The U.S. Coast Guard finalized a $3.3 billion award for six Arctic Security Cutters, splitting the work between Bollinger ($2.2 billion for four hulls) and Finnish shipbuilder Rauma ($1.1 billion for two hulls).…

Breaking analysis of what happened and who is affected.
The U.S. Coast Guard finalized a $3.3 billion award for six Arctic Security Cutters, splitting the work between Bollinger ($2.2 billion for four hulls) and Finnish shipbuilder Rauma ($1.1 billion for two hulls).…
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The Coast Guard finalized a $3.3 billion award for six Arctic Security Cutters, allocating $2.2 billion to Bollinger for four hulls and $1.1 billion to Finnish shipbuilder Rauma for two hulls.…
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The Coast Guard (USCG) has finalized a $3.3 billion award for six Arctic Security Cutters, with Bollinger receiving $2.2 billion for four hulls and Rauma receiving $1.1 billion for two hulls.…
Read full report →The U.S. Coast Guard finalized a $3.3 billion award for six Arctic Security Cutters, splitting the work between Bollinger ($2.2 billion for four hulls) and Finnish shipbuilder Rauma ($1.1 billion for two hulls). Bollinger began cutting steel in April ahead of the formal award, signaling accelerated procurement and parallel fabrication under the 'Finland model'—foreign yards building ships in parallel with domestic yards. The program is being executed with emphasis on speed and stable designs under White House direction, and all hulls are scheduled for delivery by 2031. This award materially shifts near‑term shipbuilding workload and capture timelines for maritime and defense contractors focused on Arctic operations. Immediate implications include an accelerated need to align industrial base planning, compliance postures (ITAR (International Traffic in Arms Regulations), DFARS (Defense Federal Acquisition Regulation Supplement), Buy American Act, Jones Act), and capture resources to respond to follow‑on requirements and subcontracting opportunities.
Affected segments include shipbuilders and maritime systems firms supporting Arctic operations and naval architecture, defense contractors providing subsystems and integration, and professional services firms supporting program management and design. Specific NAICS codes, agencies, and contract vehicles are listed in the segmentation: NAICS 336611, 336612, 541330, 488390, 332312; agencies DHS and USCG; contract vehicle Arctic Security Cutter Program; compliance regimes ITAR, DFARS, Buy American Act, Jones Act.
A: Yes. Per the summary, Bollinger began cutting steel in April ahead of the formal award.
A: As described in the summary, the "Finland model" refers to foreign yards building ships for the U.S. in parallel with domestic yards. Specific contractual mechanics and limitations are pending source review.
A: The summary states all hulls are scheduled for delivery by 2031. Detailed delivery dates per hull or milestone schedules are pending source review.
Who to notify immediately: BD Director, Capture Manager for maritime programs, Shipbuilding Program Lead, Compliance/Security Officer, Supply‑Chain Planning Lead, and Finance/Estimating.
First 48‑hour playbook:
Reference material: Winning Federal Contracts Guide (/insights/winning-federal-contracts), CMMC (Cybersecurity Maturity Model Certification) Compliance Guide (/insights/cmmc-compliance-guide), CUI-Safe CRM Guide (/insights/cui-safe-crm-guide).