The Sunday Post (Inverness)

Small is beautiful... and £400m cheaper: Expert maps out an alternativ­e future for island’s ferries

- By Mark Aitken POLITICAL EDITOR

Scotland’s ferry owners could save the taxpayer £400 million by buying smaller vessels more suitable for the communitie­s they serve, according to experts.

State-owned Caledonian Maritime Assets Ltd (CMAL) this month announced it has invited tender bids from four shipyards – none of them in Scotland – for two new Calmac ferries worth an estimated £100m for Islay.

The contract for the two 350-passenger, 107-car ferries is due to be awarded in March. According to transport expert Roy Pedersen, a member of the Scottish Government’s Ferry Industry Advisory Group, the ferries will cost £475m to run over 25 years, the expected working life of a ferry.

He said much smaller ships could be built for £5m – costing £75m over 25 years – and would be much more suitable for the route.

He said some of the saving could go on upgrading roads on Jura and the mainland.

Pedersen said: “They are going to cost about £24m a year in operating costs, including capital repayment costs, and the revenue will be in the region of £5m. The high cost of these vessels is due in part to their proposed huge crew complement­s of no less than 27.

“This compares with Pentland Ferries’ crew for their new £14m MV Alfred of 13 or 14 for 430 passengers and 98 cars.

“The annual estimated annual loss of £19m amounts to some £475m over 25 years. For several decades, various bodies have suggested a better alternativ­e of upgraded roads through Jura and on the adjacent mainland and two small shuttle ferries, on short, frequent crossings one between Islay and Jura and another between Jura and the mainland.

“If you operated two smaller four-crew 40-car ferries costing about £5m each, you would provide more capacity, more frequency, costing about £75m net over 25 years to operate, taking into account revenue, saving about £400m, which could go toward the necessary road upgrades.”

He added: “There is a lot of discontent in the communitie­s about these large ships that provide an infrequent service.”

Due for replacemen­t is MV Isle of Arran and MV Hebridean Isles, which were built 38 and 36 years ago respective­ly and are among the oldest ferries in the fleet.

A breakdown of MV Hebridean Isles earlier this month left businesses without supplies, tourists stranded and affected music fans attending a festival on Colonsay.

Calmac was criticised last week after issuing a warning to passengers using the service to only travel if necessary.

It said that to “maintain lifeline and essential services there may be a need for some bookings to be cancelled or amended at short notice”.

Transport Scotland said: “The new vessels would replace the MV Hebridean Isles and allow for the potential cascading of the younger, more recently built MV Finlaggan, both of which currently serve the Islay route.

“Work to establish the requiremen­ts for the vessels involved detailed assessment of the freight and passenger needs of the service, as well as close engagement with the stakeholde­rs for the route – most notably the community on Islay.

“We are content that this investment represents the right solution for the needs of Islay.”

CMAL said: “Various factors are explored when considerin­g new vessel options, including, but not limited to, Calmac’s requiremen­ts as the operator, Transport Scotland policy, passenger, vehicle and freight demand, now and future projection­s, passenger facilities, accessibil­ity, harbour infrastruc­ture, vessel speed and timetablin­g, MCA rules and regulation, cost and environmen­tal impact.

“Planning, feasibilit­y studies and modelling for the new vessels for Islay and Jura have, so far, involved hundreds of hours of time and expertise from qualified and highly experience­d naval architects, ship designers and civil engineers – both within CMAL and external consultant­s. The vessel options have been thoroughly researched and analysed by the relevant experts.

“Importantl­y, the two new vessels will bring muchneeded tonnage to the vessel fleet. It is one of several new vessel and harbour upgrade projects we are currently progressin­g to improve the resilience of ferry services for island communitie­s.”

 ?? Picture Andrew Price ?? MV Finlaggan operated by Calmac passes by the Isle of Jura
Picture Andrew Price MV Finlaggan operated by Calmac passes by the Isle of Jura

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