The Sunday Post (Dundee)

Islanders: Ferry owners wanted to steer us off course during a sham consultati­on

Claims of a stitch-up on Mull

- By Stephen Stewart sstewart@sundaypost.com

Islanders have accused the owners of Calmac’s ferries of trying to dupe them during a consultati­on into a replacemen­t boat for the lifeline service.

C o m m u n i t i es on M u l l and Iona wanted to buy and modify a catamaran-style ve s s e l but s a y Ca l e d o n i a n Maritime Assets Ltd ( CMAL) – the Scottish Government quango which owns ferries infrastruc­ture – weighted a consultati­on last year toward its preferred option.

Joe Reade, chairman of the islands’ Ferry Committee, said CMAL put no effort into investigat­ing a catamaran service but knocked together a design intended to be inferior in every way to its preferred option.

Yesterday, CMAL questioned the committee’s expertise and denied it had any preference.

Reade said his group had used Freedom of Informatio­n laws to access CMAL’S proposed designs, adding: “CMAL held a public online consultati­on on options for ferries for Islay in January 2021. A table compared an unnamed catamaran with C M A L’s ‘p re f e r re d’ monohull option.

“It rated the catamaran as being worse on every measure. It caught not just our attention, but also that of industry profession­als with whom we have regular contact.

“The two natural advantages of good catamaran designs are that they have a shallow draught,

great for the restricted waters of many ports in the Hebrides and are efficient, requiring less energy to push them through the water.

“CMAL’S catamaran exhibited neither of these advantages and instead was both deep-draughted and very fuel- thirsty. Naturally, we wanted to know more about this catamaran.”

After an appeal to the Scottish Informatio­n Commission­er, the committee was shocked on seeing the plan.

Reade said: “Work on the design began just three weeks before the webinar in which it was presented. The design was the

creation of the same design house who worked up the preferred monohull design.

“We put the design to several naval architects, including catamaran specialist­s, and their appraisal was far from compliment­ary. It was recognised as a hugely h e a v y, poorly developed design.

“CMAL’S cynical and manipulati­ve use of a catamaran design that was deliberate­ly designed to fail is harmful to both islanders and taxpayers. It’s shameful.”

The quango is already under scrutiny for its role in the Ferguson shipbuildi­ng contract which led to the Port Glasgow yard collapsing and passing into government control. The costs of building two ferries there has more than doubled and could end up costing £400m and will be years behind schedule.

CMAL said: “Our analysis and consultati­on for the two Islay vessels was extensive and the Islay Ferry Committee has stated its satisfacti­on with the level of engagement and the two boats on order. CMAL is not anticatama­ran. We are considerin­g a catamaran for the DunoonKilc­reggan-gourock route.

“We deal in facts not fiction and will only ever order the vessels best suited to the routes and communitie­s they are intended to serve.”

 ?? ?? The old Calmac ferry to Mull
The old Calmac ferry to Mull

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