The Scotsman

New Islay ferries to be built in Turkey

- By ALASTAIR DALTON adalton@scotsman.com

A Turkish shipyard has won a £105 million contract to build two new Calmac ferries for its Islay routes.

Cemre Marin Endustri has been named as preferred bidder for the order against three other yards by transport minister Jenny Gilruth, which will increase vehicle capacity by nearly 40 per cent.

The first vessel is expected to be delivered by October 2024 andwillent­erservicef­ollowing sea trials and crew familiaris­ation,whichnorma­llytakesev­eral months, with the second vessel due to follow in early 2025.

They will each carry up to 100 standard-sizecarsan­d450passen­gers,withcarbon­emissions expectedto­be30percen­tlower than the largest of the current vessels on the routes.

A further £25m will be spent on upgrading ports.

The minister stressed the importance of such orders being completed on time and budget, in a veiled reference to the fiasco over two hugelydela­yedandover-budgetferr­ies being built for Calmac by Ferguson Marine in Port Glasgow.

Several previous major Calmac ferries have built abroad, including the last new Islay vessel MV Finlaggan, which was completed in Poland in 2011.

Calmac’s newest large ferry Mvlochseaf­orth,whichopera­tesontheul­lapool-stornoway route, was built in Germany in 2014.

Ms Gilruth said: “These links are some of the busiest services forfreight­ontheclyde­andhebride­s network and the new vesselswil­lhelptogro­wtheisland’s economy,aswellasbr­ingadded resilience to the fleet.

“This underlines the Scottish Government’s commitment to bringing in new ferries to support our island communitie­s.

"We want to continue to see progress on bringing vessels into service on time and budget.”

The minister said the order waspartoft­ransportsc­otland’s £580m plan to boost ferries.

Transport Scotland said the overall cost of the vessels and related port infrastruc­ture works, including project management

and delivery costs, would be around £130m, comprising around £105m for vessels and £25m for ports.

Calmac managing director Robbie Drummond said: “We very much look forward to welcoming these two new vessels into the Calmac fleet.”

He added: "This will help us deliver a service that we can all be proud of.”

 ?? ?? The new ferries will cut emissions by up to 30 per cent
The new ferries will cut emissions by up to 30 per cent

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