Competitive evaluation and design selection First studies for a class of future surface ships were initiated in 2009. At the time, the goal was to develop a replacement for the
143A Gepard-class fast attack craft. In reference to the five
K130-class corvettes which were set to replace the older
143 Albatros class, the project was termed MÜKE (
Mittlere Überwasserkampfeinheit) or K131. Eight ships were planned to join the navy by the early 2020s and then be available into the 2050s. The ships were to be mission modular. The Navy, increasingly tasked with conducting long overseas deployments with an aging fleet of ships influenced by
Cold War requirements, wished to obtain flexible ships that could be rapidly modified depending on need. This design driver, also influencing the
Baden-Württemberg-class frigates at the time, caused the projected design to increase in displacement and complement compared to a typical corvette. By early 2011, the project was therefore expected to result in a "Multi-Role Combat Ship" (
Mehrzweckkampfschiff). On 25 March 2013, the detailed requirements were formally decided on. During the following analysis phase, three designs were suggested, one fulfilling all requirements and two other less expensive ones fulfilling them partially. On 8 June 2015, the fully compliant design was selected. Crucially, the MKS 180 project had now grown to be the replacement for the four aging
F123 Brandenburg-class frigates, representing the Navy's primary ASW capability. •
BAE Systems and
German Naval Yards •
Damen Group and
Blohm + Voss •
Thyssenkrupp Marine Systems and
Lürssen In mid 2017, BAE Systems, offering a ship based on the
Type 26, withdrew from the tender and in March 2018 the German government excluded the Thyssenkrupp/Lürssen consortium. Thyssenkrupp Marine Systems then partnered as a subcontractor to German Naval Yards, while Lürssen effectively became a partner to Damen, having acquired Blohm + Voss in 2016. In January 2020 after a five year long bidding process the Dutch
Damen Group won the tender, although the ships will be constructed at the
Blohm + Voss shipyard in
Hamburg, Germany and at the Peene-shipyard in
Wolgast, Germany, both owned by Lürssen Group. German Naval Yards protested the award, delaying the required legally binding contract signature. However, the company withdrew its protest when it and Lürssen announced they would pool their naval shipbuilding in a joint venture and that the Kiel shipyard would participate in construction.
Contract award The contract was signed on 17 June 2020. In June 2020 the German
parliaments budgetary committee officially cleared 6 billion Euros for the first four ships and two options with the first ship planned to be commissioned by 2027. The contract awarded to Damen covers the ships, training facilities as well as two ASW and two detention modules and amounts to 5.48 billion Euros while weapons are contracted separately. Initial operating capability for the ships - to be based in
Wilhelmshaven - was expected in 2028 but has now been estimated as 2032.
Thales at its facilities in the Netherlands and Germany will provide radar, IT and
fire control systems, In November 2020, the provider of the underwater warfare suite had yet to be decided.
Wärtsila SAM Electronics in Hamburg will integrate the ships electrical systems while Canadian company OSI Maritime is delivering the navigation suite and
Rolls-Royce unit
Power Systems is responsible for the ship platform management and automation systems.
ABB was awarded a contract to supply the ships DC power system. Electric drive motors and the gearbox will be provided by
Renk. The frigates will also be equipped with systems to
handle CBRN threats, which includes multiple ChemProX-DS chemical detectors and RanidX radiation detectors.
Construction The design passed a critical design review in early 2022, after which construction of the first ship began in December 2023 with the first steel-cutting in Wolgast while keel laying is intended for 2024. While the fore ships will be constructed in
Wolgast, the aft ships will be built in
Kiel where both will be joined and towed to
Hamburg. Fitting, tests and trials are to take place in Hamburg. The Hamburg Ship Model Basin (HSVA) is conducting model-based flow testing. On 3 June 2024 the keel for the first F126 frigate, the
Niedersachsen, was laid down. In January 2026 it was reported that the design data of the F126 is successfully transferring from Damen to (NVL), which is a prerequisite for ramping up production. == Controversy over contract award ==