The Courier & Advertiser (Fife Edition)

Rosyth could be in line for £50m in wake of contract

Capital expenditur­e would ensure facilities are fit for purpose

- LEEZA CLARK

Rosyth dockyard could receive a £50 million boost in the wake of its contract to supply the Navy with a new generation of frigates.

A Babcock-led consortium has been named as the preferred bidder for the £1.25 billion Ministry of Defence contract to build five Type 31e warships.

With hopes the formal contract could be signed by November, and details still at an early stage, it is thought the initiative could need a massive capital expenditur­e over several years to ensure facilities are fit for purpose.

And with a large proportion of the work earmarked for Rosyth, that will mean a significan­t boost for the Fife yard.

Rosyth dockyard could be in line for a multi-million-pound investment in the wake of a contract to build new Royal Naval frigates.

Last week, the Ministry of Defence (MoD) announced a consortium led by the Fife yard’s owners, Babcock, was the preferred bidder for a massive £1.25 billion contract to build five Type 31e warships for the Navy.

It will secure more than 2,500 jobs across the UK, with work spread across several years, and open the door to around 150 new technical apprentice­ships.

With a large portion of the work coming to Rosyth, it will safeguard hundreds of local jobs in a boost for a workforce reeling from a series of cuts over the last few years as work on the aircraft carriers HMS Queen Elizabeth and HMS Prince of Wales comes to an end.

It is hoped the formal contract for the frigates will be signed by the end of this year, with work starting immediatel­y afterwards.

That could mean a major investment in the infrastruc­ture at Rosyth.

While planning is at its early stages, rumours are rife the contract could require a capital expenditur­e of £50m in coming years, with Rosyth getting a huge tranche.

A spokeswoma­n for Babcock said there were spaces at present at Rosyth for the frigates.

She added: “We expect to sign before the end of the year.

“We are continuing to work on the finer details but yes, that would mean some work would be required at Rosyth.

“At the moment we are continuing to work on the planning as this is quite a long programme.”

The contract will provide the MoD with a fleet of five ships, at an average production cost of £250m per vessel

The Babcock-led consortium aims to start work on the ships immediatel­y after the ink dries on the formal contract.

The first ship is due to go in the water in 2023.

The winning partnershi­p includes Thales and BMT as well as Ferguson Marine in Port Glasgow and Harland and Wolff in Belfast, both of which are currently in administra­tion.

“We are continuing to work on the finer details but yes, that would mean some work would be required at Rosyth. BABCOCK SPOKESWOMA­N

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