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HMAS Stirling
HMAS Stirling
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Key Information

HMAS Stirling
Summary
Airport typeMilitary
OperatorRoyal Australian Navy
LocationGarden Island, Western Australia
Elevation AMSL30 ft / 9 m
Map
YGAD is located in Western Australia
YGAD
YGAD
Location in Western Australia
Runways
Direction Length Surface
m ft
05/23 450 1,476 Asphalt
Sources: AIP[1]

HMAS Stirling is a Royal Australian Navy (RAN) base that is part of Fleet Base West situated on the west coast of Australia, on the Indian Ocean. The base is located on Garden Island in the state of Western Australia, near the city of Perth. Garden Island also has its own military airport on the island (ICAO: YGAD). HMAS Stirling is currently under the command of Captain Ken Burleigh, RAN

History

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HMAS Stirling is named after Admiral Sir James Stirling (28 January 1791 – 23 April 1865).[2] Stirling, a Royal Navy officer and colonial administrator, landed on Garden Island, Western Australia in 1827 and returned as commander of the barque Parmelia in June 1829 to establish and administer the Swan River Colony in Western Australia. He was the first Governor of Western Australia, serving between 1828 and 1838.[3]

The planning of Stirling began in 1969 when, after it was decided to create the Two-Ocean Policy, a feasibility study into the use of Garden Island as a naval base was begun. The 4.3 km (2.7 mi) causeway linking the island with the mainland was completed in June 1973. Construction of the wharves and workshops began in early 1973 and accommodation in 1975 with the facility, including the new Fleet Base West, being formally commissioned on 28 July 1978.[4]

The first major unit to call Fleet Base West home was HMAS Stuart, having first been assigned to Stirling in 1984 for several years and, after refitting in the east, again in 1988 until decommissioning in 1991. The first submarine to be based at Stirling was HMAS Oxley in 1987. Later, the headquarters of the Australian Submarine Squadron was relocated there in 1994.[2]

Stirling has expanded significantly within its existing boundaries and is the largest of the RAN's shore establishment, with a base population of approximately 2,300 service personnel, 600 defence civilians and 500 contractors. Amenities included berthing and wharves, vessel repair and refit services, a ship-lift, and a helicopter support facility, as well as medical facilities, fuel storage and accommodation. The base also hosts the Submarine Escape Training Facility – one of only six in the world and the only one in the Southern Hemisphere.[2]

Garden Island

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Garden Island is 10 km (6.2 mi) in length, 1.5 km (0.93 mi) wide, and is 13 km2 (5.0 sq mi) in area, with Stirling occupying approximately 28% of that area. The remaining portion of the Island is nature reserve, the navy has been active in the removal of introduced flora and fauna species. The island has its own quarantine conditions, which prohibit bringing of plants and animals to the island.[5]

Submarine Rotational Forces

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The USS Emory S. Land (AS-39) and USS Hawaii (SSN-776) at HMAS Stirling in August 2024

In March 2023, the US, UK and Australia announced, as part the AUKUS security partnership, the Submarine Rotational Forces-West (SRF-W) initiative whereby the US and UK would maintain a permanent rotational presence of nuclear-powered submarines at the base. Under the AUKUS partnership, US and UK submarines will visit Stirling' more frequently and remain for longer. Australia's nuclear-propelled submarines will be based at Stirling from the early 2030s.[6][7]

Vessel Class Date Country
HMS Astute Astute-class submarine October 2021 United Kingdom[8]
USS North Carolina Virginia-class submarine August 2023 United States[9]
USS Annapolis Virginia-class submarine March 2024 United States[9]
USS Emory S. Land Emory S. Land-class submarine tender August 2024 United States[9][10]
USS Hawaii Virginia-class submarine August – September 2024 United States[11][9]
USS Minnesota Virginia-class submarine February – March 2025 United States[9]

Ships stationed

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HMAS Sheean (front left), HMAS Collins (front right), HMAS Sirius (back left) and ex-HMAS Westralia at HMAS Stirling in 2006

Stirling is home port to 10 fleet units, including four Anzac class frigates, all six of the Collins class submarines operated by the Royal Australian Navy Submarine Service, and a replenishment vessel.[2][4]

See also

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References

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Revisions and contributorsEdit on WikipediaRead on Wikipedia
from Grokipedia
HMAS Stirling is a (RAN) shore establishment and the principal component of Fleet Base West, situated on Garden Island approximately 4 kilometres offshore from Rockingham in . Commissioned on 28 July 1978 and named in honour of Captain James Stirling, the first , it serves as the primary base for the RAN's , including the Collins-class fleet, and supports a significant portion of the surface combatant force. The base provides comprehensive administrative, training, communications, and logistics support to over 2,300 active-duty personnel and associated vessels, making it the largest RAN facility by personnel strength. As part of the security partnership, HMAS Stirling is undergoing expansion to accommodate rotational deployments of up to four U.S. Virginia-class nuclear-powered submarines starting from 2027, with plans to host Australia's future sovereign nuclear-powered submarine capability from the early 2030s. This development underscores its strategic role in enhancing through enhanced interoperability with allies.

History

Establishment and Commissioning

The planning for HMAS Stirling originated in 1969 as part of the Royal Australian Navy's shift to a two-ocean policy, which sought to establish a dedicated western fleet base to bolster Australia's strategic posture in the during the era. A confirmed Garden Island's viability for this purpose, prompting the Australian Government to announce development intentions in November 1969. Construction commenced with a 4.3 km linking the island to the mainland in 1971, completed in 1973 to facilitate access and logistics. Further infrastructure works followed, including wharves and workshops from early 1973 and accommodation facilities in 1975, enabling initial ship visits by August 1975. The base was designed to sustain both surface combatants and submarines, shifting some maintenance responsibilities westward from east coast facilities like HMAS Platypus to minimize transit demands and enhance operational readiness for contingencies. Named in honor of Captain James Stirling, Western Australia's first governor, the establishment formalized the RAN's commitment to balanced hemispheric coverage. HMAS Stirling was officially commissioned on 28 July 1978, marking it as the RAN's principal west coast hub and the last major shore establishment activated under the two-ocean framework. This milestone addressed longstanding logistical gaps, allowing more efficient force projection without excessive dependence on transcontinental voyages from eastern bases.

Early Operations and Expansion

Following its commissioning on 28 July 1978, HMAS Stirling initially focused on providing logistical and operational support to (RAN) vessels conducting exercises and patrols in the , with ships beginning visits as early as August 1975. The base's early operations emphasized berthing, refueling, and minor maintenance for surface combatants and visiting Oberon-class submarines, aligning with Australia's strategic shift toward enhanced maritime presence on its western seaboard amid growing regional tensions in the late era. Infrastructure developments in the immediate post-commissioning years included basic wharf enhancements to accommodate destroyer escorts and frigates, enabling sustained deployments without reliance on eastern ports. In the and , expansions were driven by the RAN's fleet modernization, transitioning from the aging Oberon-class to the domestically built Collins-class submarines, with the first vessel, HMAS Collins, entering service in 1996. HMAS Stirling underwent significant upgrades, including specialized berthing facilities and docks tailored for the larger Collins-class hulls (approximately 78 meters long and displacing 3,100 tons submerged), to serve as the primary homeport for all six boats. These works, completed progressively through the decade, incorporated dry-docking capabilities and training infrastructure such as the , supporting the operational tempo of extended underwater patrols and addressing the logistical demands of diesel-electric propulsion systems requiring frequent surfacing for battery recharging. The 2000s saw further growth to integrate the Anzac-class frigates, with five of the eight vessels progressively homeported at to bolster west coast force projection capabilities amid evolving security dynamics. This prompted wharf extensions and expanded sustainment facilities capable of handling the frigates' 3,600-ton displacement and helicopter operations, including modules. Personnel numbers expanded from initial cadres of a few hundred in the late to over 2,300 uniformed RAN members by the mid-2000s, supplemented by approximately 600 Defence civilians and contractors, totaling around 3,400 by 2010—reflecting the base's role in sustaining a larger resident fleet for rapid response to regional contingencies. These developments were underpinned by empirical assessments of strategic geography, prioritizing western basing to reduce transit times to key chokepoints like the Malacca Strait.

Location and Facilities

Garden Island Geography

Garden Island lies approximately 50 kilometres south of Perth, , as a slender extending about 10 kilometres in length and 1.5 kilometres in width, positioned roughly 5 kilometres offshore within Cockburn Sound. The island's southeastern shores front Careening Bay, contributing to the sound's configuration as a semi-enclosed embayment bounded westward by the island itself. Cockburn Sound's geography offers sheltered, relatively calm waters ideal for vessel berthing, protected from predominant westerly swells by Garden Island and adjacent features, while maintaining navigable channels with natural depths exceeding 10 metres in key areas for access to the open via the sound's southern mouth near Woodman Point. This strategic coastal placement, approximately 20 kilometres south of the Perth-Fremantle metropolitan area, facilitates proximity to regional for mainland without compromising maritime connectivity. The surrounding marine environment includes extensive meadows, predominantly Posidonia australis and Amphibolis antarctica, which cover significant portions of Cockburn Sound's seabed and support as for fish and . Ecological assessments for activities like maintenance adjacent to the island evaluate risks to these beds from , incorporating mitigation strategies such as silt curtains and sediment plume modeling to limit impacts below thresholds that seagrasses can naturally accommodate.

Infrastructure and Maintenance Capabilities

HMAS Stirling possesses wharves designed to accommodate Collins-class submarines, measuring approximately 78 meters in length, alongside Anzac-class frigates exceeding 100 meters. These berthing facilities enable simultaneous of multiple submarines and surface vessels, supporting the basing of all six Collins-class submarines and select fleet units such as minehunters. The base conducts maintenance primarily through in-water repairs and specialized workshops tailored to diesel-electric systems, without an on-site . These workshops handle routine sustainment, including , , and systems upkeep for the RAN's . Logistics infrastructure includes fuel depots, munitions storage and handling areas, and supply chains enabling extended self-sufficient operations. The RAN Training and Systems Centre provides simulators and facilities for , ensuring operational readiness without reliance on external bases. This setup sustains the squadron's availability for patrols and exercises in the region.

Operational Role in the RAN

Fleet Base West Functions

Fleet Base West, established with the commissioning of HMAS Stirling on 28 July 1978, functions as the Royal Australian Navy's primary command and administrative center for west coast operations, overseeing activities that ensure the readiness and sustainment of naval forces based in . This role encompasses coordination of personnel management, operational planning, and logistical support to align with the RAN's broader fleet requirements under . The base integrates with Australian Defence Force-wide logistics systems to provide basing infrastructure for permanent fleet elements, enabling efficient resource allocation and maintenance cycles that support sustained naval presence. It facilitates training programs and sustainment services tailored to west coast units, including those managed by subordinate commands such as the Submarine Force, which handles personnel oversight, operational standards, and engineering support for submarine capabilities to meet the Fleet Commander's directives. Organizational elements at Fleet Base West extend to surface fleet commands, structuring administrative hierarchies that direct training, readiness assessments, and logistical pipelines for surface combatants operating from the base. This setup supports joint ADF operations by streamlining supply chains and rapid mobilization protocols, allowing for deployment of assets to theaters as required by national defense priorities.

Submarine and Surface Fleet Support

HMAS Stirling functions as the primary home port for the Royal Australian Navy's six Collins-class diesel-electric submarines, delivering essential through-life sustainment including docking, repairs, system upgrades, and logistical support coordinated with ASC. The base's specialized infrastructure enables maintenance of propulsion, combat, and sensor systems, alongside weapon handling and crew training simulations to ensure operational readiness for patrols. For surface fleet vessels, Stirling provides intermediate maintenance, resupply, and berthing for ships operating in Western Australia, supporting Anzac-class frigates during their service life with patrol cycle turnarounds and basic repairs. Hobart-class destroyers benefit from logistical aid and minor upkeep during Indian Ocean deployments, facilitating interoperability exercises and sustained presence without full dry-docking. Defence audits, including the 2016 Coles Progress Review, underscore Stirling's role in addressing Collins-class availability shortfalls, targeting enhanced uptime through dedicated facilities amid historical challenges with fleet reliability. Recent assessments note persistent issues, with only one submarine fully operational as of November 2024 due to ongoing repairs and upgrades, highlighting the base's critical yet strained sustainment capacity.

Submarine Rotational Forces

Pre-AUKUS Rotations

The implemented rotational sustainment cycles for its at HMAS Stirling during the to counter persistent readiness shortfalls and sustain operational surge capacity in the region. These cycles structured the fleet into a model where two submarines remained deployable at any time, while the other four progressed through phased maintenance, upgrades, and crew training rotations. This approach addressed early operational deficiencies, including and faults that hampered fleet effectiveness following initial commissions between 1996 and 2003. Sustainment reforms, informed by reviews such as the 1999 McIntosh inquiry and subsequent initiatives like Project SEA 1439, progressively elevated submarine availability from below 50% in the early —often as low as one boat operational—to over 80% by 2020 through enhanced maintenance protocols and supply chain efficiencies. Government assessments credited these rotations with enabling consistent patrols and rapid response capabilities, transforming the Collins fleet from a liability to a reliable deterrent asset. Pre-AUKUS rotations facilitated joint exercises with allied navies in the , fostering tactical interoperability via diesel-electric submarine operations, such as drills and patrols, without nuclear propulsion integration. These activities, including bilateral engagements with U.S. and regional partners, honed skills in contested waters while leveraging HMAS Stirling's strategic positioning for forward presence.

AUKUS SRF-West Implementation

The security partnership, announced on September 15, 2021, by , the , and the , established the framework for enhanced submarine cooperation, including the Submarine Rotational Force–West (SRF-West) at HMAS Stirling to host rotations of foreign nuclear-powered submarines. This rotational presence aims to build interoperability, sustainment capabilities, and regional deterrence without permanent basing of foreign assets. Under the pact's Optimal Pathway outlined in March 2023, Phase 1 initiates SRF-West from as early as 2027, enabling a sustained rotational deployment of up to four U.S. Virginia-class submarines and one UK Astute-class submarine operating from HMAS Stirling. These rotations will involve submarines conducting independent operations while leveraging Australian facilities for logistics, training, and limited maintenance, phased to align with Australia's acquisition of its own nuclear-powered submarines in the early 2030s. Implementation includes procedural alignments for safety, non-proliferation compliance, and handling, governed by the Naval Nuclear Propulsion Agreement signed in 2024, which facilitates secure transfer of submarine-specific materials and verifies adherence to safeguards. Joint exercises and port visits, such as the USS Minnesota (SSN-783) docking at HMAS Stirling in February 2025, test these protocols ahead of full rotations. The inaugural Submarine Tendered Maintenance Period (STMP) began on August 23, 2024, marking Australia's first maintenance of a U.S. submarine at the base to refine sustainment procedures. SRF-West requires HMAS Stirling's wharves to accommodate the larger draft and length of Virginia- and Astute-class submarines, ensuring safe berthing for nuclear-powered vessels without altering systems or enabling nuclear refueling in . These measures, confirmed in trilateral joint statements, prioritize operational readiness while maintaining the submarines' conventionally armed configuration.

Recent Developments

Infrastructure Upgrades

Upgrades to HMAS Stirling's infrastructure, initiated in September 2025, form part of the $5.2 billion Submarine Rotational Force-West (SRF-West) Infrastructure Project, designed to enable the basing and sustainment of conventionally armed, nuclear-powered submarines under the Pillar 1 agreement. These enhancements address requirements for increased power generation, secure storage for components, wharf expansions, and specialized facilities to support rotational deployments starting in 2027. In September 2024, engineering firm KBR received a contract extension from the Australian Department of Defence's Security and Estate Group to deliver technical design services for SSN-compatible at the base, building on prior work for sustainment facilities. The scope emphasizes resilient power upgrades and integration to handle the operational demands of Virginia-class and submarines, with full project completion targeted over a 10-year horizon into the early to align with Australia's acquisition timeline. Defence assessments in 2025 highlighted potential timeline pressures due to the complexity of nuclear-specific adaptations, though no formal delays were announced as of October 2025; public consultations on priority works, including environmental and community impacts, concluded in February 2025 to refine implementation.

International Cooperation and Visits

The Virginia-class submarine USS Minnesota (SSN-783) conducted a port visit to HMAS Stirling from 25 February 2025, initiating the first of two scheduled U.S. nuclear-powered attack submarine stops at the facility that year. This engagement enabled U.S. Navy personnel to share maintenance procedures with Royal Australian Navy counterparts, fostering technical interoperability essential to AUKUS Pillar I objectives. In August 2025, a senior delegation conducted its third visit to HMAS Stirling that year, focusing on coordination for the impending Submarine Rotational Force-West. These interactions underscore deepening trilateral alignment, with discussions emphasizing logistical integration for allied submarine operations. Planning for sustained rotations from 2027 includes provisioning for one Astute-class submarine alongside up to four U.S. Navy Virginia-class submarines at the base, incorporating joint training exercises to cultivate operational familiarity and procedural alignment among partners.

Strategic Importance

Indian Ocean Deterrence

HMAS Stirling's location on Garden Island in Cockburn Sound provides the Royal Australian Navy (RAN) with immediate access to the , positioning it adjacent to critical sea lanes that transport over one-third of the world's and two-thirds of global seaborne oil trade. This geographic advantage supports RAN operations to deter threats to , which empirical trade data links to Australia's , as disruptions in these routes could severely impact energy imports and exports. Since its commissioning in , HMAS Stirling has served as the primary base for RAN submarines conducting patrols in the region, initially focused on countering Soviet naval threats during the . Oberon-class submarines homeported there performed intelligence collection missions to the west of between 1978 and 1992, shadowing foreign submarines and monitoring potential adversarial movements. These efforts evolved in response to shifting dynamics, with contemporary operations from Stirling enabling surveillance of expanding Chinese naval activities, including efforts to influence strategic ports and sea lanes in the eastern . Basing at HMAS Stirling substantially shortens deployment times for RAN assets to hotspots compared to east coast facilities like [Fleet Base East](/page/Fleet Base East) in , avoiding lengthy transits around southern Australia that can exceed 3,000 nautical miles. Strategic analyses emphasize this as a force posture multiplier, enhancing deterrence by allowing quicker positioning against time-sensitive threats in .

Contribution to Alliances

HMAS Stirling functions as the operational hub for the Submarine Rotational Force-West (SRF-West), enabling AUKUS Pillar I by hosting rotations of up to four U.S. Virginia-class and one UK Astute-class nuclear-powered submarines from as early as 2027. This setup advances collective deterrence across the AUKUS partners by sustaining forward-deployed allied submarine capabilities, circumventing the technical and sovereign challenges of Australian-owned nuclear submarines in the near term while progressively integrating Royal Australian Navy personnel into sustainment and operations. SRF-West thus serves as an enabler for trilateral undersea force multiplication without immediate proliferation risks. Interoperability gains materialize through shared logistics and procedural alignment at the base, including U.S. Navy comparisons of weapons handling and maintenance protocols with Australian counterparts during port visits, as evidenced by USS Minnesota (SSN-783)'s February 2025 arrival—the first of two planned U.S. fast-attack submarine calls that year. Infrastructure adaptations at Stirling, such as expanded berthing and sustainment facilities, integrate U.S. and UK supply chains, permitting extended rotations that enhance joint readiness and reduce individual nations' basing burdens. These measures yield verifiable advancements in allied submarine employment, with embedded Australian crews gaining exposure to nuclear operations aboard partner vessels. Stirling's contributions extend to the Five Eyes intelligence framework, where AUKUS rotations amplify trilateral data-sharing on undersea threats among core members , the , and the U.S. Persistent SSN presence via SRF-West is projected to provide long-range surveillance and strike persistence, strengthening domain awareness in contested waters without sole reliance on any single partner's assets. This operational synergy underpins broader alliance resilience, as demonstrated by ongoing U.S. submarine docking protocols tailored for Stirling's secure environment.

Controversies and Criticisms

Security and Basing Concerns

HMAS Stirling's strategic location on Garden Island, adjacent to Perth's , exposes it to unique basing vulnerabilities in a contested environment, particularly from long-range missile strikes by adversaries capable of precision targeting naval infrastructure. Analyses in 2025 have emphasized overlaps with the Westport port development project, which proposes expanded commercial shipping channels and facilities in close proximity to the base, potentially enabling covert threats such as containerised weaponry, via merchant vessels, or . Defence veterans and security experts have warned that this proximity could compromise the base's defensibility, especially for hosting nuclear-powered submarines under , by increasing risks of weaponised commercial traffic or disrupted access during conflict. Adversarial surveillance activities have heightened these concerns, with verifiable incidents of Chinese naval and vessels operating near HMAS Stirling. In March 2025, a Chinese including warships , , and supply ship Weishanhu conducted exercises and transited close to the base, prompting assessments of potential gathering or shadowing of allied assets. Earlier in April 2025, a Chinese survey ship was detected mapping seabed features off , raising suspicions of efforts to install underwater sensors or prepare targeting data for , given the base's growing role in submarine rotations. These operations underscore risks, including potential cyber intrusions or penetration, amid broader patterns of Chinese maritime assertiveness near Australian waters. To mitigate these threats, has pursued infrastructure hardening and enhanced countermeasures at HMAS Stirling. A $5.2 billion upgrade program, initiated in 2025, includes reinforced facilities to support conventionally armed nuclear-powered , emphasizing resilient power systems, secure berthing, and dispersed to reduce single-point vulnerabilities. Allied basing under integrates U.S. and rotational forces while preserving command authority over operations, avoiding over-reliance on foreign assets and maintaining sovereign decision-making. Enhanced surveillance protocols, including P-8 patrols and expulsion of suspect foreign vessels, have been implemented following these incidents, bolstering base security without compromising operational .

Political and Economic Debates

Critics of , including former Australian Prime Minister and some strategic analysts, contend that the pact's Pillar I—encompassing nuclear-powered acquisitions and basing at HMAS Stirling—compromises Australia's by fostering excessive dependence on U.S. technology and , potentially drawing the nation into American-led conflicts amid escalating tensions with . These voices, often aligned with perspectives skeptical of U.S. alliances, argue for abandoning the program to preserve and avoid bloc confrontation, citing China's warnings against as evidence of heightened regional risks. Proponents, drawing from realist assessments of Indo-Pacific dynamics, rebut that such critiques underestimate Australia's pre-existing capability gaps in undersea deterrence, where conventional submarines prove insufficient against advanced adversaries like , necessitating for sovereign sustainment and burden-sharing within alliances rather than pacifist avoidance of tensions. The estimated A$268–368 billion cost over 30 years for Pillar I, including HMAS Stirling expansions, is framed as an in credible deterrence, with empirical on 's territorial underscoring the causal imperative for enhanced capabilities over unsubstantiated sovereignty erosion claims. Economically, debates center on opportunity costs versus localized gains, with detractors highlighting the program's scale—potentially exceeding initial projections due to U.S. constraints—as diverting funds from social priorities, while analyses emphasize boosts like up to 3,000 direct jobs from $8 billion in HMAS Stirling upgrades and broader demand for skilled positions in to support submarine sustainment. These projections, derived from official strategy documents, counter anti-AUKUS calls by evidencing industrial multipliers in a region historically reliant on resource exports, though strains on local sectors remain a noted point.

Current Stationed Assets

Submarines and Surface Ships

![HMAS Sheean, a Collins-class submarine][float-right] HMAS Stirling is the primary basing location for the Royal Australian Navy's six Collins-class diesel-electric s, which form the backbone of Australia's submarine force. These vessels, comprising HMAS Collins, Farncomb, Waller, Dechaineux, Sheean, and Rankin, are maintained and operated from Fleet Base West at the installation. The submarines undergo sustainment and operational support at adjacent facilities, ensuring rotational deployments while based there. Surface ship assets at HMAS Stirling include multiple Anzac-class frigates, which provide , , and air defense capabilities for the RAN's western fleet. As of 2025, several of the remaining Anzac-class ships, following the decommissioning of HMAS Anzac in May 2024, are homeported at the base for operations in the region. These frigates are supported by auxiliary and support vessels that facilitate logistics, replenishment, and maintenance. The Anzac-class frigates stationed at are undergoing upgrades and are slated for replacement by the Hunter-class frigates in the 2030s, as part of the RAN's surface combatant evolution, though current operations rely on the existing fleet inventory. No Hobart-class destroyers are permanently based at the facility, with those assets primarily operating from eastern Australian ports.

Personnel and Units

HMAS Stirling serves as a major hub for (RAN) personnel, accommodating over 3,000 individuals including RAN sailors, Defence civilians, and contractors who provide administrative, training, communications, and logistics support. This workforce supports the base's operational demands, with specialized roles encompassing submarine operations training, diving expertise, and systems maintenance. Key units stationed or operating from the base include the RAN Submarine Training and Systems Centre, which delivers submariner qualification and certification programs, having trained personnel for over 30 years through partnerships with entities like ASC. The Training Centre West complex facilitates a range of courses, including practical submarine safety and escape training via the , operational since 1987 and mandatory for new trainees. Additionally, elements of the Clearance Diving Branch, such as Clearance Diving Team 4, conduct explosive ordnance disposal, search missions, and underwater engineering tasks, with recent activities focusing on high-intensity mine countermeasures training. Personnel roles exhibit diversity, from foundational crew certification to advanced familiarization; for instance, eight RAN enlisted sailors completed the U.S. Navy's six-month nuclear course in April 2025, qualifying them for and systems handling in preparation for future capabilities. The base also hosts the Defence Communications Station Perth for signal and network operations, alongside a trials wing for equipment testing and evaluation, ensuring a broad spectrum of technical and operational expertise among the stationed units. Ongoing expansions, such as the new Centre opened in 2024, aim to scale capacity for growing submariner numbers.

References

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