Canadian Submarine Modernization Meets South Korean Ambition
The Public Services and Procurement Canada (PSPC) announced on 26 August 2025 that it had shortlisted two bidders for its ambitious under-sea fleet renewal: Germany’s Thyssenkrupp Marine Systems (TKMS) and South Korea’s Hanwha Ocean, the latter offering its advanced KSS-III submarine design. 
This move kicks off one of Canada’s most consequential naval procurement deals in decades: the Canadian Patrol Submarine Project (CPSP), targeting up to 12 conventionally-powered submarines to replace the aging Victoria-class fleet. 
In response, South Korea has thrown its full weight behind the bid. The offer is more than a simple platform sale — it seeks to deliver the KSS-III design to Canada, transfer technology, build industrial partnerships and position Seoul as a trusted defense supplier in the Anglo-Pacific space.
The Offer: What South Korea is Bringing to the Table
Platform capability and delivery schedule
South Korea’s pitch revolves around its indigenous KSS III design. The KSS-III Batch II, in particular, is a 4,000-ton submerged model with advanced air-independent propulsion (AIP), lithium-ion batteries and six 533 mm torpedo tubes plus 10 vertical launch cells. 
Hanwha has committed to delivering the first four hulls by 2035 and the full fleet by the early 2040s if selected. 
Technology transfer & industrial cooperation
Crucially for Canada, the South Korean bid includes local industry participation. Hanwha has signed teaming agreements with Babcock Canada to support in-service logistics and training, and is pitching Canadian steel procurement and other industrial offsets. 
The pitch emphasizes that South Korea, facing a persistent security threat in its own environment, has a robust defense-industrial base and a track record of delivery — an argument put forward to differentiate from some European suppliers. 
Strategic fit for Canada’s Arctic and under-ice needs
The CPSP emphasizes under-ice and long-range patrol capability in the Arctic. South Korea argues the KSS-III, with its AIP + lithium battery combination, is capable of extended submerged operations and long-range patrols. 
From Ottawa’s perspective, that capability is vital given Canada’s unique geographic demands: Atlantic, Pacific and Arctic coasts, and operations under ice caps.
Why Canada is Considering a South Korean Design
Modernisation urgency
The Royal Canadian Navy’s current four Victoria-class submarines were purchased second-hand and are reaching their end of life in the 2030s. A replacement is necessary to avoid a capability gap. Defense News+1
The timeline is tight: Canada expects initial delivery by around 2035, with full fleet by the early to mid‐2040s. The South Korean offer focuses on meeting that schedule.
Diversification of supply and alliances
Canada is signaling a willingness to diversify defense suppliers beyond its traditional anchor of the United States. The South Korean offer aligns with that shift, offering a non-European Atlantic power alternative. 
For Seoul, being chosen by a major Western navy would mark a significant endorsement of its submarine export ambition — given that no NATO member has previously purchased a South Korean sub. 
Industrial and trade benefits
The proposal offering Canadian-industry participation is a strong lever in Ottawa’s procurement calculus. Jobs, supply-chain development and sovereign-industrial capacity are key motives. South Korea’s willingness to include Canadian steel, build partnerships and co-train crews strengthens the domestic economic appeal of its bid. Army Recognition+1
Challenges and Context — Why It’s Not a Done Deal
Under-ice and Arctic credentials
While the KSS-III boasts impressive specs, Canada’s Arctic conditions pose unique demands: extended patrols beneath ice, extremely low acoustic signatures and integration into allied systems. The German/Norwegian Type 212CD offered by TKMS is seen by some analysts as a more mature option for under-ice stealth. 
Canada must decide whether to priorities strike flexibility (which the KSS-III emphasizes with VLS cells) or ultimate acoustic stealth (which the Type 212CD emphasizes).
Domestic build expectations
Although South Korea proposes industrial cooperation, questions remain about the degree of Canadian build-in country. The Canadian embassy in Seoul recently noted that Canadian officials said no discussions have happened about domestic construction of the submarines.
Export and interoperability considerations
Choosing a South Korean design would mark a break from Canada’s historical submarine alliances and may raise supply, sustainment and interoperability questions, especially with existing NATO/Allied systems. European bidders emphasize deeper interoperability and allied logistics chains.
Strategic Implications: Asia-Pacific Defense Cooperation & Beyond
This bid is more than a procurement exercise: it sits at the intersection of Asia-Pacific geopolitics, naval strategy and defense industrial competition. By attempting to sell the KSS-III to Canada, South Korea is signalling its emergence as a global submarine-export nation — seeking to expand its reach from Asia into North America. Meanwhile, Canada’s embrace of a non-traditional partner reflects its shifting defense posture amid a more contested Indo-Pacific and Arctic environment.
For South Korea, a win would open the door to deeper defense ties with NATO-aligned states and underpin its ambition to become a major arms exporter. For Canada, the deal offers a chance to modernize its under-sea fleet, enhance Arctic deterrence and build domestic industrial capacity. But the decision also carries risk: if the industrial and logistical frameworks do not align, the long-term sustainment of the fleet could be challenged.
Looking Ahead: What to Watch
- Contract award timeframe: Canada aims to select a supplier by around 2028 and to deliver the first boat by roughly 2035.
- Technology transfer terms: The depth of Canadian domestic construction, industrial participation and long-term sustainment support will be key negotiation aspects.
- Delivery and sustainment timeline: Whether South Korea can credibly deliver four hulls by 2035 and the remainder by 2043 as proposed will be closely watched.
- Broader defense ties: How this deal may affect Canada-South Korea defense relations, and perhaps shift paradigms around submarine exports to non-traditional buyers.
- Arctic capability: Canada will evaluate which offer best enables persistent under-ice patrols, especially in support of sovereignty in the High North.
FAQs
The CPSP is Canada’s plan to acquire up to 12 conventionally powered submarines to replace the ageing Victoria-class fleet, with operations spanning Atlantic, Pacific and Arctic waters.
Canada is seeking advanced under-sea capability for Arctic and global patrols; the KSS-III offers air-independent propulsion, lithium-ion batteries, long-range strike capacity and a delivery schedule aligned with Canada’s 2030s deadlines. South Korea’s offer also includes industrial collaboration with Canadian firms.
The main identified competitor is the German/Norwegian Type 212CD submarine offered by TKMS, which emphasizes stealth, acoustic signature reduction and allied interoperability.
Key risks include whether the industrial partnership and build-in-Canada commitments are sufficient, whether the submarine design is optimized for Canada’s Arctic environment, and long-term sustainment and interoperability with allied navies.
Canada is targeting a contract award by around 2028, first delivery by about 2035 and full fleet in the early 2040s, depending on the supplier and build schedule
 
			         
														
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[…] it serves as a subtle indicator of the broader shift in under-ice, under-sea, Arctic and adjacent-sea naval operations: the strategic importance of the Norwegian Sea is growing, and so are the “edge-case” risks […]
[…] Changing salinity, stratification and biological regimes complicate acoustic signatures, under-ice navigation and unmanned underwater systems (UUV) operations in the Arctic. Defense planners must account for dynamic ecosystems when calibrating sensors or planning ASW and submarine operations. […]