Western Daily Press

£1.6bn ships contract won by UK consortium

- GAVIN CORDON wdp@reachplc.com

ABRITISH-LED consortium has been chosen as the preferred bidder to build new support ships for the Royal Navy, creating 1,200 new jobs in UK shipyards and hundreds more in the supply chain, the Ministry of Defence has said.

The £1.6 billion contract will see final assembly for the three vessels – each the length of two football pitches – take place at Harland & Wolff’s shipyard in Belfast, after earlier work takes place at its shipyard at Appledore in North Devon.

They will be built to an entirely British design by Bath-based BMT which forms the rest of the Team Resolute consortium along with Navantia UK.

Defence Secretary Ben Wallace said the announceme­nt was a “significan­t boost” to the UK shipbuildi­ng industry.

“By selecting Team Resolute, the Ministry of Defence has chosen a proposal which includes £77 million of investment into the UK shipyards, creating around 2,000 UK jobs, and showcasing cutting-edge British design,” he said.

“Building on ambitions laid out in the National Shipbuildi­ng Strategy, this contract will bolster technology transfer and key skills from a worldrenow­ned shipbuilde­r, crucial in the modernisat­ion of British shipyards.”

The contract is subject to final Treasury and ministeria­l approval.

The Royal Fleet Auxiliary’s three 216-metre Fleet Solid Support (FSS) ships will supply munitions, stores and provisions to the Navy’s aircraft carriers, destroyers and frigates deployed at sea.

The MoD said the “majority” of the blocks and modules for the ships will be constructe­d at Harland & Wolff in Belfast and Appledore in Devon, with components manufactur­ed at centres in Methil in Fife and Arnish on the Isle of Lewis.

However, build work will also take place at Navantia’s shipyard in Cadiz, Spain, in a collaborat­ion the MoD said would allow for key skills and technology to be transferre­d from a world-leading auxiliary shipbuilde­r.

Labour and trade unions expressed anger that the entire project was not being done in the UK.

Shadow defence secretary John Healey said: “This decision is a betrayal of British jobs and British business.

“Ministers have rejected a big opportunit­y to boost our UK economy and strengthen our sovereign industrial capability at a time when threats are increasing.”

Mike Clancy, general secretary of the Prospect union, said it was “a terrible, short-sighted decision” and a missed opportunit­y to support the whole of UK shipbuildi­ng.

“At a time when the economy is struggling it is short-sighted in the extreme to go with a bid that takes most of the high-value work and intellectu­al property overseas,” he said. “Spain will be delighted with the Government’s approach to levelling up. It is now essential that the Government does all it can to maximise the small amount of work going to UK yards.”

GMB national officer Matt Roberts called for reassuranc­es from ministers that UK shipyards would get the work they needed to prosper.

“It’s only a few short years since Harland & Wolff, set to benefit from this bid, was occupied by workers to save the yard from closure,” he said. “Ever since the last RFA order debacle from the Tory Government back in 2012, we have campaigned for all of the build work on FSS to be done in the UK and for each shipyard in every nation and region of the country to get decent packages of work from this big Government order.

“Ministers finally concede a ‘significan­t’ amount of the FSS work will be done at home. The problem is that they don’t define ‘significan­t’ by volume or value and they don’t tell us what guarantees or enforceabi­lity there is. Due diligence must be rigorous.”

Ministers have rejected a big opportunit­y to boost our UK economy

JOHN HEALEY

 ?? Steven Roberts ?? Defence Secretary Ben Wallace at the Appledore shipyard yesterday
Steven Roberts Defence Secretary Ben Wallace at the Appledore shipyard yesterday

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