Advancing UK Aerospace, Defence, Security & Space Solutions Worldwide
  • Home
  • /
  • Defence
  • /
  • BAE Systems welcomes first Royal Navy sailors on HMS Glasgow

Defence

BAE Systems welcomes first Royal Navy sailors on HMS Glasgow

The Royal Navy sailors who will bring to life the first of the UK’s next-generation warships, HMS Glasgow, have been given a warm welcome as they arrived at BAE Systems’ Glasgow shipyards.

Above: HMS Glasgow Ships Company.
Courtesy BAE Systems

 
Designed and built in her namesake city, HMS Glasgow is the first anti-submarine warfare City Class Type 26 frigate being built for the Royal Navy which will deliver critical protection of the Royal Navy’s Continuous At Sea Deterrent and Carrier Strike Group.

Advertisement
ODU RT

Working closely with BAE Systems teams, the first members of HMS Glasgow Ship’s Company will produce the ‘operators’ manual’, which determines how HMS Glasgow will be run, her routines, her systems and sensors, to make her an effective fighting force when she enters service later this decade.

It is also their task to give HMS Glasgow her soul – to set the tone for an active career of 25 years or more, building bonds with her Sponsor, affiliates such as the City of Glasgow, Army and RAF units, charities and community groups.

Commander Phil Burgess, Marine Engineer Officer and Senior Naval Officer, said: "The ship’s company is the life-blood of a warship. With Royal Navy personnel joining HMS Glasgow for the first time, we have reached a key milestone that will enable the engineering, administrative and organisational foundations to be established.

"These are necessary for a modern-day warship to function efficiently and effectively, and by starting now we can best support the build and transition into Service of HMS Glasgow."

Simon Lister, Managing Director of BAE Systems' Naval Ships business, presented the ship’s first two junior ratings – Leading Writer Hayden Palmer and logistician Leading Hand Samuela Halofaki – with the inaugural HMS Glasgow cap tallies as part of welcoming the first members of HMS Glasgow Ships Company.

Leading Hand Samuela Halofaki will be responsible for making sure HMS Glasgow has all the requisite equipment and stores aboard, as well as the supporting documentation.

“I’m delighted to have joined as the first logistics expert in the first of ship of the Type 26 class. It’s exciting to be part of the team delivering a new ship into Service in the RN and I’m looking forward to playing my part in that,” said Samuela who has already helped to bring HMS Trent, HMS Tamar and HMS Spey into service.

Advertisement
PTC rectangle

“HMS Glasgow will be an extremely versatile, capable and powerful addition to the Royal Navy fleet and we are proud to welcome the first members of the Ship’s Company to work alongside our teams here in Glasgow”, said Simon Lister.

“Together with the men and women who will live and work on-board HMS Glasgow, we look forward to using our collective skill and knowledge to bring her to life completing the installation and commissioning of the key systems that will give her the vital capability to serve the Royal Navy for decades to come.”

Supporting more than 4,000 jobs across the UK, the UK Type 26 programme is making a significant contribution to the nation’s economic recovery by maintaining much-needed skills and capabilities. To date, more than £1 billion has been invested across the programme’s supply chain, with more than 100 suppliers globally.

The Type 26 is the original variant of BAE Systems’ Global Combat Ship, which supports a close partnership between the Royal Navy, Royal Canadian Navy and the Royal Australian Navy. Australia and Canada both selected a variant of the Type 26 design for their anti-submarine frigate programmes, supporting greater operational, training and intelligence ties between the three nations.

 

 

Advertisement
Gulfstream banner
ARTEC awarded £53m contract for British Army artillery weapon systems

Defence

ARTEC awarded £53m contract for British Army artillery weapon systems

13 March 2026

Increased lethality for the British Army has moved a step closer after a £53 million contract was awarded by OCCAR on behalf of the British Army to ARTEC GmbH for the long-lead production of 37 weapon systems for the Remote Controlled Howitzer (RCH) 155.

BAE Systems completes preliminary design review of USSF missile tracking system

Defence Space

BAE Systems completes preliminary design review of USSF missile tracking system

12 March 2026

BAE Systems has completed the Preliminary Design Review for the $1.2 billion US Space Force (USSF) Space Systems Command (SSC) Resilient Missile Warning & Tracking (RMWT) – Medium Earth Orbit (MEO) Epoch 2 programme to provide missile warning and tracking of advanced missile threats.

Torus alliance launched

Defence Events

Torus alliance launched

12 March 2026

Amentum, GXO, Accenture and Maersk have entered into an alliance to support the next generation of supply chain solutions to the UK Defence Sector, called Torus Defence Supply Chain.

Rolls-Royce strengthens PGZ partnership

Defence

Rolls-Royce strengthens PGZ partnership

12 March 2026

Rolls-Royce and the Polish defence technology group Polska Grupa Zbrojeniowa S.A. (PGZ) intend to intensify their cooperation in the field of propulsion technologies for military vehicles.

Advertisement
ODU RT
UK-first achieved in advanced materials

Aerospace Defence Space

UK-first achieved in advanced materials

11 March 2026

The UK has established its first sovereign manufacturing capability for ultrahigh temperature materials - vital for space, hypersonic and propulsion systems.

Thales launches SkyDefender

Defence

Thales launches SkyDefender

11 March 2026

Thales has today announced the launch of SkyDefender, a system providing an integral air and missile defence dome with artificial intelligence.

Advertisement
PTC rectangle
Advertisement
Gulfstream banner