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78,000 Tons: France’s New PANG Nuclear Aircraft Carrier Has a Message for the U.S. Navy

Isaac Seitz, defense columnist and Strategic Intelligence graduate, examines France’s Porte-Avions de Nouvelle Génération — Europe’s largest warship ever planned. At 310 meters and 78,000 tons displacement, the nuclear-powered PANG will be built at Saint-Nazaire by Chantiers de l’Atlantique and Naval Group, equipped with U.S.-made EMALS catapults, K22 nuclear reactors, and designed to operate France’s Next Generation Fighter alongside Collaborative Combat Aircraft drones.

Charles de Gaulle Aircraft Carrier
U.S. 5TH FLEET AREA OF OPERATIONS (April 24, 2019) A U.S. Marine MV-22 Osprey assigned to the 22nd Marine Expeditionary Unit sits on the flight deck of France's Marine Nationale aircraft carrier FS Charles De Gaulle (R 91). This was the second time that Ospreys have landed aboard the French vessel. Marines and Sailors assigned to the 22nd MEU and Kearsarge Amphibious Ready Group are currently deployed to the U.S. 5th Fleet area of operations in support of naval operations to ensure maritime stability and security in the Central region, connecting the Mediterranean and the Pacific through the western Indian Ocean and three strategic choke points. (U.S. Marine Corps photo by Maj. Joshua Smith/Released)

Summary and Key Points: Isaac Seitz — defense columnist, Patrick Henry College Strategic Intelligence and National Security graduate, and private-sector intelligence analyst — provides a detailed English-language breakdown of France’s Porte-Avions de Nouvelle Génération (PANG), the nuclear-powered supercarrier that will become the largest warship ever constructed in Europe.

-At 310 meters, 78,000 tons displacement, and powered by two K22 nuclear reactors producing 220 megawatts each, the PANG will dwarf its predecessor, Charles de Gaulle, at every metric.

PANG Aircraft Carrier from France.

PANG Aircraft Carrier from France. Image Credit: Industry Handout.

PANG Aircraft Carrier from France.

PANG Aircraft Carrier from France. Image Credit: French Navy.

PANG Aircraft Carrier

PANG Aircraft Carrier. Image Credit: Creative Commons.

-Construction begins at Saint-Nazaire’s Chantiers de l’Atlantique and Naval Group in 2026, with service entry targeted for 2038 under President Emmanuel Macron’s December 2025 authorization.

PANG: France Is Building Europe’s Largest Warship Ever — a Nuclear Supercarrier That Rivals the U.S. Navy

In Europe, only France and the United Kingdom field aircraft carriers. France maintains only one nuclear aircraft carrier, the Charles de Gaulle, which has been in service for more than 20 years. 

With its lone carrier aging, France has been working on its replacement: the Porte-Avions de Nouvelle Génération (PANG). The carrier has been in development since 2018 and recently received the official green light to begin construction in December 2025.

The new carrier will reportedly match the size of a U.S. supercarrier and feature state-of-the-art technology such as an electromagnetic aircraft launch system (EMALS) and advanced arresting gear (AAG).

France’s Next Generation Aircraft Carrier

Ever since Charles de Gaulle entered service in 2001, France has been trying to secure another aircraft carrier to make up for downtime when the de Gaulle is in maintenance. The Porte-Avion 2 project was meant to develop a vessel based on the UK’s Queen Elizabeth-class carrier, but the project never went anywhere.

Queen Elizabeth-Class Aircraft Carrier.

Queen Elizabeth-Class Aircraft Carrier.

HMS Queen Elizabeth Royal Navy

HMS Queen Elizabeth Royal Navy. Image Credit: Creative Commons.

Queen Elizabeth-Class Aircraft Carrier

(Aug. 8, 2017) The Royal Navy aircraft carrier HMS Queen Elizabeth II sails in formation alongside the Nimitz-class aircraft carrier USS George H.W. Bush (CVN 77) during exercise Saxon Warrior 2017, Aug. 8. Saxon Warrior is a United States and United Kingdom co-hosted carrier strike group exercise that demonstrates interoperability and capability to respond to crises and deter potential threats. (U.S. Navy photo by Mass Communication Specialist 3rd Class Tristan B. Lotz/Released)

Queen Elizabeth-Class Royal Navy Aircraft Carrier

Queen Elizabeth-Class Royal Navy Aircraft Carrier. Image Credit: Creative Commons.

In 2018, a new carrier project was announced, this time as a replacement for Charles de Gaulle. In 2023, more details about this project began to circulate, with CGI renderings previewing the carrier’s expected capabilities. In December, French President Emmanuel Macron announced that construction of PANG would begin in 2031, with the ship expected to enter service sometime around 2038.

For more than a decade, France’s shipbuilding industry has been preparing itself for this monumental project. Construction is centered in Saint-Nazaire, where Chantiers de l’Atlantique and Naval Group will assemble the ship between 2026 and 2038, according to regional reporting from Pays-de-la-Loire.

Work on long-lead nuclear components began as early as 2024, when Naval Group and TechnicAtome received authorization to begin procurement and early reactor-related fabrication. The components include elements of K22 nuclear reactors, the most powerful naval reactors ever installed on a French surface combatant, with production activities scheduled between 2024 and 2029. 

What to Expect from France’s PANG

One of the most striking characteristics of the PANG is its enormous size. At around 310 meters in length, with a flight-deck beam of roughly 85 meters and a displacement of nearly 78,000 tons, the vessel will be the largest warship ever constructed in Europe.

This would mark a dramatic leap from the Charles de Gaulle, which displaces 42,000 tons and measures 261 meters. It would prove France’s intent to field a carrier competitive with the newest U.S. and Chinese platforms. 

Much like its predecessor, the PANG will be a nuclear-powered carrier. The ship will be powered by two K22 nuclear reactors, each providing approximately 220 megawatts.

These reactors provide better performance than the K15 units onboard the Charles de Gaulle, enabling an all-electric propulsion system capable of powering the ship’s movement, sensors, onboard electrical systems, and next-generation aviation equipment.

The design supports an effectively unlimited range, long endurance between refueling cycles, and substantial electrical excess capacity for future energy-intensive technologies such as directed-energy weapons. 

A New World-Class Carrier

Most interestingly, the PANG will adopt U.S.-made EMALS and AAG.

These systems will replace the steam catapults currently used on the Charles de Gaulle, allowing the PANG to launch and recover a wider range of aircraft types at lighter stress loads and with greater energy efficiency.

Reports indicate the carrier will mount two to three EMALS catapults and three AAGs, purchased under a U.S. Foreign Military Sales contract fully funded by the French government. The adoption of EMALS aligns the PANG with other top-tier carriers, including the U.S. Ford-class, and is essential for deploying heavier next-generation aircraft and unmanned aerial vehicles. 

According to estimates, the PANG is designed to support at least 40 aircraft, including approximately 36 combat jets, two to three airborne early-warning aircraft, five to six helicopters, and around ten light drones.

Operational air wing numbers may sit closer to 30 aircraft in routine deployments, reflecting sortie patterns rather than maximum deck and hangar capacity. 

Crucially, the vessel is engineered to operate the Next Generation Fighter (NGF), the crewed combat aircraft component of the broader Future Combat Air System program shared with Germany and Spain. Because the NGF is expected to be larger and heavier than the Rafale-M, the extended flight deck and EMALS are essential design features.

Dassault Rafale

ATLANTIC OCEAN (July 19, 2008) A French F-2 Rafale fighter prepares to launch during combined French and American carrier qualifications aboard the aircraft carrier USS Theodore Roosevelt (CVN 71). This event marks the first integrated U.S. and French carrier qualifications aboard a U.S. aircraft carrier. The Theodore Roosevelt Carrier Strike Group is participating in Joint Task Force Exercise “Operation Brimstone” off the Atlantic coast until the end of July. (U.S. Navy photo by Mass Communication Specialist 3rd Class Christopher Hall/Released)

The PANG will also support carrier-capable drones, including Collaborative Combat Aircraft designed to operate alongside manned fighters. 

A Much-Needed Addition to the French Navy

In terms of performance, the PANG has a projected top speed of 27 knots, which matches or exceeds most modern supercarriers. Nuclear propulsion ensures long operational durations at sea, essential for France’s extensive global presence across the Atlantic, Indian, and Pacific Oceans.

The vessel’s combat system is built around a data-centric architecture that allows rapid information processing and enhanced situational awareness. This architecture will facilitate updates throughout the ship’s multi-decade service life. 

From a geopolitical perspective, the PANG will reinforce France’s strategic autonomy within NATO and the European Union.

The ship’s scale and capabilities position France as a stabilizing force across its overseas possessions and exclusive economic zones, which span multiple oceans.

With tensions around the world boiling over, the desire for a new carrier as a deterrent is understandable. The question is whether the PANG will be ready soon enough. 

About the Author: Isaac Seitz 

Isaac Seitz, a Defense Columnist, graduated from Patrick Henry College’s Strategic Intelligence and National Security program. He has also studied Russian at Middlebury Language Schools and has worked as an intelligence Analyst in the private sector.

Written By

Isaac Seitz graduated from Patrick Henry College’s Strategic Intelligence and National Security program. He has also studied Russian at Middlebury Language Schools and has worked as an intelligence Analyst in the private sector.

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