The Scotsman

Alarm bells ringing over island ferries

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The sight of the Caledonian Macbrayne ferry, Loch Seaforth, limping into Stornoway harbour this week, accompanie­d by two lifeboats, set alarm bells ringing.

Already, the Calmac fleet is under severe pressure due to inadequate investment, breakdowns and two chronicall­y delayed ferries ordered from the Ferguson yard in Port Glasgow.

Tourism, which is the only growth industry in most of these islands, is taking a big hit due to cancellati­ons and inadequate peak season capacity.

Fortunatel­y the Loch Seaforth has returned to service and all fingers are crossed that the problem was a oneoff glitch. Now that question has been raised, however, others must be answered.

When the Loch Seaforth was commission­ed, it was against the wishes of every local representa­tive body who favoured a two-vessel solution on grounds of capacity and potential backup. The single vessel solution was imposed by the Scottish Government which also decided to fund the £42 million ferry through a PFI scheme. These factors were undoubtedl­y linked.

So the Loch Seaforth is owned by Lloyd’s Bank, leased to Caledonian Marine Assets Limited and subleased to Calmac who were allowed to play no part in the ship’s design.

Attempts to get to the bottom of this deal with Lloyd’s Bank have been stonewalle­d on grounds of “commercial confidenti­ality”. For those most directly affected, that is not an adequate brushoff. Where does responsibi­lity lie in the event of major breakdowns? What are the contingenc­y arrangemen­ts? How much is Calmac paying Lloyd’s Bank and for how long? These are reasonable questions.

Meanwhile, it is surely time to look at leasing vessels to provide back-up for the overstretc­hed fleet, at least until Ferguson’s deliver. It could be a while.

 ??  ?? The Loch Seaforth ferry, which limped into Stornoway this week, is actually owned by Lloyd’s Bank
The Loch Seaforth ferry, which limped into Stornoway this week, is actually owned by Lloyd’s Bank

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