80 and 
CVN-81. 
64 Naval Sea Systems Command Public Affairs, “Navy Seeks Savings, Releases Two-Carrier RFP,” Navy News, March 
20, 2018. See also Megan Eckstein, “UPDATED: Navy, Newport News Taking Steps Towards Two-Carrier Buy,” 
USNI News, March 19, 2018. 
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announced that it had awarded a two-ship fixed-price incentive (firm target) (FPIF) contract for 
CVN-80 and CVN-81 to HII/NNS.65 
The two-ship contract for CVN-80 and CVN-81 can be viewed as a block buy contract because 
the two ships are being procured in different fiscal years (CVN-80 was procured in FY2018 and 
CVN-81 is shown in the Navy’s FY2020 budget submission as a ship procured in FY2020).66 The 
Navy’s previous two-ship aircraft carrier procurements occurred in FY1983 (for CVN-72 and 
CVN-73) and FY1988 (for CVN-74 and CVN-75). In each of those two earlier cases, however, 
the two ships were fully funded within a single fiscal year, making each of these cases a simple 
two-ship purchase (akin, for example, to procuring two Virginia-class attack submarines or two 
DDG-51 class destroyers in a given fiscal year) rather than a two-ship block buy (i.e., a contract 
spanning the procurement of end items procured across more than one fiscal year). 
Compared to DOD’s estimate that the two-ship block buy contract for CVN-80 and CVN-81 
would produce savings of $3.9 billion (as measured from estimated costs for the two ships in the 
December 2017 Navy business case analysis), DOD states that “the Department of Defense’s 
Office of Cost Assessment and Program Evaluation (CAPE) developed an Independent Estimate 
of Savings for the two-ship procurement and forecast savings of $3.1 billion ([in] Then-Year 
[dollars]), or approximately 11 percent.... The primary differences between [the] CAPE and Navy 
estimates of savings are in Government Furnished Equipment67 and production change orders.”68 
Within the total estimated combined reduction in cost, HII/NNS reportedly expects to save up to 
$1.6 billion in contractor-furnished equipment.69 
A November 2018 DOD report to Congress that was submitted as an attachment to DOD’s 
December 31, 2018, certification stated the following regarding the sources of cost reduction for 
the two-ship contract: 
The  CVN  80  and  CVN  81  two-ship  buy  expands  and  improves  upon  the  affordability 
initiatives  identified  in  the  Annual  Report  on  Cost  Reduction  Efforts  for  JOHN  F. 
KENNEDY (CVN 79) and ENTERPRISE (CVN 80) as required by section 126(c) of the 
National  Defense  Authorization  Act  for  Fiscal  Year  2017  (P.L.  114-328).  Production 
saving initiatives  for single-ship buys included use of unit families  in construction, pre-
outfitting  and  complex  assemblies  which  move  work  to  a  more  efficient  workspace 
environment,  reduction  in  the  number  of  superlifts,70  and  facility  investments  which 
improve the shipbuilder trade effectiveness. A two-ship buy assumes four years between 
                                                 
65 See Office of the Navy Chief of Information, “Navy Awards Contract for Construction of Two Carriers,” Navy News 
Service, January 31, 2019; Megan Eckstein, “UPDATED: Navy Awards 2-Carrier Contract to Newport News 
Shipbuilding,” USNI News, January 31, 2019; Marcus Weisgerber, “US Navy Places First 2-Carrier Order in Three 
Decades,” Defense One, January 31, 2019; David B. Larter, “US Navy Signs Mammoth Contract with Huntington 
Ingalls for Two Aircraft Carriers,” Defense News, January 31, 2019; Rich Abott, “Navy Awards HII $15 Billion In 
Two Carrier Buy,” Defense Daily, February 1, 2019. 
66 For more on block buy contracting, see CRS Report R41909, Multiyear Procurement (MYP) and Block Buy 
Contracting in Defense Acquisition: Background and Issues for Congress, by Ronald O'Rourke. 
67 Government-furnished equipment (GFE) is equipment that the government purchases from supplier firms and then 
provides to the shipbuilder for incorporation into the ships. 
68 Department of Defense, FORD Class Aircraft Carrier Certification, CVN 80 and CVN 81 Two Ship Procurement 
Authority, as Required by Section 121(b) of the John S. McCain National Defense Authorization Act for Fiscal Year 
2019 (P.L. 115-232), November 2018, pp. 8-9. 
69 Rich Abott, “Navy Awards HII $15 Billion In Two Carrier Buy,” Defense Daily, February 1, 2019. Contractor-
furnished equipment (CFE) is equipment that the contractor (in this case, HII/NNS) purchases from supplier firms for 
incorporation into the ships. 
70 A superlift is the use of a crane to move a very large section of the ship from the land into its final position on the 
ship. 
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ship  deliveries  which  allows  more  schedule  overlap,  and  therefore  more  shop-level  and 
assembly-level production efficiencies than two single-ship buys. 
Procuring two ships to a single technical baseline reduces the requirement for engineering 
labor  hours  when  compared  to  single-ship  estimates.  The  ability  to  rollover  production 
support  engineering  and  planning  products  maximizes  savings  while  recognizing  the 
minimum amount of engineering labor necessary to address obsolescence and regulatory 
changes on CVN 81. The two-ship agreement with the shipbuilder achieves a 55 percent 
reduction in construction support engineering hours on CVN 81 and greater than 18 percent 
reduction in production support and planning hours compared to single ship procurements. 
The two-ship procurement strategy allows for serial production opportunities that promote 
tangible learning and reduced shop and machine set-up times. It allows for efficient use of 
production facilities, re-use of production jigs and fixtures, and level loading of key trades. 
The continuity of  work allows for reductions in supervision, services and support costs. 
The result of these efficiencies is a production man-hours step down that is equivalent to 
an 82 percent learning curve since CVN 79. 
Key  to  achieving  these  production  efficiencies  is  Integrated  Digital  Shipbuilding  (iDS). 
The Navy’s Research, Development, Test, and Evaluation (RDT&E) and the shipbuilder’s 
investment  in  iDS,  totaling  $631  million,  will  reduce  the  amount  of  production  effort 
required to build FORD Class carriers. The two-ship buy will accelerate the benefits of this 
approach. The ability to immediately use the capability on CVN 81 would lead to a further 
reduction in touch labor and services in affected value streams. The two-ship agreement 
with  the  shipbuilder  represents  a  production  man-hours  reduction  of  over  seven  percent 
based  on  iDS  efficiencies.  Contractual  authority  for  two  ships  allows  the  shipbuilder  to 
maximize  economic  order  quantity  material  procurement.  This  allows  more  efficient 
ordering and scheduling of material deliveries and will promote efficiencies through earlier 
ordering,  single  negotiations,  vendor  quotes,  and  cross  program  purchase  orders.  These 
efficiencies  are  expected  to  reduce  material  costs  by  about  six  percent  more  when 
compared  to  single-ship  estimates.  Improved  material  management  and  flexibility  will 
prevent costly production delays.  Furthermore, this provides stability  within the  nuclear 
industrial base, de-risking the COLUMBIA and VIRGINIA Class programs. The two-ship 
buy would provide economic stability to approximately 130,000 workers across 46 States 
within the industrial base. 
Change  order  requirements  are  likewise  reduced  as  Government  Furnished  Equipment 
(GFE) providers will employ planning and procurement strategies based on the common 
technical baseline that minimize configuration changes that must be incorporated on the 
follow ship. Change order budget allocations have been reduced over 25 percent based on 
two-ship strategies. 
In addition to the discrete savings achieved with the shipbuilder, the two-ship procurement 
authority provides our partner GFE providers a similar opportunity to negotiate economic 
order quantity savings and achieve cross program savings when compared to single-ship 
estimates.71 
An April 16, 2018, press report stated the following: 
If  the  Navy  decides  to  buy  aircraft  carriers  CVN-80  and  81  together,  Newport  News 
Shipbuilding will be able to maintain a steady workload that supports between 23,000 and 
25,000 workers at the Virginia yard for the next decade or so, the shipyard president told 
reporters last week. 
                                                 
71 Department of Defense, FORD Class Aircraft Carrier Certification, CVN 80 and CVN 81 Two Ship Procurement 
Authority, as Required by Section 121(b) of the John S. McCain National Defense Authorization Act for Fiscal Year 
2019 (P.L. 115-232), November 2018, pp. 6-7. 
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Part of the appeal of buying the two carriers together is that the Navy would also buy them 
a bit closer together: the ships would be centered about three-and-a-half or four years apart, 
instead of the five-year centers for recent carrier acquisition, Newport News Shipbuilding 
President Jennifer Boykin told reporters. 
Boykin said the closer ship construction centers would allow her to avoid a “labor valley” 
where the workforce levels would dip down after one ship and then have to come back up, 
which is disruptive for employees and costly for the company. 
If this two-carrier buy goes through, the company would avoid the labor valley altogether 
and ensure stability in its workforce, Boykin said in a company media briefing at the Navy 
League’s  Sea  Air  Space  2018  symposium.  That  workforce  stability  contributes  to  an 
expected $1.6 billion in savings on the two-carrier buy from Newport News Shipbuilding’s 
portion of the work alone, not including government-furnished equipment.... 
Boykin said four main things contribute to the expected $1.6 billion in savings from the 
two-carrier buy. First, “if you don’t have the workforce valley, there’s a labor efficiency 
that represents savings.” 
Second,  “if  you  buy  two  at  once,  my  engineering  team  doesn’t  have  to  produce  two 
technical baselines, two sets of technical products; they only have to produce one, and the 
applicability is to both, so there’s savings there. When we come through the planning, the 
build plan of how we plan to build the ship, the planning organization only has to put out 
one plan and the applicability is to both, so there’s savings there.” 
The third savings is a value of  money over time issue, she  said, and fourth is economic 
order quantity savings throughout the entire supply chain.72 
Discussions of the option of using a block buy contract for procuring carriers have focused on 
using it to procure two carriers in part because carriers have been procured on five-year centers, 
meaning that two carriers could be included in a block-buy contract spanning six years—the same 
number of years originally planned for the two block buy contracts that were used to procure 
mnay of the Navy’s Littoral Combat Ships.73 
It can be noted, however, that there is no statutory limit on the number of years that a block buy 
contract can cover, and that the LCS block buy contracts were subsequently amended to cover 
LCSs procured in a seventh year. This, and the possibility of procuring carriers on 3- or 3.5-year 
centers, raises the possibility of using a block buy contract to procure three aircraft carriers: For 
example, if procurement of aircraft carriers were shifted to 3- or 3.5-year centers, a block buy 
contract for procuring CVN-80, CVN-81, and CVN-82 could span seven years (with the first ship 
procured in FY2018, and the third ship procured in FY2024) or eight years (with the first ship 
procured in FY2018 and the third ship procured in FY2025). 
The percentage cost reduction possible under a three-ship block buy contract could be greater 
than that possible under a two-ship block buy contract, but the offsetting issue of reducing 
congressional flexibility for changing aircraft carrier procurement plans in coming years in 
response to changing strategic or budgetary circumstances could also be greater. 
 
                                                 
72 Megan Eckstein, “Newport News Would Save $1.6 Billion, Maintain Stable Workforce of 25,000 Under 2 Proposed 
Carrier Buy,” USNI News, April 16, 2018. See also Rich Abott, “HII Sees Two Carrier Buy Saving $1.6 Billion Before 
GFE,” Defense Daily, April 11, 2018: 10-11. 
73 For more on the LCS block buy contracts, see CRS Report RL33741, Navy Littoral Combat Ship (LCS) Program: 
Background and Issues for Congress, by Ronald O'Rourke. 
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Appendix B. Shock Trial 
An earlier oversight issue for Congress for the CVN-78 program was whether to conduct the 
shock trial for the CVN-78 class in the near term, on the lead ship in the class, or years later, on 
the second ship in the class. This appendix presents background information on that issue. 
A shock trial, known formally as a full ship shock trial (FSST) and sometimes called a shock test, 
is a test of the combat survivability of the design of a new class of ships. A shock trial involves 
setting off one or more controlled underwater charges near the ship being tested, and then 
measuring the ship’s response to the underwater shock caused by the explosions. The test is 
intended to verify the ability of the ship’s structure and internal systems to withstand shocks 
caused by enemy weapons, and to reveal any changes that need to be made to the design of the 
ship’s structure or its internal systems to meet the ship’s intended survivability standard. Shock 
trials are nominally to be performed on the lead ship in a new class of ships, but there have also 
been cases where the shock trial for a new class was done on one of the subsequent ships in the 
class. 
The question of whether to conduct the shock trial for the CVN-78 class in the near term, on the 
lead ship in the class, or years later, on the second ship in the class, has been a matter of 
disagreement at times between the Navy and the office of the Secretary of Defense (OSD). The 
Navy has wanted to perform the shock trial on the second ship in the class, because performing it 
on the lead ship in the class, the Navy has argued, will cause a significant delay in the first 
deployment of the lead ship, effectively delaying the return of the carrier force to an 11-ship force 
level and increasing the operational strain on the other 10 carriers. The Navy has argued that the 
risks of delaying the shock trial on the CVN-78 to the second ship in the class are acceptable, 
because the CVN-78 class hull design is based on the Nimitz (CVN-68) class aircraft carrier hull 
design, whose survivability against shocks is understood, because systems incorporated into the 
CVN-78 design have been shock tested at the individual component level, and because computer 
modeling can simulate how the CVN-78 design as a whole will respond to shocks. 
OSD has argued that the risks of delaying the CVN-78 class shock trial to the second ship in the 
class are not acceptable, because the CVN-78 design is the first new U.S. aircraft carrier design in 
four decades; because the CVN-78 design has many internal design differences compared to the 
CVN-68 design, including new systems not present in the CVN-68 class design; and because 
computer modeling can only do so much to confirm how a complex new platform, such as an 
aircraft carrier and all its internal systems, will respond to shocks. The risk of delaying the shock 
trial, OSD has argued, outweighs the desire to avoid a delay in the first deployment of the lead 
ship in the class. OSD in 2015 directed the Navy to plan for conducting a shock trial on the lead 
ship. The Navy complied with this direction but has also sought to revisit the issue with OSD. 
The issue of the shock trial for the CVN-78 class has been a matter of legislative activity—see, 
for example, Section 121(b) of the FY2018 National Defense Authorization Act (H.R. 2810/P.L. 
115-91 of December 12, 2017). 
An April 5, 2018, press report states the following: 
The  Pentagon’s  No.  2  civilian  has  said  the  Navy  should  perform  shock-testing  soon  to 
determine  how  well  its  new  $12.9  billion  aircraft  carrier—the  costliest  warship  ever—
could withstand an attack, affirming the service’s recent decision to back down from a plan 
for delay. 
“We agree with your view that a test in normal sequence is more prudent and pragmatic,” 
Deputy Defense Secretary Patrick Shanahan said in a newly released March 26 letter to 
Senate Armed Services Committee Chairman John McCain. The Arizona Republican and 
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Senator Jack Reed, the panel’s top Democrat, pressed for the shock-testing to go ahead as 
originally planned. 
James Guerts, the Navy’s chiefs weapons buyer, told reporters last month that the Navy 
was acquiescing to the testing after initially asking Defense Secretary James Mattis to delay 
it for at least six years. In its push to maintain an 11-carrier fleet, the Navy wanted to wait 
and perform the test on a second carrier in the class rather than on the USS Gerald Ford.74 
 
 
Author Information 
 
Ronald O'Rourke 
   
Specialist in Naval Affairs 
    
 
 
Disclaimer 
This document was prepared by the Congressional Research Service (CRS). CRS serves as nonpartisan 
shared staff to congressional committees and Members of Congress. It operates solely at the behest of and 
under the direction of Congress. Information in a CRS Report should not be relied upon for purposes other 
than public understanding of information that has been provided by CRS to Members of Congress in 
connection with CRS’s institutional role. CRS Reports, as a work of the United States Government, are not 
subject to copyright protection in the United States. Any CRS Report may be reproduced and distributed in 
its entirety without permission from CRS. However, as a CRS Report may include copyrighted images or 
material from a third party, you may need to obtain the permission of the copyright holder if you wish to 
copy or otherwise use copyrighted material. 
 
                                                 
74 Anthony Capaccio, “Pentagon Endorses Shock-Testing Carrier After Navy Backs Down,” Bloomberg, April 5, 2018. 
See also Craig Hooper, “The Navy Obfuscates On Shock Testing The $13 Billion USS Ford,” Forbes, October 23, 
2019; Jason Sherman and Lee Hudson, “Navy to Conduct Full Ship Shock Trials of CVN-78 in ’19 or ’20,” Inside the 
Navy, March 26, 2018; Anthony Capaccio, “Navy Presses Mattis to Delay ‘Shock Testing’ Costliest Carrier,” 
Bloomberg, February 7, 2018; Jason Sherman, “Lawmakers Rraise Ford-Class Carrier Cost Cap, Grant Navy Wiggle 
Room to Avoid Shock Testing,” Inside the Navy, November 13, 2017. 
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