Advancing UK Aerospace, Defence, Security & Space Solutions Worldwide
  • Home
  • /
  • Defence
  • /
  • HRH Prince William opens £34m submarine training facility in Clyde

Defence

HRH Prince William opens £34m submarine training facility in Clyde

His Royal Highness Prince William visited the home of the UK Submarine Service in Argyll and Bute earlier this week to meet with service personnel and officially open a multimillion-pound training facility.

Image courtesy Royal Navy / Crown Copyright

The Prince, who is Commodore-in-Chief Submarines, spent the afternoon at HM Naval Base Clyde, Scotland’s largest military establishment, beginning with an update on operations delivered by members of the Submarine Flotilla.

While at the site His Royal Highness officially opened the new £34m Submarine Escape, Rescue, Abandonment and Survival (SMERAS) facility.

Advertisement
ODU RT

Known as 'Thetis' building, after wartime submarine HMS Thetis which sank in Liverpool Bay in 1939, the facility is used to train Royal Navy submariners in how to safely escape from a stricken submarine. 

The state-of-the-art building features a realistic simulator capable of mimicking a variety of weather conditions and sea states. 

Trainers can put students through their paces in the water, giving them the opportunity to practise abandoning a submarine and escaping to life rafts while wind, rain and even thunder and lightning rage around them.

Submariners can also practise escape from depth methods in a realistic training environment, simulating the expected conditions on board a submarine in distress.

Captain Iain Breckenridge OBE, in charge of submarine training with the navy’s Flag Officer Sea Training organisation, said: “We were delighted to host our Commodore-in-Chief to open this fantastic and world-leading submarine escape training facility.

“His Royal Highness toured the entire building, met training staff and students, and enjoyed some hands-on operation of the escape towers and wave generator.”

While officially opening the SMERAS facility Prince William also signed the guest book on the same page as his grandfather, Prince Philip, did in 1961, and his father, Prince Charles, signed in 1972. 

The guest book was inherited by the SMERAS team from the previous submarine training facility, SETT (Submarine Escape Tank Trainer), at HMS Dolphin in Gosport. Generations of submariners undertook their training at the Gosport establishment’s famous escape tower before its closure last year. 

The new SMERAS facility at HM Naval Base Clyde has taken up the baton, becoming the site where all current and future submariners will be trained in vital escape skills.

SMERAS is part of the transformation of the naval base into the Submarine Centre of Specialisation.

Other development work underway at the site includes the construction of a new £100m Submarine Training School. Royal Navy Submarine School training is currently held at HMS Raleigh in Cornwall but will be transferred to the new Faslane facility in the future, along with the Defence School of Marine Engineering, the Nuclear Systems Group and Nuclear Department at HMS Sultan in Gosport.

Advertisement
ODU RT

More than 6,700 civilians and service personnel are employed at HM Naval Base Clyde with this number set to increase in preparation for the arrival of the Dreadnought class of submarines, the next generation of the deterrent at the end of the decade.

Commodore Jim Perks OBE, Head of the Royal Navy Submarine Service, said: “This visit has been an excellent and important opportunity to update the Submarine Service’s Commodore-in-Chief on recent operations. It has also provided us with an opportunity to highlight the ongoing work on the Clyde to make the naval base the Royal Navy’s Submarine Centre of Specialisation.

“These are exciting times to be a submariner at HM Naval Base Clyde as we continue to shape the future of the service.”

Serving submariners were also able to speak with The Prince outside of HM Naval Base Clyde’s Neptune Building Supermess at the site’s Submariners’ Memorial Garden.

The Prince heard from personnel about life in the Submarine Service, and about ongoing initiatives aimed at helping to improve mental health of members of the armed forces.

His Royal Highness Prince William has been Commodore-in-Chief Submarines since 2006.

He has previously visited attack submarine HMS Artful at sea in 2016 where he presented dolphins badges to newly qualified submariners and conducted his first submarine dive. 

The Prince has also presented deterrent pins to submariners at HM Naval Base Clyde and also attended a service at Westminster Abbey in 2020 which marked 50 years of the Continuous At Sea Deterrent.


 


 

Advertisement
FIA2026 animated banner
UK and France to develop next-gen air-to-air missile

Defence

UK and France to develop next-gen air-to-air missile

1 April 2026

The United Kingdom and France have today signed a Memorandum of Understanding to conduct a joint study into the development of a successor to the Meteor missile, one of the world's most advanced beyond-visual-range air-to-air weapons.

Solar array to be installed at Bassingbourn Barracks

Defence Events

Solar array to be installed at Bassingbourn Barracks

1 April 2026

The Defence Infrastructure Organisation (DIO), working with Custom Solar on behalf of the British Army, held a ground-breaking ceremony for a new solar array at Bassingbourn Barracks.

QinetiQ to establish Belgian Mission Data Factory

Defence

QinetiQ to establish Belgian Mission Data Factory

1 April 2026

QinetiQ is to support the Government of Belgium in strengthening its ability to collect, manage and exploit mission data, the information and intelligence critical to modern defence operations.

HMS Active completes float off feat

Defence Events

HMS Active completes float off feat

30 March 2026

Building on the momentum of February's dual milestone event at Babcock’s Rosyth site, the Type 31 frigate programme has reached another significant stage, with HMS Active completing the float-off process.

Advertisement
ODU RT
Lockheed Martin joins MTC as Tier 1 member

Defence

Lockheed Martin joins MTC as Tier 1 member

30 March 2026

Lockheed Martin has joined the Manufacturing Technology Centre (MTC) as a Tier 1 member which will see it collaborate on core research, capabilities and investments and play a key role in managing projects that address some of the pressing challenges being faced by defence industry supply chains.

RFA Lyme Bay gets mine hunting tech upgrade

Defence

RFA Lyme Bay gets mine hunting tech upgrade

30 March 2026

The Royal Navy is stepping up its mine hunting capabilities with new cutting-edge uncrewed equipment being added to RFA Lyme Bay in the coming days.

Advertisement
ODU RT
Advertisement
FIA2026 animated banner