The Courier & Advertiser (Fife Edition)

HMS Prince of Wales afloat for the first time

Aircraft carrier passes major milestone

- Ryan wilkinson

The second aircraft carrier to be built for the Royal Navy in the record-breaking design of the £3.1 billion HMS Queen Elizabeth has passed a major milestone – it floats.

As its sister ship undergoes emergency repairs for an embarrassi­ng leak, the HMS Prince of Wales rose up overnight as water was gradually let into its dry dock at Rosyth.

The 65,000-tonne behemoth, which has been taking shape at the yard over the past three years and is due to be handed over to the Navy in 2019, was moved to a berth where the Queen Elizabeth was fitted out.

The now Portsmouth-based HMS Queen Elizabeth, the largest, most powerful and most expensive ship to be built for the Royal Navy in its history, was the subject of embarrassi­ng revelation­s this week after it emerged it had a leak.

The 919ft-long (280m) vessel set out for sea trials over the summer and is believed to have been taking on water for some time due to a faulty seal.

The Government has insisted repairs will not cost the taxpayer, with Defence Secretary Gavin Williamson telling the Press Associatio­n “the contractor­s who built her” would foot the bill.

It is understood the cost of fixing the leak could reach into the hundreds of thousands.

Mr Williamson said: “This is the reason why we have the sea trials, to make sure that everything is working absolutely perfectly.”

 ?? Picture: PA. ?? The vessel has been floated and moved to her fitting-out berth at Rosyth.
Picture: PA. The vessel has been floated and moved to her fitting-out berth at Rosyth.

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