The National Shipbuilding Strategy has always been an industrial strategy - not a naval strategy.
The Navy doesn't really care where its ships are built, so long as they fully work and meet all operational criteria.
Thus, if the yards benefiting from the major upgrades in both facilities and training/experience for their manpower cannot turn this into a commercial venture distinct from the government procurement, then the whole strategy is a failure. Unless of course, the government demonstrate that the capacity for Canada to build in country all of its government vessels, military and civilian, is of an essential strategic importance. No such demonstration has been made, nor has the matter even been brought into the public representation of the strategy.
But there is one other aspect no one touched on: Is the government going to let the selected yards sell warships to foreign powers? The government tried with the HALIFAX class but failed. This happened for a very simple reason: the sale pitch was mostly aimed at other NATO countries and most of them already had their own in-country programs they were not about to change just to buy Canadian - no matter how good they were. On the other hand, the government was not willing to let sales out to countries that were less savoury to the Canadian public, like Saudi Arabia, Iran or Egypt, for instances. Since other nations like the French and the Dutch have no such qualms, they get those sales even if they subsidize them, to keep their yards going. If the Canadian government of today is still reluctant to do so (and, judging by the ruckus over sale of mere LAV's to Saudi Arabia, I suspect the government still is), the strategy is not going to work.
Moreover, this very possibility of foreign sales (if the government had ever planned on permitting it) is now forfeited anyway since, instead of designing a home grown Canadian design and product, we have selected foreign designs (Acker for the Berlin and we don't know who yet for the CSC's) and it's unlikely the original designers will let the Canadian yards sell them instead of selling them directly.
Also: I still have a scotch bottle (Glen Breton 2007) bet on the fact that the AOPS will be turned over to the Coast Guard within 5 years of their acquisition :nod: . So the Navy will need a real offshore surveillance vessel. [