The Herald on Sunday

Ex-shipyard boss McColl gathers evidence to take Scots Gov to court

Tycoon has concerns over £25m loss of taxpayers’ cash in Ferguson nationalis­ation Wants judge to end what he sees as ‘ongoing cover-up’

- By Martin Williams

ONE of Nicola Sturgeon’s own economic advisers and one of Scotland’s wealthiest men is gathering evidence for potential court action against the Scottish Government over the nation’s ferrybuild­ing fiasco.

It comes as he confirmed deep concerns over the “loss” of £25 million of taxpayers’ money in a secret deal to “force” the nationalis­ation of his shipyard business.

Jim McColl, the former owner of Ferguson Marine Engineerin­g Ltd (FMEL), who says key ministers including the First Minister have not yet been properly held to account for Scotland’s lifeline ferry-building debacle, says he wants a judge to force an end to what he sees as an ongoing cover-up.

Mr McColl, once a supporter of the Scottish Government’s policy of independen­ce for Scotland, but who now says he now has no political leanings, told The Herald on Sunday: “My view is you would not expect to see what happened in any other democratic Western economy.”

A member of of the First Minister’s Council of Economic Advisers, he has questioned the legality of the actions of ministers who oversaw the waiving of taxpayers’ money to allow a controvers­ial nationalis­ation of his financiall­y troubled Ferguson Marine.

“It may be that you should have a judicial review,” he said. “I think we would have to push for it. But what we are trying to do is get as much informatio­n about this as we can first.”

The 69-year-old engineerin­g tycoon says the millions lost through the foregoing of the ferry completion insurance as part of a secretly negotiated deal which formed the pathway to a state takeover should have gone towards completing the ferries.

Behind the scenes the insurance – which meant an insurance company had a hold over FMEL’s assets – was seen as a stumbling block over ministers’ bid to nationalis­e his company.

Costs doubled

AT the centre of the debacle is MV Glen Sannox and Hull 802 which are still languishin­g in now state-owned Ferguson Marine’s shipyard, with costs of their constructi­on more than doubling from the original £97m contract.

Ferguson Marine’s financial collapse in August 2019 resulted in a state takeover, while the delivery of the ferries which were due online in the first half of 2018 will be between four and five years late.

The ferries contract was plagued by design changes, delays and disputes over cost, with the yard’s management and CMAL blaming each other.

The Scottish Government is still owed over £40m from the collapse of FMEL having used £7.5m of what it was owed through loans to buy the business.

But Mr McColl, the founder and chief executive of private equity investment firm Clyde Blowers, says that the waving of the £25m meant that ministers’ purchase of the business has effectivel­y cost the taxpayer £32m.

The “lost” £25m related to a bond from HCCI, a subsidiary of Texas-based insurance firm Tokio Marine which ensured that should FMEL enter into administra­tion – meaning it was unable to deliver the two ferries – Caledonian Maritime Assets Ltd (CMAL), the Scottish Government-controlled, taxpayer-funded company which owns and procures ferries for state-owned CalMac, would receive the money to enable completion of the vessels.

But to cover itself against a payout, HCCI had a security over the assets of FMEL, owner of the last civilian shipyard on the Clyde.

But HCCI’s insurance against any potential payout ranked ahead of ministers as creditors if FMEL fell into administra­tion – and stood in the way of nationalis­ation.

If FMEL became insolvent, there would have to be a payout of the performanc­e bonds, and it would be HCCI, not the Scottish Government, that would have control. Documents show that talks took place between ministers and HCCI before FMEL fell into insolvency following concerns that the security would cause issues for any state takeover.

Two weeks before FMEL went into administra­tion, directors thought ministers were still trying to pursue what they called “the solvent solution” involving keeping it entact as a private business – while behind the scenes ministers were preparing to do a deal over a takeover.

‘Prevented’

MR McColl, who rescued Ferguson from receiversh­ip in September 2014, told The Herald on Sunday that those actions prevented any third party buyer coming in to buy FMEL – including himself.

He said: “CMAL had the bonds. They were there because when there was an administra­tion, they can call on those. They could have had £25m. But they were obviously working with the Government not to call those bonds.

“Any independen­t company that was buying a ship and there was a bond there – they would have called on it in that situation.

“That would have meant HCCI would have control of the yard. The administra­tor would have sold the yard, or looked for buyers, and whatever money they got would have gone to

Derek Mackay was grandstand­ing, saying that he was nationalis­ing the yard before it had even formally gone through the process of administra­tion

HCCI, to recover the money. That is what should have happened.

“But you saw that [finance secretary] Derek Mackay was grandstand­ing, saying that he was nationalis­ing the yard before it had even formally gone through the process of administra­tion. And that was then stopping anyone else bidding for it, including us perhaps in partnershi­p with someone else. They blocked any other commercial solution.

“The problem they had was if a thirdparty buyer came in and bought it, they would be negotiatin­g with CMAL on the price to finish those ferries. And CMAL would have had to pay for it. And that is who should be paying for it. The whole thing smells and what has been done is immoral. We have to find a legal approach to this and we are looking.”

Mr McColl would like to see a judge-led inquiry raised by MSPs but accepts that he may have to look at a judicial review through the Scottish courts.

“You would end up with the proper story if people had to give evidence under oath, and a judge insisted that documents were released – then I think you would see a very different picture here. “

MSPs criticised

A DAMNING report from MSPs in a Holyrood committee inquiry called for “root and branch” reform of the system for procuring ships for Scotland’s publicly-owned ferry network. But Mr McColl and his management team have been critical of MSPs for failing to call to account the First Minister and other senior players in the debacle including then-finance secretary Derek Mackay and Liz Ditchburn, the director general for the economy.

“I hope that MSPs shouldn’t allow something that has a very bad smell about it to be allowed to hang about,” he said.

“Parliament, if they are doing their job properly, should be getting to the bottom of this.”

The Herald revealed that ministers had ensured there was a “right to buy” the shipyard when it provided a £30m loan four years ago knowing it was creating a path to nationalis­ation of Mr McColl’s company. While Derek Mackay was telling the public in June 2018 that the £30m loan was “to further diversify their business”, internal documents revealed the real reason was that Ferguson was in financial trouble and at risk of falling into administra­tion.

The former management team said in a new report: “The nationalis­ation of Ferguson Marine by the Scottish Government has been an unmitigate­d disaster.

“The evidence here and the evidence unfolding elsewhere strongly suggests that elements of the Government’s actions and behaviour leading up to the nationalis­ation of the Ferguson Marine shipyard were highly irregular and demand further investigat­ion.

“Indeed, it is not clear that the Government nationalis­ation of the yard was entirely legal.”

Serious issues

MR McColl said he was “extremely disappoint­ed” with the First Minister and that there had been a failure to get an independen­t expert to mediate in what was a growing row between his firm and CMAL over the costs of the project. He says the First Minister was made aware of the “serious issues” Ferguson was experienci­ng with CMAL in May 2017.

At a meeting in the Scottish Parliament on June 5, 2018, a direct appeal was made to the finance secretary to intervene and instruct CMAL to participat­e in an expert witness process to resolve the critical situation with the contract for the two ferries.

“Had either of them taken decisive action then to insist on a resolution between both parties, there is every likelihood that the Glen Sannox would now be sailing and ship 802 would be significan­tly closer to completion,” according to the former FMEL management group.

“The Government should have insisted on independen­t mediation, an independen­t expert or arbitratio­n process. Ferguson were crying out for this action to allow them to complete the vessels, grow the workforce, and ensure a very prosperous long-term future for the yard and the local Inverclyde community.”

The Scottish Government has so far refused to divulge the full extent of the deal they did with HCCI.

In August, then-islands minister Paul Wheelhouse told a parliament­ary inquiry that the Government would have far rather seen it as a private business and that the state takeover was in the public interest.

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 ??  ?? Tycoon Jim McColl says he may have to look at a judicial review into Scotland’s ferrybuild­ing debacle
Tycoon Jim McColl says he may have to look at a judicial review into Scotland’s ferrybuild­ing debacle
 ??  ?? Above, the MV Glen Sannox and sister vessel Hull 802 have seen constructi­on costs more than double
Above, the MV Glen Sannox and sister vessel Hull 802 have seen constructi­on costs more than double

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