A 'green-water navy' is a naval term that refers to a naval force based around a coastal or
littoral capability. This is a relatively new terminology, as non blue-water navies used to be collectively referred to as
brown-water navy.
Generally speaking, a
blue-water navy is one with over-sea power-projection capability, preferably with
aircraft carriers to provide air cover. Green-water navies have ships of
corvette-class or better, and can operate in coastal (littoral) and regional area. However, green-water navies usually lack aircraft carriers, and must depend on land-based aircraft for protection.
Green-water navies might be capable of sending a few ships overseas on friendly visits, or even joint-exercise with other navies. But they lack the ability for sustained long-distance combat operations. The
Finnish Navy,
Italian Navy,
Spanish Navy , and Thailand's
Royal Thai Navy fall under this category, with some expeditionary (blue water) capabilities. The
Royal Netherlands Navy is changing its role from national defence to intervention. The navies of
Australia,
Brazil and
Canada also have some expeditionary capabilities that they are strengthening
[1]. The
Republic of Korea Navy [2] aims to operate a blue-water navy by 2020. It has embarked upon an ambitious construction programme, with the
Dokdo Class Amphibious Ship due to be commissioned sometime in 2007.
A good comparison of blue-water navy vs. green-water navy, is the British
Royal Navy vs. the
Argentine Navy during the 1982
Falklands War. Although both UK and Argentina had aircraft carriers, the Royal Navy was capable of sustained combat deployment across the Atlantic, while such feats were out of reach for the Argentine navy.
See also
★
Maritime geography
★
Blue-water navy
★
Brown-water navy
References
1. Warship 2006, Conway's Maritime Press - World Navies in Review 2006)
2. ''Global Security'' report on RoK Navy