Australia designed the vessels using commercial off-the-shelf technology, so small countries would find them easier to maintain, in small remote shipyards. Australia fully equipped the ships, prior to delivery, with the exception of providing armament, but they are capable of mounting an autocannon on the foredeck.
Australia started building a new, larger, and more capable class of patrol vessels, to replace the Pacific Forum class.[1][7]Rabaul was replaced by HMPNGS Ted Diro, in December 2018.
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Arieta Vakasukawaqa (2016-08-03). "Kiro Grounding Probe Completed". Fiji Sun. Archived from the original on 2018-06-12. Retrieved 2018-06-11. He said works to salvage the RFNS Kiro would be an expensive operation for the Fiji Navy.
^ ab"Semaphore: February 2005". Semaphore magazine. February 2005. Archived from the original on 2018-10-25. Retrieved 2018-10-24. The governments of a number of the Pacific island nations expressed their concern about the need for a suitable maritime patrol force to fulfil their new surveillance requirements. The Australian government responded by instituting a Defence Cooperation Project (DCP), to provide suitable patrol vessels and associated training and infrastructure to island nations in the region. The Pacific Patrol Boat Systems Program Office was created within the Minor War Vessels Branch of the Royal Australian Navy (RAN) procurement organisation to manage the DCP[2] and to be the Project Authority.
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Marcus Boomen (2017). "The Prospects of Developing War Crimes Databasing Projects: A Case Study of the Bougainville Conflict"(PDF). Canterbury University. Archived(PDF) from the original on 2018-02-16. Retrieved 2018-10-24. The Papua New Guinea Defence Force – This is the military of PNGDF and identifies all uniformed soldiers as well as the naval and air assets. Their air force contains Australian-supplied UH-1 Iroquois helicopters, Pacific class patrol boats 1-4 HMPNGS Rabaul, Dreger, Seeadler and Moresby as well as Nomad light aircraft.
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Joanne Wallis (2018-10-20). "Australia steps up its Pacific pivot". East Asia Forum. Archived from the original on 2018-10-25. Retrieved 2018-10-24. A particularly well received aspect of the Defence Cooperation Program is the Pacific Patrol Boat Program. While the program has faced challenges in the past, these have been outweighed by its benefits, both to recipient states and Australia. Australia was right to build on the existing program with the Pacific Maritime Security Program, which will see new boats supplied to the region as well as a commitment to provide personnel and sustainment over 30 years.