She with her two sisters, were initially known as the Olynthus class. Her design was a development of the two later 1961 Tide-class replenishment oilers. She was renamed Olwen in 1967 to avoid confusion with the Oberon-classsubmarine, HMS Olympus. The class were then redesignated as the Olwen class and later the Ol class.[2]
Design and description
Olwen had a normal complement consisting 88 Royal Fleet Auxiliary personnel with provision for 40 Royal Navy personnel and she was armed with two 20 mm guns and two Corvus chaff launchers. She was designed to achieve a speed of 21 knots (39 km/h; 24 mph) with a fully loaded displacement of 36,000 tonnes (35,000 long tons; 40,000 short tons).[3]
The ship had the capability to supply fuel and other liquid cargo to vessels using four pairs of replenishment rigs which were located between the forward and aft superstructures. She was able to carry four types of fuels: Furnace Fuel Oil, Diesel, Avcat and Mogas. Limited supplies of lubricating oils, fresh water and dry stores could also be carried. She could operate Westland Wessex or Westland Sea Kinghelicopters, or other helicopters of similar size, from a hangar and flight deck at the stern.[3]
In November and December 1970 Olwen was involved in Operation Burlap giving humanitarian assistance to East Pakistan after a cyclone caused extensive damage and flooding.[2]
In the Second Cod War, Olwen supported Royal Navy ships three times off Iceland in 1973: from 24 June until 10 July, between 14 July and 27 July and then from 30 July until 10 August.[2]
Between 25 November to 19 December 1977, Olwen was involved with Operation Journeyman.[5] She was part of a task force, led by the nuclear-powered submarine HMS Dreadnought, and comprised the Type 21 frigate HMS Alacrity and the Leander-class frigateHMS Phoebe, along with the armament stores ship RFA Resource, dispatched to the South Atlantic as a deterrent.[6] The operation was secretly ordered to prevent a possible Argentinian invasion of the Falkland Islands after 50 Argentine "scientists" landed on South Thule.[7] She stood back from the Falkland Islands in support of the frigates with an 819 Naval Air Squadron Westland Sea King helicopter embarked.[6]
In 1999 Olwen was wthdrawn from service and laid up at Portsmouth and on 19 September 2000 she was handed over for disposal; purchased by the Eckhardt Organisation, Germany, for scrap. Then in January 2001 she was renamed Kea for the move to the breakers. In May it came to light that she had been banned from Turkish yards due to a high asbestos content. She was diverted to Greece and later sailed via the Suez Canal to Alang Ship Breaking Yard in India, arriving on 21 July 2001.[2]