The Press and Journal (Inverness, Highlands, and Islands)

Traffic up 8.4% at harbour Results: More visits from cruise liners but offshore vessels down 11% on year

- BY STAN ARNAUD BY ALYS KEY

More visits by cruise liners, fishing boats and roll-on, roll-off ferries contribute­d to an 8.4% jump in traffic at Shetland’s main port in the first nine months of this year.

But a downward trend in arrivals of offshore oil and gas vessels at Lerwick continued, with an 11% drop compared to the same period in 2017.

Figures issued by Lerwick Port Authority (LPA) showed the overall number of vessel visits from January to September rose to 3,933, with a total tonnage of 10.2 million tonnes. They were boosted by the addition of a third freight ferry by operator Serco Northlink for peak periods from midSeptemb­er.

Passenger numbers were up 25.7% at 199,421, with cruise ships visitors providing 90,336 of them.

The total tonnage of oil and gas-related cargo fell to 622,862 tonnes.

There was a 19.4% increase in the amount of white fish landed at Lerwick, to 199,066 boxes. LPA chief executive Sandra Laurenson said: “There were positive signs over the nine months, but the offshore industry continues to disappoint. That market is expected to remain quiet in 2019, with decommissi­oning work at Lerwick picking up again in 2020. Next year will see new records set in the cruise sector. Constructi­on is continuing on the new white fish market, for completion in early 2020.” Top-flight shares in London dodged a day of declines on European markets yesterday as a weaker pound and some positive company updates supported the FTSE 100.

The blue-chip index finished the day 9.53 points, or 0.14%, higher at 7,035.85.

Meanwhile, the Eurozone braced for a possible crisis over the Italian budget weighing on sentiment in European markets. The French Cac was 0.22% lower and the German Dax fell 0.42%.

Sterling was down 0.51% at 1.119 euros, and versus the US dollar was trading 0.69% lower at 1.270.

A barrel of Brent crude oil was trading at $75.64, a drop of 1.5%.

 ??  ?? ‘POSITIVE SIGNS’: Lerwick Port Authority chief executive Sandra Laurenson said the growth in cruise visitors was a positive for the port
‘POSITIVE SIGNS’: Lerwick Port Authority chief executive Sandra Laurenson said the growth in cruise visitors was a positive for the port

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