Port Alpha

US company gears up to build next-gen shipyard for new classes of autonomous ships

Vessels

American tech firm Saronic Technologies is set to revolutionize maritime defense with the construction of Port Alpha, a next-generation shipyard dedicated to building new classes of autonomous ships.

Credit: Saronic Technologies

This ambitious project is made possible by a newly announced $600 million Series C funding round, which values the company at $4 billion. The funding marks a new phase in advancing autonomy for naval and maritime missions, following

Saronic aims to leverage advanced manufacturing processes and best practices from other industries to maximize quality, scalability, and speed.

Port Alpha is expected to enable the expansion of Saronic’s autonomous surface vessel (ASV) fleet into medium and large-class autonomous ships for defense applications.

With this move, the company wants to address gaps in US shipbuilding capacity and invest in the critical infrastructure to deliver the range and volume of autonomous ships needed to create and sustain the US military’s hybrid fleet.

“A core principle of Saronic is that we design our vessels for autonomy from the keel up. We will take the same approach with Port Alpha, designing a shipyard from the ground up to produce at a speed and scale not seen since World War II,” said Saronic CEO and Co-Founder Dino Mavrookas

Mavrookas stated that the shipyard will reflect the apex of America’s shipbuilding past – generating new opportunities for the country’s shipbuilding workforce, and forging public-private partnerships to accelerate growth.

“We will bring these elements together with a single goal: to rapidly build a fleet of autonomous vessels in America that redefines maritime superiority and guarantees freedom of the seas for generations to come,” he added.

“The last years have seen a degradation in the capacity for the United States to build ships and to manufacture core needs of the country. I am excited to back Saronic and its focus on revitalizing shipbuilding in America, while also building products to defend those interests,” highlighted Elad Gil, CEO, Gil Capital.

The US Navy has declared the need for a hybrid fleet – one that integrates a significant number of unmanned systems operating alongside manned platforms. Achieving this will require a transformation in how we approach shipbuilding and a dedicated focus on scaling the production of advanced technologies and autonomous systems that can extend the operational reach of the fleet.

Saronic has invested in developing and expanding its manufacturing capabilities for its small ASVs over the past two years. Port Alpha will build on that foundation and deliver an advanced waterside facility designed from the ground up around a first-principles approach to shipbuilding.

With this raise, the firm plans to invest in the US shipbuilding infrastructure and work with federal and state legislators to establish public-private partnerships. 

“The velocity and economics of warfare have fundamentally evolved and several of our own team have witnessed firsthand how unmanned systems became true force multipliers in Afghanistan and in other theaters of conflict. Saronic represents a paradigm shift for our maritime resilience. GC is proud to help Saronic transform our shipbuilding industry and provide the capabilities needed for the Navy’s modern hybrid fleet,” said Paul Kwan, Managing Director, of General Catalyst.

This announcement comes on the heels of Saronic’s development and delivery of Corsair, its largest ASV model to date, and the acquisition of a ~420,000-square-foot (39,019 square meters) production and manufacturing facility in Austin, Texas.

Read more

Follow Naval Today on: