The primary role of the Lewis and Clarks is to provide logistic lift from supply sources such as friendly ports, or while at sea, from specially equipped merchant ships by consolidation. Lewis and Clarks will transfer cargo (ammunition, food, limited quantities of fuel, repair parts, ship store items, and expendable supplies and material) to station ships and other naval warfare forces. As auxiliary support ships, Lewis and Clarks will directly contribute to the Navy's ability to maintain a forward presence. When operating together with Henry J. Kaiser-class oilers Lewis and Clarks will provide the carrier battle group and/or amphibious readiness group with product lift equivalent to a Supply-class combat support ship.
Construction of the lead ship (USNS Lewis and Clark (T-AKE-1)) was awarded to National Steel and Shipbuilding Company (NASSCO) of San Diego, California, on 18 October 2001. The contract contains options for eleven follow ships. The option for the first follow ship (USNS Sacagawea (T-AKE-2)) was exercised simultaneously with award of Lewis and Clark.
Ships
References
This article includes information collected from the Naval Sea Systems Command (NAVSEA) Web site http://www.navsea.navy.mil/