Bougainvilles
keel was
laid down on 28 January 1986 by
Chantiers Dubigeon at
Nantes. Shortly after construction began it was put on hold. Construction resumed and the ship was
launched on 3 October of the same year. However, due to financial difficulties, Chantiers Dubigeon closed and the incomplete hull was towed to
Chantiers de l'Atlantique at
Saint-Nazaire to be completed. The vessel was
commissioned on 25 June 1988.
Bougainville was based in
Polynesia, where it performed missions of
Tahiti-Hao-Mururoa-Fangataufa (inter-island maritime transport), supporting French nuclear testing. Aside from support for French naval operations,
Bougainville also provided humanitarian support in the area following natural disasters. Once the Directorate of Nuclear Experimentation was closed in 1997,
Bougainville returned to France from Papeete in November 1998. On 30 November 1998,
Bougainville began conversion to an intelligence ship.
Bougainville returned to service in November 1999 based at
Toulon, replacing the aging . In October 2001, it was tasked with collecting information in the Indian Ocean as part of the
War in Afghanistan in the aftermath of the
11 September attacks.
Bougainville supported coalition forces during the conflict. It was replaced by in the intelligence ship role and was converted back into a transport ship in 2006. Just after conversion, the vessel took part in supporting efforts to combat the
Chikungunya virus and then took part in Mission Corymbe-91 the next year. It was decommissioned in 2008 after 20 years of service and placed in
reserve on 29 May 2009. Five years later, in 2013, the ship was used as a
breakwater for a
drydock containing the
aircraft carrier . It was sold for scrap in 2018 to the Galloo shipyard at
Ghent, Belgium, and left Toulon on 17 May 2018 for dismantling. ==Notes==