As a result of the 1981 Defence Review, which had recommended the disposal of some older frigates, the ship was sold to the RNZN, along with sister ship . The already 18-year-old
Southland was selected mainly to train RNZN personnel on computerised command and control systems, even though the ADWAS 5 system was dated with only 4 screens and talley and a quarter of the processing capacity and screens of the later Leander and T21, C4 CAAIS. It is seen as a dubious purchase, in retrospect, and by some at the time, as an ageing, if recently refitted, 'over specialised anti submarine frigate' without any real surface armament or surveillance radar. The acquisition of the second hand frigate was also in direct conflict with the 1978 NZ Defence Review that decided that future frigates would be gas turbine powered and steam abandoned as a prime mover for RNZ combat ships. Diesel powered long range frigates were also, offered in 1981, HMS Lynx and HMS Lincoln were rejected on account of age and lack of helicopter capability, the partly gas turbine powered HMS Zulu and HMS Norfolk which at least started and could leave port immediately, without 6/8 hours to flash up the steam boilers were rejected on the basis 'that they were already almost in the scrapyard' (they were later sold to Indonesia and Chile) and excessive manning requirements, although all had 4.5 guns and 965AW radar and in the case of HMS Norfolk, full Link 10/11 USN compatible communications, high range and Exocet missiles. The option of purchasing a second Ikara
Leander was available in the general offer after the UK 1981 Defence Review, with , and in particular , completed in March 1965, also offered. Given the extremely specialised nature of the Ikara
Leanders and their incompatibility with the rather different Ikara systems in the Australian
Type 12 frigates and
guided missile destroyers, the acquisition of two Ikara
Leanders would actually have given a real capability, able to test and practice, joint computer age anti-submarine operations. As UK experience and UK Treasury costing already indicated that the 13-year-old
Bacchante was too old for cost-containable structural modernisation, a view also held by the former captain of ,
Southland received a five-month, $15 million refit at
Vosper Thornycroft after recommissioning on 18 July 1983 as HMNZS
Southland. During the refit the Limbo mortar and VDS were removed as were the associated 170 and 199 sonars, while US
Mk 32 torpedo tubes for anti-submarine torpedoes were fitted. The refit was completed in late December 1983 and over the following months,
Southland had several workups at
Portland and participated in a number of Royal Navy and
NATO exercises before sailing for New Zealand in mid-1984. An earlier already had historical links with
Southland. ==Decommissioning and fate==