List of equipment of the Armed Forces of Urcea and Energy policy in Burgundie: Difference between pages

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The energy policy of [[Burgundie]] is determined by royal and national governments of [[Burgundie]], which address issues of energy generation, distribution, and consumption, such as building codes and gas mileage standards. Energy policy may include legislation, international treaties, subsidies and incentives to investment, guidelines for energy conservation, taxation and other public policy techniques.


The '''equipment of the [[Armed Forces of the Apostolic Kingdom of Urcea]]''' includes, but is not limited to, weapons, ammunition, vehicles, and attire.
Since its addition to the responsibilities of the Royal Department of the Commonwealth, power generation and distribution has been a matter of public health in [[Burgundie]]. Comprehensive plans for the development of the energy sector have been enacted in times of energy shortage or in times of conversation. The Royal Department of the Commonwealth has the power to oversee, inspect, and enact laws regarding the generation and distribution of power in [[Burgundie]]. The [[Golden Council of Ten]] has the authority to regulate consumption and taxation/incentivization of the energy utilized by [[Burgundian|Burgoigniacs]]. This difference means that energy generated for export is outside of the [[Golden Council of Ten|Golden Council’s]] jurisdiction and therefore not subject to taxation by the nation of [[Burgundie]]. This makes the generation of power in [[Burgundie]] attractive to many multi-national firms as they can sell it cheaply. This has led to a number of fuel shortages and in some cases paradoxical actions over the years. During the [[Second Great War]], large portions of energy sold on the international market by companies operating in [[Burgundie]] was purchased by the Auxilium Alliance. Thusly, [[Burgundie]] was a massive provider of wartime endurance to its enemies and its detractors in the Western Alliance accused the royal government of racketeering. Regardless of ongoing criticism, the policy remains in place today.


== Infantry weapons ==
== History ==


=== Muskets and rifles ===
With the advent of transportable electricity and as part of the city beautiful movement in the 1890s-1920s, the Royal Department of the Commonwealth brought centralized power generation under its jurisdiction. Until that time it was common for each entity to generate its own power which, with the advent of the industrial revolution meant the cities were packed with dirty factories and sick workers. Compounded by the fact that [[Burgundie]]’s most accessible power generating material was the dirty and inefficient lignite coal, cities were filthy and workers succumbed to all manner of lung and heart diseases. As a matter of [[Public health in Burgundie|public health]] it was determined that public power needed to alleviate factories from having to build in-house power plants and that they should be far from the cities they served to keep the air clean and breathable.
{| class="wikitable"
!Name
!Type
!Caliber
!Branches
!Years in service
!Notes
!Picture
|-
|{{wp|Brown Bess|Continental Pattern Service Musket}}
|Musket
|0.75 inch ball
|[[Royal and Imperial Army (Urcea)|Royal and Imperial Army]]
|1722-1840
|First standardized weapon in use by the [[Royal and Imperial Army (Urcea)|Royal and Imperial Army]]
|[[File:British Military Short Land Pattern Musket.jpg|275px]]
|-
|{{wp|Springfield Model 1842|Model 1840 Service Weapon}}
|Musket
|0.69 inch ball
|[[Royal and Imperial Army (Urcea)|Royal Army]], [[Royal Navy (Urcea)|Royal Navy]]
|1840-1862
|Last smoothbore musket in use
First purpose-built percussion cap weapon in use
|[[File:NMAH-ET2012-13954.jpg|275px]]
|-
|{{wp|Springfield Model 1861|Model 1862 Service Weapon}}
|Rifled musket
|0.58 inch Minié ball
|[[Royal and Imperial Army (Urcea)|Royal Army]], [[Royal Navy (Urcea)|Royal Navy]]
|1862-1874
|First purpose-built standard rifle
|[[File:Springfield 1861.jpg|275px]] 
|-
|{{wp|Springfield Model 1874|Model 1874 Service Weapon/SR-1}}
|Breech loading rifle
|.45-70
|[[Royal and Imperial Army (Urcea)|Royal Army]], [[Royal Navy (Urcea)|Royal Navy]]
|1874-1887
|First non-muzzle loading standardized weapon
First standardized cartridge small arms weapon
Reclassified as SRM-1 following 1880 equipment designation standardization
|[[File:Springfield "Trapdoor".jpg|275px]]
|-
|{{wp|Mauser Model 1871|SR-2}}
|Bolt-action rifle
|.308 Regal
|[[Royal and Imperial Army (Urcea)|Royal Army]]
|1881-1882
|First bolt-action rifle issued
Limited use/production
|[[File:Infanteriegewehr m-1871 Mauser - Tyskland - kaliber 10,95mm - Armémuseum.jpg|275px]]
|-
|{{wp|Vetterli rifle|SR-3}}
|Bolt-action rifle
|.308 Regal
|[[Royal and Imperial Army (Urcea)|Royal Army]]
|1882
|Limited use/production; licensed from [[Yonderre]]
|[[File:Repetierstutzer Vetterli 1871.jpg|275px]]
|-
|{{wp|Martini–Henry|SR-4}}
|Lever action rifle
|.308 Regal
|[[Royal and Imperial Army (Urcea)|Royal Army]]
|1883-1890
|Only lever action rifle issued to the infantry on a limited basis
Pulled from infantry use in 1883; remained in cavalry use until 1890
|[[File:Martini-Henry m1871 - England - AM.032017.jpg|275px]]
|-
|{{wp|Lebel Model 1886 rifle|SR-5}}
|Bolt-action rifle
|.308 Regal
|[[Royal and Imperial Army (Urcea)|Royal Army]]
|1884
|Limited use/production
|[[File:Lebel Mle. 1886.JPG|275px]]
|-
|{{wp|Fusil Gras mle 1874|SR-6}}
|Bolt-action rifle
|.308 Regal
|[[Royal and Imperial Army (Urcea)|Royal Army]]
|1884-1885
|Limited use/production; design adapted from [[Burgundie]] without permission
|[[File:Fusil Gras M80 1874.jpg|275px]]
|-
|{{wp|Gewehr 1888|SR-7}}
|Bolt-action rifle
|.308 Regal
|[[Royal and Imperial Army (Urcea)|Royal Army]], [[Royal Navy (Urcea)|Royal Navy]]
|1885-1887
|Limited use/production; remained in Navy use until 1890
|[[File:Infanteriegewehr m-1888 - Tyskland - kaliber 7,92mm - Armémuseum.jpg|275px]]
|-
|{{wp|Krag–Jørgensen|SR-8}}
|Bolt-action rifle
|.308 Regal
|[[Royal and Imperial Army (Urcea)|Royal Army]], [[Royal Navy (Urcea)|Royal Navy]]
|1887-1903
|Licensed from [[Veltorina]]; adopted by the Navy in 1890
|[[File:Gevär försöksmodell 1892 Krag-Jörgensen Norge - Armémuseum.jpg|275px]]
|-
|[[SRM-9]]
|Bolt-action rifle
|.324 Royal
|[[Royal and Imperial Army (Urcea)|Royal Army]], [[Royal Navy (Urcea)|Royal Navy]], [[Royal Air Force (Urcea)|Royal Air Force]]
|1903-1925
|Remained in limited service as a sniper rifle until 1945
|[[File:Gewehr 98 noBG.jpg|275px]]
|-
|[[SRM-9C]]
|Bolt-action rifle
|.324 Royal
|[[Royal and Imperial Army (Urcea)|Royal and Imperial Army]], [[Royal Navy (Urcea)|Royal Navy]], [[Royal Air Force (Urcea)|Royal Air Force]]
|1925-1937
|Remained in [[Royal Navy (Urcea)|Royal Navy]] service until 1945;
in current ceremonial service
|[[File:Kar 98K - AM.021488.jpg|275px]]  
|-
|[[Lansing-Mitchell Weaponeering|SR-10]]
|Semi-automatic rifle
|.308 Regal
|[[Royal and Imperial Army (Urcea)|Royal and Imperial Army]], [[Royal Air Force (Urcea)|Royal Air Force]]
|1937-1940
|Licensed from [[Burgundie]]
Originally in Burgoignesc service as
[[Lansing-Mitchell Weaponeering|Lansing-Mitchell]] Fusil Patron 1939
|[[File:MAS 49 rifle.jpg|275px]]
|-
|[[SAR-40]]
|Assault rifle
|.223
|[[Royal and Imperial Army (Urcea)|Royal and Imperial Army]], [[Royal Navy (Urcea)|Royal Navy]], [[Royal Air Force (Urcea)|Royal Air Force]]
|1940-2008
|
|[[File:StG CETME A2b (1).jpg|275px]]
|-
|[[SAR-87]]
|Assault rifle
|.223
|[[Royal and Imperial Army (Urcea)|Royal and Imperial Army]], [[Royal Navy (Urcea)|Royal Navy]], [[Royal Air Force (Urcea)|Royal Air Force]]
|2008-present
|
|[[File:Scar L Standard.jpg|275px]]
|}


=== Sidearms ===
Starting with the Royal Order for the Renaissance of Blue Sky Cities signed in [[1887]], a series of 15 large scale steam turbines, three each outside of [[Vilauristre]], [[Port Diteaux]], [[Dormanshire]], [[Cities_of_Burgundie#Notrestran|Reimont Gillete]], and [[Soix]]. The turbines were completed in [[1895]] and the first transmission of public power occurred on 14 November. For the first decade the power was only available to factories that removed/repurposed their in house power plants. By [[1906]] general commercial power was introduced. The steam turbines were already over capacity and coal plants were hastily erected to meet the additional draw in [[Vilauristre]], [[Port Diteaux]]. These plants were never meant to be permanent but they remained activate into the nuclear age. Residential electrical power was introduced in [[1909]] and throttled to 4 hours a day, two in morning from 6am-8am and then two in the afternoon from 6pm-8pm. This was to allow more power to go to the factories during the day shift. A confederation was formed of second and third shift workers who could not benefit from the timed electricity to protest the throttled times. Due to their influence unfettered access to residential power was introduced in [[1911]], but meters were added and residential customers charged for the energy they used. They system remained the same until after the [[Great War]] when free commercial energy became untenable and businesses were metered and charged for their usage. In the 1950s and 60s the advent of nuclear energy made public power cheap so business did not have a difficult time purchasing it and the abundance made residential power cheaper too. After a devastating accident in the nuclear sector fossil fuel fired plants came back into prominence. A cautious resurgence in nuclear power was bolstered in the 1990s by the [[BurgunFri]] movement which sought to make [[Burgundie]] self-sufficient in regards to power generation. This was felt primarily in the overseas territories as they were less likely to have their own power generation. In [[Levantia|Levantine]] [[Burgundie]], existing power generating processes were increasing transferred to nuclear and renewables. By the 2020s [[Burgundie]] had become a net exporter of energy, but remained an importer in some smaller, more far flung territories.


=== Support weapons ===
== Energy imports ==
{| class="wikitable"
!Name
!Type
!Caliber
!Branches
!Years in service
!Notes
!Picture
|-
|[[SMPM-3]]
|Submachine gun
|9×19mm Parabellum
|[[Royal and Imperial Army (Urcea)|Royal and Imperial Army]], [[Royal Navy (Urcea)|Royal Navy]], [[Royal Air Force (Urcea)|Royal Air Force]]
|1930-1943
|
|[[File:German MP wooden stock.jpg|275px]]
|-
|[[SMPM-3|SMPM-3L]]
|Submachine gun
|9×19mm Parabellum
|[[Royal and Imperial Army (Urcea)|Royal and Imperial Army]]
|1936-1943
|Light-weight model of the standard SMPM-3 for paratrooper use
|[[File:MP 40 AYF 3.JPG|275px]]
|}


=== Machine guns ===
=== International transmission lines ===
{| class="wikitable"
!Name
!Type
!Caliber
!Branches
!Years in service
!Notes
!Picture
|-
|{{wp|Maxim gun|SMGM-1}}
|Machine gun
|.308 Regal
|[[Royal and Imperial Army (Urcea)|Royal Army]], [[Royal Navy (Urcea)|Royal Navy]], [[Royal Air Force (Urcea)|Royal Air Fleet]]
|1892-1917
|Licensed from [[Caphiria]]
|[[File:Maxim m 1905 Mikkeli 2.JPG|275px]]
|-
|{{wp|M1917 Browning machine gun|SMGM-2}}
|Machine gun
|.324 Royal
|[[Royal and Imperial Army (Urcea)|Royal and Imperial Army]], [[Royal Navy (Urcea)|Royal Navy]], [[Royal Air Force (Urcea)|Royal Air Force]]
|1917-1939
|Gradually supplanted by the [[SMGM-3]] beginning in 1931;
Remained in extensive use in the
[[Audonia]] theater of the [[Second Great War]]
|[[File:B-M1917MG.jpg|275px]]
|-
|[[SMGM-3]]
|Machine gun
|.324 Royal
|[[Royal and Imperial Army (Urcea)|Royal and Imperial Army]], [[Royal Navy (Urcea)|Royal Navy]], [[Royal Air Force (Urcea)|Royal Air Force]]
|1931-1959
|
|[[File:Machine gun MG 34.jpg|275px]]
|-
|[[SMGM-4]]
|Heavy machine gun
|.50 Caliber
|[[Royal and Imperial Army (Urcea)|Royal and Imperial Army]], [[Royal Navy (Urcea)|Royal Navy]], [[Royal Air Force (Urcea)|Royal Air Force]]
|1935-2021
|
|[[File:M2 Browning, Musée de l'Armée (cropped).jpg|275px]]
|-
|[[SMGM-5]]
|Machine gun
|.324 Royal
|[[Royal and Imperial Army (Urcea)|Royal and Imperial Army]], [[Royal Navy (Urcea)|Royal Navy]] (Marine Corps only)
|1959-2024
|
|[[File:BundeswehrMG3.jpg|275px]]
|-
|[[SMGM-6]]
|Squad automatic weapon
|.324 Royal
|[[Royal and Imperial Army (Urcea)|Royal and Imperial Army]], [[Royal Navy (Urcea)|Royal Navy]] (Marine Corps only)
|1968-present
|
|[[File:HK 21 LMG LEFT SIDE.jpg|275px]]
|-
|[[SMGM-7]]
|Heavy machine gun
|.50 Caliber
|[[Royal and Imperial Army (Urcea)|Royal and Imperial Army]], [[Royal Navy (Urcea)|Royal Navy]], [[Royal Air Force (Urcea)|Royal Air Force]]
|2017-present
|Later developed into the SMGM-9; can be converted into the SMGM-9 in the field
|[[File:XM312-04.jpg|275px]] 
|-
|[[SMGM-8]]
|Machine gun
|.324 Royal
|[[Royal and Imperial Army (Urcea)|Royal and Imperial Army]], [[Royal Navy (Urcea)|Royal Navy]] (Marine Corps only)
|2022-present
|
|[[File:SMGM8.png|275px]]
|-
|[[SMGM-9]]
|Automatic grenade launcher
|25 mm grenade
|[[Royal and Imperial Army (Urcea)|Royal and Imperial Army]], [[Royal Navy (Urcea)|Royal Navy]]
|2025-present
|Variant of SMGM-7; can be converted into the SMGM-7 in the field
|[[File:XM307-02.jpg|275px]]
|}


== Artillery ==
=== Bulk fuel routes ===


== Armored vehicles ==
==== Biomass ====
As a result of the [[BurgunFri]] movement in the 1990s an increase in investment in alternative fuels occurred. Biomass (known currently as experimental fuels) has become the most promising area of exploration since the 2010s. Biomass is collected across [[Burgundie]] and the world with [[Lansing Lines]] opening up a circumnavigational route that collects both first and second-generation biofuels for use across the [[Burgoignesc thalassocracy]]. These products are brought to gigantic torrefaction and pelletizing plants on [[Salarive]] for the Audo-Alshari market, [[Torlen]] for [[Burgundie|Burgoignesc]] market, and [[Port de Vent]] for the [[Equitorial Ostiecia]]n market. These new plants have boosted employment significantly on the islands and also has had a marked impact on global waste, reducing industrial dumping/landfill use rates in participating countries by up to 3%. In [[2035]], [[Lansing Lines]] and [[PYC Limited]] started work on a retrofit for a bulk carrier that could perform small scale torrefaction and pulverization while travelling to and from ports of call.


=== Tanks ===
==== Petroleum ====
Prior to the deployment of [[SAV-5]] and full armored divisions trained for use with it, the [[Royal and Imperial Army (Urcea)|Royal and Imperial Army]] obtained a number of tanks - mostly of foreign design - and intended to use them as "mobile pillboxes" along the border, mostly to prevent surprise incursions into Urcean territories by [[Derian people|Derian]] nationalists in the first years of the [[Second Great War]]. These tanks were primarily licensed from other nations in [[Levantia]], and none of them were especially mobile or suitable for maneuver warfare. Observations of foreign conflicts, a new generation of military thinkers, and advancement in military technology moved Urcean thought away from the mobile defense notion towards a more modern understanding of the applicability of armored vehicles. The predecessors of the SAV-5 would remain in defensive service through the early years of the 1930s before the full potential of armor became clear.
[[O’Shea Container Shipping]] has long maintained a dominant position in the global petroleum trade. They are estimated to ship 38% of the world's unrefined petroleum and 42% of the refined product. Since [[Burgundie]] does not extract large quantities of petroleum, its primary part in the process is the refinement the product on islands proximate to other nation's oil fields.
{| class="wikitable"
!Tank name
!Type
!Main armament
!Years in service
!Notes
!Picture
|-
|SAV-1
|Light tank
|37 mm gun
|1922-1925
|Very limited production;
Licensed from [[Burgundie]]
|[[File:FT 17.jpg|275px]]
|-
|SAV-2
|Light tank
|4-6x .324 Royal machine guns
|1922-1924
|First tank of Urcean design to enter service with the [[Royal and Imperial Army (Urcea)|Royal and Imperial Army]]
|[[File:SchneiderReplica.jpg|275px]]
|-
|SAV-3
|Heavy tank
|47 mm gun
|1925-1928
|Very limited production;
Licensed from [[Yonderre]]
|[[File:IWM-KID-109-Vickers-Independent.jpg|275px]]
|-
|SAV-4
|Medium tank
|47 mm gun
|1927-1928
|Very limited production;
Licensed from [[Yonderre]]
|[[File:Medium Mk III tank IWM KID 4625.jpg|275px]]
|-
|[[SAV-5]]
|Light tank
|47 mm gun
|1930-1938
|First mass produced tank of Urcean design
|[[File:Vickers6ton front.JPG|275px]]
|-
|[[SAV-6]]
|Medium tank
|55 mm gun
|1936-1939
|First medium tank mass produced by [[Urcea]]; remained in intermittent service in [[Audonia]] through 1953
|[[File:German tanks of Panzerabteilung 40 advancing towards the frontline at Vasonvaara.jpg|275px]]
|-
|SAV-6D
|Tank destroyer
|75 mm gun
|1936-1939
|Built on the [[SAV-6]] chassis
|[[File:StuGIII.jpg|275px]]
|-
|SAV-7
|Light tank
|47 mm
|1936-1941
|Last light tank of Urcean design
|[[File:M5A1 Stuart 1942-1.jpg|275px]]
|-
|SAV-8
|Medium tank
|55 mm gun
|1938-1942
|
|[[File:Panzer IV 1.jpg|275px]]
|-
|[[SAV-9]]
|Medium tank
|75 mm gun
|1940-1950
|Considered by some historians to be an early main battle tank;
Replaced all other armored units in standard use in 1944
|[[File:Bundesarchiv Bild 183-H26258, Panzer V "Panther".jpg|275px]]
|-
|[[SAV-10]]
|Main battle tank
|75 mm gun
|1948-1965
|First main battle tank of [[Urcea|Urcean]] design
|[[File:OF-40 MBT.jpg|275px]]
|-
|{{wp|Leopard 1|SAV-11}}
|Main battle tank
|105 mm gun
|1965-1994
|Remains in foreign service
|[[File:Leopard1 Bundeswehr 1983.jpg|275px]]
|-
|[[SAV-12]]
|Main battle tank
|105 mm gun
|1989-present
|
|[[File:3rd ABCT Soldiers practice weapons proficiency during gunnery 170119-A-XQ291-845.jpg|275px]]
|}


=== APCs and IFVs ===
==== LNG ====
Early tanks and infantry carriers were sometimes indistinguishable, but the SIAV-1, licensed from [[Burgundie]] was considered different enough from a tank to warrant the creation of the Standard Infantry Armored Vehicle designation within the [[Royal and Imperial Army (Urcea)|Royal and Imperial Army]]'s standardization system. Initially intended as a complete delivery system for combat operations - including infantry transport and artillery support - artillery was dropped from the SIAV line vehicles after the SIAV-1 as military thinking came closer to modern thought in regards to armored personnel carriers. The first SIAV with true military significance was the SIAV-4; the SIAV-1 and its immediate successors were mostly relegated to experimental operations outside of key theaters.
{| class="wikitable"
!Tank name
!Type
!Armament
!Years in service
!Notes
!Picture
|-
|SIAV-1
|Armored fighting vehicle
|1x .324 Royal machine gun
|1925-1927
|Licensed from [[Burgundie]]
|[[File:StChamondLaat.jpg|275px]]
|-
|[[SIAV-4]]
|Armored personnel carrier
Half track
|1x .324 Royal machine gun
|1934-1960
|
|[[File:OT-810 pic1.JPG|275px]]
|}


=== Other ===


== Aircraft ==
O'Shea LNG tanker


=== Fighters ===
==== Coal ====
{| class="wikitable"
!Aircraft name
!Branches
!Years in service
!Notes
!Picture
|-
|{{wp|Vickers F.B.5|SPV-1}}
|[[Royal and Imperial Army (Urcea)|Royal Army]], [[Royal Air Force (Urcea)|Royal Air Fleet]]
|1914-1918
|
|[[File:RAF Vickers FB5 Gunbus.jpg|275px]]
|-
|{{wp|Sopwith Camel|SPV-2}}
|[[Royal and Imperial Army (Urcea)|Royal Army]], [[Royal Air Force (Urcea)|Royal Air Fleet]]
|1917-1923
|
|[[File:RAF Sopwith Camel.jpg|275px]] 
|-
|[[List_of_Urcean_fighter_aircraft_types#SPV-61|SPV-61]]
|[[Royal Air Force (Urcea)|Royal Air Force]], [[Royal Navy (Urcea)|Roval Navy]]
|1961-1993
|
|[[File:F-4E Phantom - RIAT 2016 (28590285415).jpg|275px]] 


|}
=== Trade agreements ===


=== Bombers ===
== Energy exports ==


=== Attack aircraft ===
=== International transmission lines ===


=== Naval scouts ===
=== Bulk fuel routes ===
Prior to the realization of the impact of air power on naval warfare at the [[Battle of the Adonáire Strait]] in 1935, [[Urcea]] employed a number of airplanes designed exclusively for scouting and spotting information for the [[Royal Navy (Urcea)|Royal Navy]]'s capital ships. The [[Canaery-class aircraft carrier|''Canaery''-class aircraft carrier]] was, consequently, designed to carry a large number of these small yet nimble scouting planes which had virtually no armament but carried photographic equipment. Following the battle, virtually all naval scout planes were retired and placed with purpose-built naval fighters and bombers. Some reconnaissance planes were also used in small numbers by the [[Royal and Imperial Army (Urcea)|Royal and Imperial Army]] in the first years of the [[Second Great War]], but their use was phased out by late 1933. Of the three, the SSV-2 were built in the greatest numbers, and their larger size made them the only planes that could be jury-rigged for weapons during the [[Battle of the Adonáire Strait]]. The SSV-3 was the first monoplane in service in any branch of the [[Armed Forces of the Apostolic Kingdom of Urcea]].
{| class="wikitable"
!Aircraft name
!Branches
!Years in service
!Notes
!Picture
|-
|{{wp|Hawker Danecock|SSV-1}}
|[[Royal Navy (Urcea)|Royal Navy]], [[Royal and Imperial Army (Urcea)|Royal and Imperial Army]]
|1927-1933
|
|[[File:Hawker danecock.jpg|275px]]
|-
|{{wp|De Havilland Dormouse|SSV-2}}
|[[Royal Navy (Urcea)|Royal Navy]]
|1930-1936
|
|[[File:DH 42.jpg|275px]]
|-
|{{wp|Vickers Vireo|SSV-3}}
|[[Royal Navy (Urcea)|Royal Navy]]
|1933-1936
|
|[[File:Vickers 125 Vireo.jpg|275px]]
|}


=== Helicopters ===
=== Trade agreements ===


=== Tilt-rotors ===
== Energy consumption ==
=== Transports ===


{| class="wikitable"
== Sources ==
!Aircraft type name
!Number constructed
!Years in commission
!Notes
!Picture
|-
|[[List of Urcean auxiliary aircraft types#STV-224|STV-224]]
|4,887
|1991-present
|Other variants exist as different types of auxiliary aircraft
|[[File:An air-to-air left front view of a 95th Tactical Airlift Squadron C-130 Hercules aircraft DF-ST-89-04148.jpg|275px]]
|}


=== Auxiliary aircraft ===
== Energy efficiency ==


=== Airships ===
== Electricity distribution ==


== Ships and naval craft ==
== Carbon footprint ==


=== Battleships ===
== See also ==
{| class="wikitable"
[[Category:Economy]]
!Ship class name
[[Category:Economy of Burgundie]]
!Number constructed
[[Category:Technology]]
!Years in commission
[[Category:Politics]]
!Notes
[[Category:Politics of Burgundie]]
!Picture
|-
|''Julian''-class battleship
|2
|1904-1930
|One ship, the HMCMS ''Valcum'', was sold to [[Burgundie]] for use as a
[[List of powerships of the Navy of Burgundie|powership]]
|[[File:German battleship SMS Lothringen underway at sea before 1914 (ggbain.28288).jpg|275px]]  
|-
|[[Archduchy-class battleship|''Archduchy''-class battleship]]
|6
|1909-1953
|One ship, the HMCMS ''Star of the Sea'', was sold to [[Burgundie]] for use as a
prison hulk
|[[File:SMS Rheinland NH 46835.jpg|275px]]
|-
|[[Restoration-class battleship|''Restoration''-class battleship]]
|2
|1915-1936
|Both ships were converted into ''Victory''-class aircraft carriers in 1936
|[[File:The British Battleship HMS Queen Elizabeth; 35,00o Ton Battleship. A16385.jpg|275px]]
|-
|[[Ardri-class battleship|''Ardri''-class battleship]]
|13
|1920-1953
|
|[[File:USS Tennessee BB-43 underway.jpg|275px]]
|-
|[[Leo the Great-class battleship|''Leo the Great''-class battleship]]
|15
|1934-1960
|
|[[File:The Royal Navy during the Second World War A29859.jpg|275px]]
|-
|''Abylf Steppe''-class battleship
|4
|1939-1967
|Twelve ships were planned but most were canceled in favor of the ''Apostolic King''-class.
|[[File:USS North Carolina NYNY 11306-6-46.jpg|275px]]
|-
|''Apostolic King''-class battleship
|18
|1941-2011
|Final battleship produced for the Royal Navy.
|[[File:BB61 USS Iowa BB61 broadside USN.jpg|275px]]
|}
 
=== Aircraft carriers ===
{| class="wikitable"
!Ship class name
!Number constructed
!Years in commission
!Notes
!Picture
|-
|[[Canaery-class aircraft carrier|''Canaery''-class aircraft carrier]]
|7
|1927-1939
|One ship, the HMCMS ''Arelate'' remained in service until 1947 as a training ship; three carriers were transferred to the [[Navy of Burgundie]]<br>
Only two were intended, but the escalation leading towards the [[Second Great War]] lead to more being ordered
|[[File:Japanese aircraft carrier Akagi 01.jpg|275px]]
|-
|''Victory''-class aircraft carrier
|2
|1936-1961
|The ''Victory'' class ships were both converted [[Restoration-class battleship|''Restoration''-class battleships]]
|[[File:USS San Jacinto (CVL-30) underway at sea on 23 January 1944 (80-G-212798).jpg|275px]]
|-
|''Gabban''-class aircraft carrier
|5
|1936-1957
|The ''Gabban'' class ships were all converted [[Apostle-class cruiser|''Apostle''-class cruisers]]
|[[File:USS Saipan (CVL-48) at sea with helicopters embarked, circa in 1955 (NH 67747).jpg|275px]]
|-
|[[Erenion-class aircraft carrier|''Erenion''-class aircraft carrier]]
|8
|1958-2011
|
|[[File:USS Enterprise (CVN-65) underway in the Atlantic Ocean on 14 June 2004 (040614-N-0119G-020).jpg|275px]]
|-
|[[Elector-class aircraft carrier|''Elector''-class aircraft carrier]]
|29
|1977-present
|
|[[File:USS Nimitz in Victoria Canada 036.jpg|275px]]
|-
|[[Adjudicator-class aircraft carrier|''Adjudicator''-class aircraft carrier]]
|23
|2011-present
|
|[[File:F-A-18F Super Hornet approaches to USS Gerald R. Ford.jpg|275px]]
|-
|''Indefatigable''-class aircraft carrier
|2
|2023-present
|
|[[File:Indefatigable.jpg|275px]]
|}
 
=== Cruisers ===
{| class="wikitable"
!Ship class name
!Number constructed
!Years in commission
!Notes
!Picture
|-
|[[List_of_Urcean_cruiser_classes#Coria-class_light_cruiser|''Coria''-class cruiser]]
|43
|1908-1939
|
|[[File:SMS Dresden German Cruiser LOC 16727.jpg|275px]]  
|-
|[[List_of_Urcean_cruiser_classes#Glens_Falls-class_cruiser|''Glens Falls''-class cruiser]]
|37
|1912-1945
|
|[[File:HMS Frobisher.jpg|275px]]
|-
|[[List_of_Urcean_cruiser_classes#Apostle-class_heavy_cruiser|''Apostle''-class cruiser]]
|21
|1916-1953
|
|[[File:HMS Vindictive cruiser.jpg|275px]]
|-
|[[List_of_Urcean_cruiser_classes#Roscampus-class_heavy_cruiser|''Roscampus''-class cruiser]]
|73
|1966-present
|Most were replaced by ''Cape'' class cruisers in the 1990s; only 18 still in active use
|[[File:USS California CGN-36.jpg|275px]]
|-
|[[List_of_Urcean_cruiser_classes#Callan-class_heavy_cruiser|''Callan''-class cruiser]]
|98
|1974-present
|Most were replaced by ''Cape'' class cruisers in the 1990s; only 27 still in active use
|[[File:USS Virginia (CGN-38) at sea before 1984.jpg|275px]]
|-
|[[List_of_Urcean_cruiser_classes#Cape-class_cruiser|''Cape''-class cruiser]]
|234
|1983-present
|
|[[File:US Navy 031109-N-9769P-076 Guided missile cruiser USS Lake Champlain (CG 57) steams in the Southern California operating area.jpg|275px]]
|}
 
=== Destroyers ===
{| class="wikitable"
!Ship class name
!Number constructed
!Years in commission
!Notes
!Picture
|-
|[[List_of_Urcean_destroyer_classes#Halfway-class destroyer|''Halfway''-class destroyer]]
|408
|1991-present
|
|[[File:130920-N-NX070-025 - USS Arleigh Burke (DDG-51).jpg|275px]]
|}
 
=== Destroyer Escorts ===
Destroyer escorts were a type of smaller ships which could achieve 20 knots and were primarily designed for anti-submarine warfare and convoy escort during the [[Second Great War]]. Their small size and relative simplicity of design allowed for them to be produced in large numbers.
{| class="wikitable"
!Ship class name
!Number constructed
!Years in commission
!Notes
!Picture
|-
|[[Creagmer-class destroyer escort]]
|198
|1934-1964
|Large numbers of these ships were transferred to allied nations during the [[Second Great War]]
and afterwards; only a handful remained in Urcean service past 1953
|[[File:USS Cannon (DE-99) underway in Delaware Bay on 5 September 1943 (NH 83390).jpg|275px]] 
|}
 
=== Frigates ===
 
=== Corvettes ===
=== Submarines ===
 
=== Support ships ===
 
=== Other ===
 
[[Category: Urcea]]
[[Category: Armed Forces of Urcea]]

Revision as of 13:17, 20 August 2023

The energy policy of Burgundie is determined by royal and national governments of Burgundie, which address issues of energy generation, distribution, and consumption, such as building codes and gas mileage standards. Energy policy may include legislation, international treaties, subsidies and incentives to investment, guidelines for energy conservation, taxation and other public policy techniques.

Since its addition to the responsibilities of the Royal Department of the Commonwealth, power generation and distribution has been a matter of public health in Burgundie. Comprehensive plans for the development of the energy sector have been enacted in times of energy shortage or in times of conversation. The Royal Department of the Commonwealth has the power to oversee, inspect, and enact laws regarding the generation and distribution of power in Burgundie. The Golden Council of Ten has the authority to regulate consumption and taxation/incentivization of the energy utilized by Burgoigniacs. This difference means that energy generated for export is outside of the Golden Council’s jurisdiction and therefore not subject to taxation by the nation of Burgundie. This makes the generation of power in Burgundie attractive to many multi-national firms as they can sell it cheaply. This has led to a number of fuel shortages and in some cases paradoxical actions over the years. During the Second Great War, large portions of energy sold on the international market by companies operating in Burgundie was purchased by the Auxilium Alliance. Thusly, Burgundie was a massive provider of wartime endurance to its enemies and its detractors in the Western Alliance accused the royal government of racketeering. Regardless of ongoing criticism, the policy remains in place today.

History

With the advent of transportable electricity and as part of the city beautiful movement in the 1890s-1920s, the Royal Department of the Commonwealth brought centralized power generation under its jurisdiction. Until that time it was common for each entity to generate its own power which, with the advent of the industrial revolution meant the cities were packed with dirty factories and sick workers. Compounded by the fact that Burgundie’s most accessible power generating material was the dirty and inefficient lignite coal, cities were filthy and workers succumbed to all manner of lung and heart diseases. As a matter of public health it was determined that public power needed to alleviate factories from having to build in-house power plants and that they should be far from the cities they served to keep the air clean and breathable.

Starting with the Royal Order for the Renaissance of Blue Sky Cities signed in 1887, a series of 15 large scale steam turbines, three each outside of Vilauristre, Port Diteaux, Dormanshire, Reimont Gillete, and Soix. The turbines were completed in 1895 and the first transmission of public power occurred on 14 November. For the first decade the power was only available to factories that removed/repurposed their in house power plants. By 1906 general commercial power was introduced. The steam turbines were already over capacity and coal plants were hastily erected to meet the additional draw in Vilauristre, Port Diteaux. These plants were never meant to be permanent but they remained activate into the nuclear age. Residential electrical power was introduced in 1909 and throttled to 4 hours a day, two in morning from 6am-8am and then two in the afternoon from 6pm-8pm. This was to allow more power to go to the factories during the day shift. A confederation was formed of second and third shift workers who could not benefit from the timed electricity to protest the throttled times. Due to their influence unfettered access to residential power was introduced in 1911, but meters were added and residential customers charged for the energy they used. They system remained the same until after the Great War when free commercial energy became untenable and businesses were metered and charged for their usage. In the 1950s and 60s the advent of nuclear energy made public power cheap so business did not have a difficult time purchasing it and the abundance made residential power cheaper too. After a devastating accident in the nuclear sector fossil fuel fired plants came back into prominence. A cautious resurgence in nuclear power was bolstered in the 1990s by the BurgunFri movement which sought to make Burgundie self-sufficient in regards to power generation. This was felt primarily in the overseas territories as they were less likely to have their own power generation. In Levantine Burgundie, existing power generating processes were increasing transferred to nuclear and renewables. By the 2020s Burgundie had become a net exporter of energy, but remained an importer in some smaller, more far flung territories.

Energy imports

International transmission lines

Bulk fuel routes

Biomass

As a result of the BurgunFri movement in the 1990s an increase in investment in alternative fuels occurred. Biomass (known currently as experimental fuels) has become the most promising area of exploration since the 2010s. Biomass is collected across Burgundie and the world with Lansing Lines opening up a circumnavigational route that collects both first and second-generation biofuels for use across the Burgoignesc thalassocracy. These products are brought to gigantic torrefaction and pelletizing plants on Salarive for the Audo-Alshari market, Torlen for Burgoignesc market, and Port de Vent for the Equitorial Ostiecian market. These new plants have boosted employment significantly on the islands and also has had a marked impact on global waste, reducing industrial dumping/landfill use rates in participating countries by up to 3%. In 2035, Lansing Lines and PYC Limited started work on a retrofit for a bulk carrier that could perform small scale torrefaction and pulverization while travelling to and from ports of call.

Petroleum

O’Shea Container Shipping has long maintained a dominant position in the global petroleum trade. They are estimated to ship 38% of the world's unrefined petroleum and 42% of the refined product. Since Burgundie does not extract large quantities of petroleum, its primary part in the process is the refinement the product on islands proximate to other nation's oil fields.

LNG

O'Shea LNG tanker

Coal

Trade agreements

Energy exports

International transmission lines

Bulk fuel routes

Trade agreements

Energy consumption

Sources

Energy efficiency

Electricity distribution

Carbon footprint

See also