The Courier & Advertiser (Fife Edition)

Boost for Rosyth’s shipbuildi­ng yards after foreign bids withdrawn.

MPs urge UK Government to sign contracts and safeguard hundreds of jobs at Rosyth

- CRAIG SMITH csmith@thecourier.co.uk

Fife workers are “good to go” to deliver new contracts at Rosyth’s shipbuildi­ng yards.

Fife MPs have urged the UK Government to start signing contracts and secure hundreds of jobs amid ongoing uncertaint­y as the HMS Prince of Wales aircraft carrier project draws to a conclusion.

Dunfermlin­e and West Fife SNP MP Douglas Chapman and Labour MP for Kirkcaldy and Cowdenbeat­h Lesley Laird have pressed the government to safeguard the workers.

They want the new UK defence secretary Penny Mordaunt to guarantee the £1 billion Fleet Solid Support Ships (FSSS) contract will be built in Britain, protecting an estimated 16,400 jobs across the UK.

The calls come after defence minister Stuart Andrew revealed Italian firm Fincantier­i has pulled out of the FSSS bidding process, while a South Koreanbase­d bid from Daewoo Shipbuildi­ng and Marine Engineerin­g has also been withdrawn.

Mr Chapman believes there is no reason the project should not be awarded to a UK-based dock like Rosyth, an area which could also secure work via the contract for Type31e frigates, which is also up for grabs and is a UK-only competitio­n.

He said: “The Royal Navy wants to build a range of smaller frigates and they have put them out to competitio­n between shipyards in the UK.

“Looking out from the flight deck of the Royal Navy’s biggest ever ship, HMS Queen Elizabeth – which is in Rosyth for post sea-trial checks – the quality of engineerin­g in the West Fife yard is there for all to see.

“I hope (Penny Mordaunt) can succeed in getting the Type31e project off the ground as soon as possible so that the gap between finishing the second aircraft carrier and starting on Type31e frigates is as seemless as can be managed.

“Babcock tell me they’ve a really strong bid on the table and they want to invest in Rosyth in order to make the yard an engineerin­g hub to take on all comers.”

Mrs Laird said the FSSS contract, due to be awarded next year, has been put to tender internatio­nally because the ships are not classified as warships.

The British consortium consisting of Babcock, BAE Systems, Cammell Laird and Rolls-Royce is now one of just three bidders left, with Spanish firm Navantia and the Japan Marine United Corporatio­n still in the running.

“Recently, we have seen the workforce at Rosyth reduce due to a lack of certainty as to whether they would be successful in their bid for the Fleet Solid Support contracts,” she said.

“This comes amidst job losses at Appledore and Cammell Laird, while Harland and Woolf is up for sale.

“Only last week an all-party government committee published a report saying all of the evidence points to the fact that this government’s current position is completely unsustaina­ble and is hurting communitie­s the length and breadth of the UK, while also underminin­g our strategic and competitiv­e advantage in the shipbuildi­ng and marine sector.”

 ?? Picture: PA. ?? HMS Queen Elizabeth, the Royal Navy’s largest ever warship, in the dry dock at Rosyth.
Picture: PA. HMS Queen Elizabeth, the Royal Navy’s largest ever warship, in the dry dock at Rosyth.

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