Anecdotally, the Navy
unofficially sanctions the practice of cannibalization as a means of meeting
short term readiness and inspections.
Intuitively, this is wrong – badly wrong – because the readiness of one
unit is obtained at the expense of another. Worse, the practice masks readiness and supply
issues that should be dealt with by the chain of command, thereby providing a
false sense of readiness.
The Navy defines
cannibalization as the removal of parts from an active unit or piece of
equipment to another unit in order to enable the readiness or meet inspections. In addition to cannibalization, the Navy also
recognizes and defines another type of parts swapping called
cross-decking. The difference is that
cross-decking involves the swapping of parts from the inventory (non-active) of
one unit to another in order to enable readiness or meet inspections.
Does the Navy actually
recognize and condone cannibalization or is ComNavOps just being
sensationalistic? Well, unbelievably, the
Navy has an official policy defining the practice and establishing rules for
its use. Ironically, the policy condemns
the practice while simultaneously establishing procedures for doing it!
“Cannibalizations between active fleet units shall
not be a normal peacetime practice and will be considered an acceptable option
only after all other logistics support alternatives have been exhausted.” (4)
So, in a typically Navy form
of insanity, the practice is “banned” and yet procedures are established to
regulate it and metrics have been set up to monitor it!
Anecdotal evidence aside,
how pervasive is the problem? Do we have
any data? Here’s some old data from a
Dynamics Research Corporation report.
“… reports show that in FY 1996-2000, the Navy and
Air Force performed 850,000 cannibalizations requiring over 5 million
maintenance man-hours—which translates to between 154,000 and 176,000
cannibalizations a year (and this does not even include the Army, and the Navy
reportedly understates its data by as much as 50%) (Government Accountability
Office, 2001)” (1)
The degree of underreporting
of data may be significant, according to a GAO report.
“The Air Force and the Navy, however, do not report
all cannibalizations, and how much the Army uses cannibalizations is not known
because it requires that only very selected cannibalizations be reported. As a
result, total Servicewide figures may be considerably higher than those
officially reported.” (2)
“During the 5-year period under study (fiscal years
1996-2000), the Navy reported approximately 468,000 cannibalizations, or on
average, about 94,000 a year. … However, according to recent studies, the
actual number of cannibalizations may be much higher. In fiscal year 1998, a
Navy group noted that as many as half of all Navy cannibalizations may go
unreported. In April 2000, the Navy Inspector General also confirmed that
cannibalizations were being consistently underreported and that commanders were
concerned that cannibalization was becoming an accepted maintenance practice.”
Much of the above data is
for aircraft. How are ships doing?
“In four consecutive quarters in 2010 the USN
reported a rate of so-called “cannibalization” of components between ships of
on average twice the current allowable maximum allowed limit (MAL) of about one
instance per four ships (.28), according to the data.
Across the fleet in 2010, the USN saw an average rate
of cannibalization of .48, or about one instance per two ships across the
entire year. “ (3)
We see, then, that the Navy
allows a cannibalization rate of one instance per four ships and that the
actual rate is about every other ship.
According to this data (likely vastly underreported), every other ship
in the fleet is not currently mission ready.
If we apply the 50% underreporting factor that GAO suggests, the
cannibalization rate becomes 0.96 which is almost every ship in the fleet!
What’s the Navy’s response
to the apparent severe problem? Here’s
the salient excerpt from the then CNO.
“… the supply system is performing at or above
goals,” read the USN statement.” (3)
So, the Navy would have us
believe that the supply system is functioning at or above goals and yet the
practice of cannibalization is widespread.
Seems like a contradiction, there.
Even faced with hard documentation (set aside the fact that the problem
is vastly underreported) of a serious problem, the Navy claims all is
well. Outstanding!
Commanders are fired on a
regular and frequent basis for “loss of confidence” in their ability to
command. Where are the firings of the
CNO and other upper leaders of the Navy for failure to provide the parts and
ensure actual readiness of the ships under their command? I don’t know about you but I’ve lost
confidence in their ability to command.
_____________________
(1)Dynamics Research
Corporation, “Cannibalization in the Military: A Viable Sustainment Strategy?”,
Peter Bogdanowicz, 2-Apr-2003 ,
(2)GAO, “MILITARY AIRCRAFT
Services Need Strategies to Reduce Cannibalizations”, GAO-02-86, Nov 2001,
(3)DoDBuzz Website, “Report:
Parts-swapping is common across Navy”, Philip Ewing, 19-Jul-2011 ,
(4)OPNAVINST 4440.19F N4, 5 Jun 2012 ,
Shouldn't we address our ability to maintain our current fleet and airwing before we start building more ships? Especially really unique ships like the Zumwalt?
ReplyDeletePresumably if the senior leadership had that level of foresight, the US would not be in this problem to begin with.
DeleteThe other issue with cannibalization is the increase in maintenance burden since you're doing everything twice. You have to remove the good part from the source and then install good parts in both items (assuming you get a good part to replace the one you cannibalized) instead of just installing once.
ReplyDelete-interestedparty
Quite right!
DeleteFrom what I've read of the Marines and their hornets, they aren't even doing that. They are just pulling parts off of old hornets and leaving them.
ReplyDeleteOnly in the short term. Aircraft go back to the manufacturer for servicing quite often, and when they go in is decided years in advance.
DeleteYou could strip an aircraft to get three others operational, and then have to strip three more to get the original operational and run up its flying hours in time for service.
All to push the spares budget back a few months, insanity.
Officially bone yarding an aircraft is quite a big deal.
Any aircraft that is "bone yarded" will be stripped bare before hand of course.
Remember, Michelle and Barack Obama's goal for the military was more political correctness not readiness. Michelle stated yesterday she was proud of the correctness now
ReplyDeleteThis is an outgrowth of that philosophy. More money after bad decisions with idiots being promoted beyond their ability. Aka Zumwalt, LCD, f35, the lack of spares for the navy and on and on. It's time to clean house because the current crop in charge is beyond saving
Please keep the politics out of it but, yes, sadly, your central premise is true.
DeleteI didn't mean for it to sound political. I meant to show that attitude and direction is set by the top and that current decisions are made in line with commander and chief objectives.
DeleteI know its current policy for the army to swap parts for testing purposes or to take from a deadline vehicle to fix a deadline vehicle. Not knowing the nature of the parts being replaced, maybe its along the same lines?
ReplyDeleteWe're not talking about testing purposes. The Navy's cannibalization is for meeting readiness inspections. This results in the donor ship losing its readiness and conveys a false impression of readiness.
DeleteCannibalisation should be done only in times of shortage such as a state of war. I heard it is being done even outside of the us though
ReplyDeleteTheres nothing wrong with having a documented process, its a very sensible idea.
ReplyDeleteProcesses and Procedures should represent follow reality. If they dont, they are utterly useless, harmful even.
If it happens, there should be a procedure, and the procedure should document what *actually* happens, not what should happen.
That said, there should be a process for cannibalisation, that process should show what occurs, and a key part of it should be a senate sub committee hearing and an admiral dragged over the coals.
Yes, one of my many jobs is trying to explain exactly what a procedure is and what its for to director type folks...
On the face of it, you're suggesting that because the Navy is allowing its ships to deteriorate from lack of maintenance, we should have a procedure to implement that deterioration. That's insane!
DeleteIt's like saying because people commit crimes we should have a procedure to guide people in the commission of crimes.
I think you're trying to make some other point and I'm missing it.
"On the face of it, you're suggesting that because the Navy is allowing its ships to deteriorate from lack of maintenance, we should have a procedure to implement that deterioration. That's insane!"
DeletePretty much yeah.
Think of it like having a procedure for retreating after getting the **** kicked out of you.
Its not a procedure you hope to implement, but when you are outnumbered, surrounded and outgunned, you dont want to be starting off with improvise.
I very brief, the process would go something like.
Widget A is replaced every 6 months or 100hrs of use, whichever comes first.
If a replacement is unavailable, raise a Special Order Request and copy in x / y / z important people
If a replacement is unavailable after 7 months or 110hrs of use, raise an Emergency Order Request and copy in a / b /c important people
If a replacement is unavailable after 8 months or 120hrs of use, Widget A is no longer safe and must be deactivated, and either the asset grounded/ported or widget A replaced with a used Widget, situation and resolution reported to SecDef, SecNav, POTUS, whoever.
A process covers EVERY eventuality.
Its not a blurb on sunshine and rainbows, if it can happen, its in the procedure, because its important to know whether widget A not being replaced after 100hrs of use means Widget A needs to be turned off and things carry on, or the entire asset needs to be turned off.
The ideal is that widget A is replaced every 100hrs, the process to achieve that goal is that if there isnt a widget A on the stores shelf available, is that its reported to the Squadron commander, and if he dpesnt fix it, the whatever, and if he does, senate.
Its not saying its good, its making sure you can monitor the bad
Interesting article about this one:
ReplyDeletehttp://www.dodbuzz.com/2011/07/19/report-parts-swapping-is-endemic-across-navy/
Submarines apparently have the worst cases of cannibalization.