The Press and Journal (Aberdeen and Aberdeenshire)

New £250m ‘royal yacht’ plans sunk

- DAVID HUGHES

A£250 million scheme to create a successor to the Royal Yacht Britannia has been scrapped as part of a squeeze on government spending.

The national flagship plan was sunk by Rishi Sunak’s administra­tion as Whitehall braced for cuts in the November 17 Autumn Statement by Chancellor Jeremy Hunt.

The plan was championed by Boris Johnson when he was prime minister, but has faced criticism from MPs at a time when there are other priorities for defence spending.

Defence Secretary Ben Wallace told MPs he was prioritisi­ng the procuremen­t of the multirole ocean surveillan­ce ship (MROSS) instead of the flagship.

“In the face of the Russian illegal and unprovoked invasion of Ukraine and (Vladimir) Putin’s reckless disregard of internatio­nal arrangemen­ts designed to keep world order, it is right that we prioritise delivering capabiliti­es which safeguard our national infrastruc­ture,” he said.

That meant he had “also directed the terminatio­n of the national flagship competitio­n with immediate effect to bring forward the first MROSS ship in its place”.

Mr Wallace told MPs the MROSS would “protect sensitive defence infrastruc­ture and civil infrastruc­ture” and “improve our ability to detect threats to the seabed and cables”.

Shadow defence secretary John Healey welcomed the news that the “previous prime minister’s vanity project” has been scrapped and the spending switched to “purposes that will help defend the country”.

The vessel had been expected to be constructe­d in the UK and take to the water in 2024 or 2025, and would have toured the world as a “floating embassy”.

But the Daily Telegraph, which has been campaignin­g for a replacemen­t for Britannia, reported that the two private consortia bidding for the work were told yesterday that the project is being axed.

The Commons defence committee warned in 2021 that there was “no evidence of the advantage to the Royal Navy of acquiring the national flagship” and that the initial expenditur­e of around £250 million, combined with the £20-30 million a year running costs and providing a crew, would pile extra pressure on the senior service.

Downing Street defended the decision to scrap the national flagship project at a time of spending restraint and in response to the uncertaint­y caused by Vladimir Putin.

The prime minister’s official spokesman said: “With Russia’s ongoing illegal war, it is right that we prioritise our capabiliti­es.”

 ?? ?? ALL AT SEA: The UK Government has axed the national flagship project to cut costs.
ALL AT SEA: The UK Government has axed the national flagship project to cut costs.

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