Lieutenant Commander Diego de la Barra Chávez

Chief of Shipyard Division Production Department SIMA Callao SIMA PERU

Graduated from the Peruvian Naval School on January 1, 2006, qualified in Naval Engineering, Industrial Engineer from the University of Piura, Master in Military Naval Engineering from the Polytechnic University of Madrid - Kingdom of Spain, member of the Project Management Institute (PMI), Candidate for Project Management Professional (PMP) certification, with 15 years of professional experience in the naval industry, both in the area of project management and in the area of operations related to naval production, constructions and repairs, he has held positions in the Servicios Industriales de la Marina S. A. at the Callao Operations Center as Chief of the Shipbuilding and Metal Mechanics Division, Chief of Dock and Chief of the Shipyard Division (current position).

OPV & Warships Latin America - 1 July 2021 - Spanish Language Day

11:30 PANEL DISCUSSION 1: INDIGENOUS SHIPBUILDING AND THE OFFSET STRATEGY

 What are your current engineering projects and future programmes to increase combat capability

of your navy?

 Which technological developments are critical to future ship design? How do you plan to work with

international industry to drive indigenous shipbuilding capability?

 Technology transfer as a driver for the procurer: Does consideration of systems and module

capability outweigh hull design?

THURSDAY 1 JULY 2021:

WARSHIPS & OPV LATIN AMERICA

 As navies embark on ambitious shipbuilding programmes, industry has an instrumental role in

supporting naval construction and strengthening national industrial bases of naval operators. How

can industry better collaborate with local shipyards to tailor solutions and provide the desired

technology to the operator?

 The Latin American operating environment has a unique set of lower-end, asymmetric threats,

ranging from transnational criminal networks to natural disasters and illegal fisheries. How can

industry best tailor solutions to the regional threat environment? How can industry ensure

interoperability of newer platforms with legacy vessels?

 The future maritime battlespace will require increased connectivity and digitization. How we

ensure that platforms have open architectures to enable integration of newer software at pace?

What solutions are needed to ensure resilience and minimize cyber vulnerability?

 Maritime operations will require an ever-increasing ability to collect and act on sensor data to

build the tactical picture for operations. How can industry advance collection, processing, and dissemination of data to help defeat transnational organized criminal networks? 

Check out the incredible speaker line-up to see who will be joining Diego.

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