Plymouth-based HMS Argyll is the longest-serving Type 23
frigate in the navy. A Royal Navy warship torpedo was accidentally fired into a
dockyard wharf, it has emerged today.
HMS Argyll was on a "training exercise" at
Devonport dockyard in Plymouth when the torpedo "unexpectedly jettisoned
onto the wharf", said the Royal Navy. It said the Test Variant Torpedo was
a dummy weapon with no explosive content, but it did cause minor damage.
A Test Variant Torpedo became caught in fencing on the
wharf after it was fired. There were no casualties involved in the incident on
Wednesday, but training has been suspended.
The navy said the torpedo flew "a couple of
metres" through the air before becoming caught in fencing on the wharf.
No-one was on the jetty at the time of firing, the navy confirmed.
"The torpedo caused minor damage to an adjacent
security fence inside the naval base where it landed," it said in a
statement."The result of the investigation will determine what actions
will be necessary to avoid any repeat of this incident in the future."
Plymouth-based HMS Argyll, which was built in the late
1980s, is the longest-serving Type 23 frigate in the Royal Navy. The navy's
website states that following a £20m refit it is "one of the most
up-to-date and capable frigates in the fleet". Last year, it was involved
in anti-drugs operations in the eastern Pacific Ocean. Its commanding officer,
Paul Hammond, has served with the navy since 1991.
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