The Herald

Ferries Next year pledge on first overdue vessel

- By Martin Williams

FERGUSON Marine’s turnaround director has said the shipyard is on the road to recovery and is confident that the first of two overdue ferries will arrive next year. Tim Hair, who has said the nationalis­ed shipyard is probably the most challengin­g business turnaround in the UK, spoke as a 35-tonne “bulbous nose” on Hull 802 was replaced at the Port Glasgow yard. It is seen as a crucial part of the programme to deliver the vessels. It came five years after tycoon Jim Mccoll first rescued the yard when it went bust.

FERGUSON Marine’s turnaround director has said the shipyard is on the road to recovery and is confident that the first of two overdue ferries will arrive next year.

Tim Hair, who has said the nationalis­ed shipyard is probably the most challengin­g business turnaround in the UK, spoke as a 35-tonne “bulbous nose” on Hull 802 was replaced at the Port Glasgow yard. It is seen as a crucial part of the programme to deliver the vessels.

The collapse of Ferguson Marine in August 2019 came amid soaring costs and delays to the constructi­on of two lifeline island ferries and resulted in a Scottish Government management takeover.

It came five years after tycoon Jim Mccoll first rescued the yard when it went bust.

The delivery of the new island ferries MV Glen Sannox and Hull 802, which were due online in the first half of 2018, was found to be between four and five years late, with costs doubling to over £200 million.

In June it emerged that the completion of the long-overdue ferries had been delayed again, with Ferguson Marine blaming the coronaviru­s pandemic and a shortage of skilled labour.

The nationalis­ed boat builder is making two ferries for Calmac for use around the Scottish islands.

Both were originally scheduled to be in operation by 2018 but the latest prediction is that one will be completed between July and September 2022 and the other will be delivered between April and July 2023.

Mr Hair, who it emerged earlier this month had been paid nearly £1.3m for 454 days work, has said that he is sure that the schedule can be met.

He said: “There are problems that could emerge in the commission­ing phase because of a lot of equipment on the ships that’s been there for five years.

“However, we’ve done everything we can to minimise that.”

Ferguson Marine said that the ‘bulbous nose’ replacemen­t was another significan­t milestone in the work on the ferries, having carried out the same jobs on Glen Sannox last year.

The state shipyard firm said: “It is a highly functional piece of precision engineerin­g, designed to facilitate less drag, consistent speed, and efficient fuel consumptio­n. The bulbous bow has been designed and constructe­d specifical­ly for Hull 802 based on its operationa­l requiremen­ts.

“In a meticulous­ly planned engineerin­g operation inside the Port Glasgow shipyard, the 35-tonne bulbous bow was lifted into place by a mobile crane and will be welded to the bow structure.”

The operation involved a team of engineers, welders and shipwright­s, working over three days, starting in the early hours of Monday morning, to ensure all preparatio­n and alignment was ready to accept the bow unit.

They said that earlier this year, structural work on MV Glen Sannox was completed following the installati­on of a reworked funnel and newly constructe­d mast, as well as completion of the structure around the stern and inside the hull.

“This is another significan­t step forward in the recovery of the shipyard, with visible progress in recent months on both vessels,” said Mr Hair. “The past year has been extremely challengin­g, working under the restrictio­ns of the pandemic. But we have gained momentum following the disruption and we are reaching important milestones.

“A lot of work is taking place at the shipyard and our teams have been working extremely hard.

“Significan­tly more work is being done on Hull 802 while it remains on the slipway, compared to MV Glen Sannox.

“This means that when it launches, it will weigh 1,300 tonnes more than MV Glen Sannox did at the point of launch, providing an indication of the volume of additional work onboard the second vessel.

“There remains a lot of work to do on both vessels, but constructi­on is progressin­g well, and we are optimistic as we forge ahead. We have developed increased capability over the past 18 months with a highly experience­d leadership team and a skilled and talented workforce.”

Ferguson Marine (Port Glasgow) Holdings (FMPG), which is controlled by ministers and supported by taxpayer cash, made a £100million loss in its first four months of Scottish Government control.

Asked if it would have made more sense to scrap the ferries and start again, Mr Hair told the BBC: “I don’t believe so. The remit was to finish the vessels, but we had a short look at starting again. The conclusion back then was to scrap them, redesign and rebuild them would have been slower than completing the vessels. I think that was the right decision at the time.”

This is another significan­t step forward in the recovery of the shipyard

 ??  ?? Ferguson Marine staff fit the ‘bulbous nose’ to Hull 802 at Port Glasgow
Ferguson Marine staff fit the ‘bulbous nose’ to Hull 802 at Port Glasgow
 ??  ?? Ferguson Marine CEO Tim Hair
Ferguson Marine CEO Tim Hair

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