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South Korea’s shipbuilding sector is entering the U.S. Navy’s next-generation autonomous surface vessel ecosystem, a development that could reshape allied maritime power.
HD Hyundai has partnered with U.S. defense technology firm Anduril and begun full-scale construction, accelerating its entry into the U.S. unmanned-vessel market.
From an October launch to year-end U.S. trials — an accelerated timeline
U.S. defense media and industry sources report that Anduril, working with Korean partners including HD Hyundai, has begun production of its first autonomous surface vessels (ASVs).
Construction on the jointly developed vessel is underway, with a targeted launch in October 2026.

Following the October launch, the program will move into testing and sea trials. Anduril expects to take delivery of the vessel and conduct trials off the U.S. coast by the end of 2026.
That schedule significantly compresses acquisition timelines compared with traditional U.S. warship procurement.
Analysts say the partnership pairs Anduril’s AI and autonomy software expertise with HD Hyundai’s large-scale shipbuilding capacity, enabling an unusually rapid production cadence.
230-fold capacity gap: Korean shipbuilders move from subcontractors to strategic partners
The speed behind the build reflects structural limits within the U.S. Defense Department as it confronts China’s volume-driven naval expansion. Office of Naval Intelligence estimates place China’s shipbuilding capacity at roughly 232 times that of the United States.

U.S. planners, concluding that traditional large manned ships alone cannot match China’s production pace, are pursuing hybrid fleets that combine crewed vessels with low-cost unmanned surface craft and autonomous maritime systems.
But U.S. shipyards have reached capacity limits and lack the physical infrastructure to mass-produce unmanned vessels.
After Hanwha announced its entry into the U.S. ASV market, HD Hyundai’s move further opens channels for U.S. defense firms to leverage Korean shipbuilding design and construction expertise.
Observers say South Korea’s shipbuilding industry is poised to evolve beyond a maintenance and repair (MRO) subcontractor for U.S. Navy vessels and to emerge as a principal producer of allied maritime capability in coming decades.











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