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China Is Launching A New Aircraft Carrier Every 20 Months. The U.S. Navy Cannot Deliver One On Time — And The Gap Is The Shipyards.

China launches a carrier every 20 months. America just delayed its newest one to 2034 — because the shipyard physically can’t fit it — and kept the 50-year-old Nimitz at sea to cover the gap. Submarines are stuck at 1.2 a year against a need for two. The bottleneck is the shipyards.

U.S. Navy Aircraft Carriers
The Ford-class aircraft carrier USS Gerald R. Ford (CVN 78) and the Nimitz-class aircraft carrier USS Harry S. Truman (CVN 75) transit the Atlantic Ocean June 4, 2020, marking the first time a Ford-class and a Nimitz-class aircraft carrier have operated together underway. Ford is underway conducting integrated air wing operations, and the Harry S. Truman Carrier Strike Group remains at sea in the Atlantic as a certified carrier strike group force ready for tasking in order to protect the crew from the risks posed by COVID-19, following their successful deployment to the U.S. 5th and 6th Fleet areas of operation. (U.S. Navy photo by Mass Communication Specialist 2nd Class Ruben Reed)

Why can’t the U.S. Navy build aircraft carriers and submarines fast enough to keep pace with China

The answer is neither money nor will.

It is that the United States has only two shipyards capable of building nuclear-powered warships, both are short of skilled workers and critical materials, and one of them is now so physically crowded that it cannot fit the next aircraft carrier into the yard.

The Navy’s own fiscal 2027 budget book, released in early May, delivered the latest evidence: the future carrier USS Doris Miller slipped two more years, to 2034, because there is no room to build her, and the fifty-year-old USS Nimitz had to be kept in service past her retirement date to cover the gap.

While China launches a new carrier roughly every twenty months, America is losing years it cannot get back, and the cause is the same industrial bottleneck on both ends of the fleet.

The Aircraft Carrier Cascade: Kennedy, Enterprise, And A Ship That Will Not Fit

Ford-Class Aircraft Carrier

A view from the Ticonderoga-class guided missile cruiser USS Normandy (CG 60) of the first-in-class aircraft carrier USS Gerald R. Ford (CVN 78) and the Arleigh Burke-class guided missile destroyers USS Thomas Hudner (DDG 116), USS Ramage (DDG 61) and USS McFaul (DDG 74) as the ships steam in formation during a drill while underway as part of the Gerald R. Ford Carrier Strike Group March 5, 2023. Ford Carrier Strike Group is underway in the Atlantic Ocean executing its Composite Training Unit Exercise (COMPTUEX), an intense, multi-week exercise designed to fully integrate a carrier strike group as a cohesive, multi-mission fighting force and to test their ability to carry out sustained combat operations from the sea. As the first-in-class ship of Ford-class aircraft carriers, CVN 78 represents a generational leap in the U.S. Navy’s capacity to project power on a global scale. (U.S. Navy photo by Mass Communication Specialist 2nd Class Malachi Lakey)

Ford-Class Aircraft Carrier U.S. Navy

Ford-Class Aircraft Carrier U.S. Navy. Image Credit: Creative Commons.

The delays run down the entire Ford-class production line, each one feeding the next. The future USS Doris Miller, the fourth Ford-class carrier, had its delivery pushed from February 2032 to February 2034 in the FY2027 shipbuilding book, and the Navy’s stated reason is as concrete as a procurement problem gets: construction-footprint constraints limiting the shipbuilder’s ability to build the ship’s modules.

There is not enough physical space in the yard to assemble her, so she waits. From the start of construction to delivery, Doris Miller will take roughly fifteen years.

The crowding traces to the ship ahead of her. The future USS Enterprise, the third Ford-class carrier, slipped from July 2030 to March 2031 due to a delay in critical-path construction required to launch the ship, caused by the late delivery of large, sequence-critical equipment that held up the initial structural build in the dry dock.

Enterprise will take just over twelve years to build, and because she is occupying the space Doris Miller needs, her delay cascades directly into the fourth carrier’s. The second ship in the class, the future USS John F. Kennedy, is now expected to deliver in March 2027, pushed back from July 2025 to finish certification of the Advanced Arresting Gear and continued work on the Advanced Weapons Elevators — the same systems that delayed the lead ship, the USS Gerald R. Ford, for years. Kennedy’s construction will have run for about sixteen years.

Three carriers, three slips, one production line that cannot move them through fast enough. The delays are not isolated failures of individual ships; they are symptoms of a single yard trying to build more nuclear carriers at once than it has the room, workers, and parts to handle.

The Nimitz Gap: Keeping A 50-Year-Old Carrier At Sea To Cover The Hole

The cascade has already forced the Navy into an awkward improvisation. The USS Nimitz, the oldest carrier in the fleet at roughly 50 years, was scheduled to retire in 2025, which would have reduced the Navy from 11 carriers to 10 until Kennedy delivered.

With Kennedy slipping to March 2027, the Navy rolled the Nimitz’s retirement back twice, and she is now scheduled for decommissioning in March 2027 — the same month Kennedy is supposed to be commissioned to replace her. The service is keeping a half-century-old warship on the line precisely because the ship meant to succeed her is years behind.

(July 18, 2012) - The aircraft carrier USS Nimitz (CVN 68) moves into formation for a photo exercise during the Great Green Fleet Demonstration as part of Rim of the Pacific (RIMPAC) 2012. Nimitz is currently underway participating in RIMPAC. Twenty-two nations, more than 40 ships and submarines, more than 200 aircraft and 25,000 personnel are participating in RIMPAC exercise from Jun. 29 to Aug. 3, in and around the Hawaiian Islands. The world’s largest international maritime exercise, RIMPAC provides a unique training opportunity that helps participants foster and sustain the cooperative relationships that are critical to ensuring the safety of sea lanes and security on the world’s oceans. RIMPAC 2012 is the 23rd exercise in the series that began in 1971. (U.S. Navy photo by Mass Communication Specialist 2nd Class Eva-Marie Ramsaran/RELEASED)

(July 18, 2012) – The aircraft carrier USS Nimitz (CVN 68) moves into formation for a photo exercise during the Great Green Fleet Demonstration as part of Rim of the Pacific (RIMPAC) 2012. Nimitz is currently underway participating in RIMPAC. Twenty-two nations, more than 40 ships and submarines, more than 200 aircraft and 25,000 personnel are participating in RIMPAC exercise from Jun. 29 to Aug. 3, in and around the Hawaiian Islands. The world’s largest international maritime exercise, RIMPAC provides a unique training opportunity that helps participants foster and sustain the cooperative relationships that are critical to ensuring the safety of sea lanes and security on the world’s oceans. RIMPAC 2012 is the 23rd exercise in the series that began in 1971. (U.S. Navy photo by Mass Communication Specialist 2nd Class Eva-Marie Ramsaran/RELEASED)

A U.S. Sailor prepares to launch a F/A-18E Super Hornet, attached to the “Kestrels” of Strike Fighter Squadron (VFA) 137, from the flight deck of Nimitz-class aircraft carrier USS Nimitz (CVN 68) in the Pacific Ocean, April 8, 2026. Nimitz is deployed as part of Southern Seas 2026 which seeks to enhance capability, improve interoperability, and strengthen maritime partnerships with countries throughout the region through joint, multinational and interagency exchanges and cooperation. (U.S. Navy photo by Mass Communication Specialist 2nd Class Jaron Wills)

A U.S. Sailor prepares to launch a F/A-18E Super Hornet, attached to the “Kestrels” of Strike Fighter Squadron (VFA) 137, from the flight deck of Nimitz-class aircraft carrier USS Nimitz (CVN 68) in the Pacific Ocean, April 8, 2026. Nimitz is deployed as part of Southern Seas 2026 which seeks to enhance capability, improve interoperability, and strengthen maritime partnerships with countries throughout the region through joint, multinational and interagency exchanges and cooperation. (U.S. Navy photo by Mass Communication Specialist 2nd Class Jaron Wills)

The improvisation does not end with the Nimitz. The next carrier due to retire, the USS Dwight D. Eisenhower, commissioned in 1977, was slated to leave service in 2026, and the Navy has pushed that date into the early 2030s to wait for Enterprise. The pattern is the same at every step: aging carriers held past their planned retirements because their replacements cannot arrive on time, a fleet propped up at the top end by ships that should already be gone.

Former Navy Secretary John Phelan acknowledged in April that the service was reviewing the cost-effectiveness of the future Ford-class carriers still to come, the USS William J. Clinton and the USS George W. Bush, to make sure they still made sense — the sound of a Navy rattled enough by the delays to question its own plan.

The Submarine Shortfall: 1.2 Boats A Year Against A Requirement Of Two

The carrier story repeats underwater, and there the numbers are even starker. The Navy’s requirement is to deliver two Virginia-class attack submarines a year, alongside one Columbia-class ballistic missile boat — the “2+1” formula it calls its top industrial-base priority. The actual delivery rate has never reached 2 and has remained near 1.2 boats per year since 2022, according to the Congressional Research Service, leaving a growing backlog of submarines bought by Congress but not yet built. As detailed in the case for why this is the industrial problem the Navy cannot buy its way out of, the recovery date keeps receding rather than approaching.

The slip is the alarming part. In May, Chief of Naval Operations Admiral Daryl Caudle told appropriators that the yards would not hit the two-a-year rate until around 2032, four years later than the 2028 target his predecessor named in 2023.

The attack-submarine fleet is meanwhile heading toward roughly 46 boats against a requirement of 66, as older Los Angeles-class submarines retire faster than Virginias arrive, and the Navy has committed to selling three to five Virginias to Australia under AUKUS — boats it does not have the capacity to spare. The Navy needs to build about 2.33 submarines per year to cover its own fleet and its AUKUS commitment. It cannot reliably build 1.2.

The Root Cause: Two Shipyards, And No Way To Conjure More

Carriers and submarines share the same bottleneck, and naming it explains why money has not fixed the problem. Only two shipyards in the United States can build nuclear-powered warships: Huntington Ingalls’ Newport News Shipbuilding in Virginia, which builds carriers and submarines, and General Dynamics Electric Boat in Connecticut, which builds submarines.

Both are running at capacity, both are short of the skilled tradespeople — the nuclear-certified welders, machinists, and electricians — that the work requires, and both depend on the same strained network of specialized suppliers for critical components. When a yard runs out of physical space, as Newport News has, or when a sequence-critical part arrives late, as it did for Enterprise, the entire schedule stalls, because there is nowhere else to route the work.

This is why the spending has not moved the rate. Congress approved a $1.9 billion plus-up for the Virginia program in the 2026 appropriations act to avert a stop-work order, on top of multibillion-dollar submarine-industrial-base investments and $6.2 billion in the long-range plan, and Australia is contributing billions more under AUKUS to expand American capacity — and the rate is still 1.2.

Money funds the training pipelines, supplier development, and facility upgrades, but it cannot compress the years it takes. A nuclear shipyard cannot be built quickly, a master shipfitter cannot be trained in a budget cycle, and a graving dock cannot be poured and certified on a wartime schedule. The constraint is physical capacity and skilled labor, not dollars, which is exactly why throwing dollars at it has not closed the gap.

The Mirror Image Of China’s Rise

This is the other half of the story of the war at sea, and it is the precise inverse of China’s. Beijing is building toward nine aircraft carriers by 2035, launching warships at a pace no other navy can match, with its first nuclear supercarrier taking shape at Dalian and its submarine production accelerating across multiple expanded facilities.

China has shipyard capacity and is scaling it; the United States has demand but cannot scale its yards. The same decade in which China may add six carriers and a fleet of submarines is the decade in which American yards are slipping carrier deliveries to 2034 and pushing the two-submarine-a-year rate to 2032.

The contrast is not about which navy is better today, because the United States is plainly still ahead. It is about which direction each is moving, and their trajectories point toward each other.

Every Ford-class slip and every year the submarine rate stays stuck is a year the gap narrows, not because China has caught up in capability, but because America cannot build fast enough to hold its lead in numbers. The bottleneck that limits the U.S. fleet is the one advantage China does not share, and it is the reason the timelines are converging.

The Honest Balance: America Still Leads, For Now

The gap is real and closing, but it is not yet closed, and the case for perspective is as important as the case for alarm. The United States operates eleven aircraft carriers today, every one nuclear-powered, against China’s three, and the American advantage in tonnage, in combat-proven crews, and in the global network of bases, escorts, and replenishment ships that make carriers usable in a sustained fight remains decisive.

The Virginia-class submarine is a generation ahead of anything China builds in terms of quietness and capabilities, and the U.S. submarine force remains the clearest military advantage America holds in the Pacific. Eleven carriers slipping their successors is a stronger position than three carriers racing to build six more, and the experience gap between the two fleets is measured in decades that money cannot buy on either side.

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The good news: The United States still has the most powerful navy on earth. The question the shipyards pose is whether they can build the next one before the gap they open becomes one they cannot close.

About the Author: Harry J. Kazianis

Harry J. Kazianis (@Grecianformula) was the former Senior Director of National Security Affairs at the Center for the National Interest (CFTNI), a foreign policy think tank founded by Richard Nixon based in Washington, DC. Harry has over a decade of experience in think tanks and national security publishing. His ideas have been published in the NY Times, The Washington Post, The Wall Street Journal, CNN, and many other outlets worldwide. He has held positions at CSIS, the Heritage Foundation, the University of Nottingham, and several other institutions focused on national security research and analysis. He is the former Executive Editor of the National Interest and the Diplomat. He holds a Master’s degree focusing on international affairs from Harvard University.

Written By

Harry J. Kazianis (@Grecianformula) is Editor-In-Chief of 19FortyFive and National Security Journal. Kazianis recently served as Senior Director of National Security Affairs at the Center for the National Interest. He also served as Executive Editor of its publishing arm, The National Interest. Kazianis has held various roles at The National Interest, including Senior Editor and Managing Editor over the last decade. Harry is a recognized expert on national security issues involving North & South Korea, China, the Asia-Pacific, Europe, and general U.S. foreign policy and national security challenges. Past Experience Kazianis previously served as part of the foreign policy team for the 2016 presidential campaign of Senator Ted Cruz. Kazianis also managed the foreign policy communications efforts of the Heritage Foundation, served as Editor-In-Chief of the Tokyo-based The Diplomat magazine, Editor of RealClearDefense, and as a WSD-Handa Fellow at the Center for Strategic and International Studies (CSIS): PACNET. Kazianis has also held foreign policy fellowships at the Potomac Foundation and the University of Nottingham. Kazianis is the author of the book The Tao of A2/AD, an exploration of China’s military capabilities in the Asia-Pacific region. He has also authored several reports on U.S. military strategy in the Asia-Pacific as well as edited and co-authored a recent report on U.S.-Japan-Vietnam trilateral cooperation. Kazianis has provided expert commentary, over 900 op-eds, and analysis for many outlets, including The Telegraph, The Wall Street Journal, Yonhap, The New York Times, Hankyoreh, The Washington Post, MSNBC, 1945, Fox News, Fox Business, CNN, USA Today, CNBC, Politico, The Financial Times, NBC, Slate, Reuters, AP, The Washington Examiner, The Washington Times, RollCall, RealClearPolitics, LA Times, Newsmax, BBC, Foreign Policy, The Hill, Fortune, Forbes, DefenseOne, Newsweek, NPR, Popular Mechanics, VOA, Yahoo News, National Security Journal and many others.

7 Comments

7 Comments

  1. Timothy Lavin

    June 16, 2026 at 12:23 am

    To Harry J. Kaxianis:
    I have a couple questions about the U.S. Navy shipyard bottleneck. This is not a recent revelation or surprise to anyone, so why wasn’t something done years ago to fix the problem? ie, build more shipyards? It is utterly ridiculous that the Navy has allowed this to happen! I say, take money away from NASA’s budget and put it towards training workersnand building infrastructure to build more carriers and submarines. We need try to correct this problem before we run out of time and China overtakes us as the #1 Navy in the world.

  2. Andrew Johnson

    June 16, 2026 at 6:39 am

    What happens if those 2 yards or even 1 of them is knocked out of commission?

  3. Tim mccarthy

    June 16, 2026 at 8:39 am

    I was an electrician building frigates in the eighties, in the north west ! I warned the globalist uniparty this would happen ! But NO, NO , NO, no one listened to me ! Now we are going to pay the price when China invades Taiwan . IDIOTS ! Every president except for Trump should be tried for treason ?

  4. Steven F

    June 16, 2026 at 9:49 am

    Part of the problem, besides the obvious space related issues, is: the American government just doesn’t have the sway nor control over our population that the CCP has. If the CCP says they need a particular skilled trade filled, then Chinese citizens instantly line up and fall in line. Meanwhile, if the American government says the same, most Americans go “Yeah, right. I’d rather work from home or be an influencer!” Add to this China’s efficient and effective use of automation, and that’s part of the reason they’re able to consistently out build us. The US Government needs to work even more with the Defense Base on a recruitment and training pipeline. Split the costs of subsidizing the trade schooling of new workers and offer sign up bonuses with employment contracts, like they do when the service needs a particular skill gap filled. Automate what you can’t fill. And expedite the module plan. You don’t technically need a carrier sized dry dock to start building a carrier. But automation is the biggest thing. We’re sorely behind in this regard.

  5. Emmanuel

    June 16, 2026 at 12:27 pm

    What’s the point of having that many aircraft carriers when none of them has never been far off Chinese waters?

  6. Will sutton

    June 16, 2026 at 10:37 pm

    I think we need to put a stop to selling all of the scrap metal to them cuz all their doing is building ships to use against us

  7. Ki

    June 18, 2026 at 11:57 pm

    I can tell the reason why the us navy even though it has been delayed or behind schedules on ships it makes it worth the wait, while the Chinese navy is behind on every ship and has failed its sea trials. The Chinese people even say that their navy sicks

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