USS Gerald R. Ford Faces Chronic Sewage System Failures During Venezuela Deployment
NPR reports that the Navy’s newest and most expensive aircraft carrier, the USS Gerald R. Ford, has been plagued by chronic sewage system breakdowns throughout its current seven‑month deployment off Venezuela, where it serves as the centerpiece of President Trump’s flotilla interdicting Venezuelan oil tankers. Internal emails and documents obtained via FOIA show the ship’s Vacuum Collection, Holding and Transfer (VCHT) system—adapted from cruise‑ship designs and already flagged by the GAO in 2020 as undersized and poorly engineered—has required outside assistance 42 times since 2023, with 32 of those calls in 2025 and 12 since this deployment began in June. One March 18, 2025 engineering email reported 205 breakdowns in four days and said hull‑maintenance technicians were working 19‑hour days trying to keep up, while routine messages to crew warn whole "zones" of toilets will lose suction for hours as sailors hunt for vacuum leaks. The documents also reveal that misuse by a young crew—everything from T‑shirts and rope to improper paper products flushed into the system—worsens a design that uses narrow vacuum piping and easily dislodged toilet valves, repeatedly knocking entire sections of heads offline for the 4,600 sailors aboard. The continuing failures on a $13 billion carrier already at sea raise fresh questions about Navy procurement decisions, maintenance burdens and real‑world readiness at a time when the Ford is being used as a visible symbol of U.S. power in the Caribbean.
📌 Key Facts
- USS Gerald R. Ford has been deployed since June 2025 off Venezuela, leading a Trump administration flotilla interdicting tankers tied to Caracas.
- Navy documents show the ship’s VCHT sewage system has needed outside assistance 42 times since 2023, including 32 calls in 2025 and 12 during the current deployment.
- An internal March 18, 2025 email reported 205 sewage-system breakdowns in four days and technicians working 19‑hour days to keep up with repairs.
- The GAO warned in 2020 that the Ford’s vacuum sewage system was undersized and poorly designed, a problem that persists despite the carrier’s $13 billion price tag.
📊 Relevant Data
The USS Gerald R. Ford's development incorporated 23 unproven technologies, contributing to various design issues and multi-year delays.
$13 Billion Mistake? USS Gerald R. Ford Is the Navy's Aircraft Carrier Agony — National Security Journal
The temporary solution to clean the USS Ford's sewage system pipes involves an acid flush that costs $400,000 per treatment.
The U.S. Navy's Ford-Class Aircraft Carriers: A $120 Billion Mistake? — National Interest
The total cost of the USS Gerald R. Ford reached approximately $13 billion, exceeding original projections by about $2.5 billion due to overruns.
USS Gerald R. Ford (CVN 78) Cost: Details & Analysis — Hardiegrant
In 2025, 30.8% of active-duty US Navy personnel identify with racial minority groups, and 17.4% are Hispanic or Latino, compared to the US population where about 40% identify as non-White.
Demographic Profile of the US Military Community — Veterans Breakfast Club
The average age of active-duty US Navy enlisted personnel is 28.2 years, with officers averaging 34.0 years.
Demographic Profile of the US Military Community — Veterans Breakfast Club
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