Naval Warfare

Royal Australian Navy Farewells Auxiliary Oiler Supply Ship HMAS Sirius

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The Royal Australian Navy’s last Auxiliary Oiler supply ship, HMAS Sirius has been farewelled by Navy’s east-coast based Fleet and dignitaries ahead of its decommissioning in Western Australia in December. New South Wales Governor General Her Excellency the Honourable Margaret Beazley AC QC and Navy personnel waved from ships and from ashore, as the Oiler did a farewell lap of Sydney Harbour as part of its decommissioning tour. During the lap of the harbour, HMA Ships Supply, Arunta, Watson, Penguin, Kuttabul and a MH-60R helicopter from 816 Squadron at HMAS Albatross, joined the event to pay tribute to Sirius’ 15 years of service.

Commanding Officer of HMAS Sirius, Commander Christopher Doherty said,”The ship and those who have crewed her have excelled in their duties. Since commissioning in 2006, HMAS Sirius has completed 766 Replenishments at Sea. This equates to almost one every week since commissioning. We have been honoured to provide critical logistics capability to not only Australian naval ships, but those from New Zealand, the United States, the United Kingdom, Indonesia, Malaysia, Singapore, Spain, South Korea, Japan and Canada. It has been a great privilege to serve on board Sirius knowing that our work has enabled the Fleet to stay at sea to help safeguard the region.”

An MH60-R helicopter from 816 Squadron flies over HMAS Sirius during its final lap of Sydney Harbour.
An MH60-R helicopter from 816 Squadron flies over HMAS Sirius during its final lap of Sydney Harbour.(Photo by LSIS David Cox/Australian Government Department of Defence)

Sirius was originally expected to remain in service for approximately 15 years. In 2012, the ship was predicted to remain in service until the early 2020s. The 2013 Defence White Paper stated that the replacement of Sirius and HMAS Success would be brought forward. Following the lap, Sirius rendezvoused with HMAS Supply in the vicinity of the Western Channel. The two ships then steamed together out of the harbour and undertook a Replenishment at Sea. HMAS Sirius’ decommissioning will be the end of an era, and signify the official handover of replenishment capability to the Supply Class Auxiliary Oiler Replenishment ships, HMA Ships Supply and Stalwart.

HMAS Sirius (O 266) (formerly MT Delos) is a commercial tanker purchased by the Royal Australian Navy and converted into a fleet replenishment vessel to replace HMAS Westralia. She is named in honor of HMS Sirius of the First Fleet. Launched in South Korea on 2004, and converted in Western Australia, Sirius was commissioned in 2006; three years before a purpose-built vessel would have been built, and at half the cost. The ship underwent modification for underway replenishment. In addition, a flight deck was fitted for helicopter operations. In September 2021 Sirius embarked on her final deployment to South-East Asia and the south-west Pacific prior to her planned decommissioning in December 2021.

HMAS Sirius transits to Norfolk Island to conduct ceremonial homeport during the decommissioning tour.
HMAS Sirius transits to Norfolk Island to conduct ceremonial homeport during the decommissioning tour.(Photo by LSIS Sittichai Sakonpoonpol/Australian Government Department of Defence)
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