The Scotsman

Calmac ferries built in Turkey on time and on budget

- Neil Pooran

All four ferries being built for Calmac at a Turkish shipyard are on time and on budget, the Scottish Government’s ferry-owning body has said.

The vessels under constructi­on at the Cemre shipyard are “progressin­g well and according to the schedule”, CMAL said in an update to MSPS.

The first of the four ferries, which will serve Islay and Little Minch, was launched earlier this month and is expected to enter service in November.

It stands in sharp contrast to the two larger ferries being built at Ferguson Marine in Port Glasgow, which are six years late and several times over-budget.

Theceoofth­estate-owned shipyard was sacked by the board this week and ministers are awaiting further detail on the potential for further delays to Glen Sannox and sister ship Glen Rosa.

The first of the Turkish vessels to enter the water is called the MV Isle of Islay.

It is just under 95m long and holds a maximum of 450 passengers and 100 cars, or 14 commercial vehicles.

The second ship, Loch Indaal, has the same specificat­ions.

The contract for both vessels was awarded in March 2022.

At Ferguson Marine, the 102m-long Glen Sannox and its sister ship will each be able to carry 852 passengers, with the number of vehicles dependent on deck configurat­ions.

In CMAL’S quarterly update to Holyrood’s Transport Committee, CEO Kevin Hobbs said a team of supervisor­s were on site in Turkeyover seeing the constructi­on.

The ship classifica­tion society, Lloyds Register, have issued statements verifying the hull constructi­on meets the design brief, he said.

Commission­ing activities for MV Isle of Islay are expected to begin in the second quarter of this year.

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