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CalMac wins controversial £43m islands ferries tender

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Published Date:
21 September 2007
CALEDONIAN MacBrayne, the state-owned ferry company, was yesterday awarded a six-year contract to run lifeline services, ending a controversial tendering process in which it ended up as the only bidder.
CalMac retained the 26 routes it operates around the Clyde and Hebrides with a subsidy of £43 million in the first year, a rise on last year's £31 million.

The new contract, to start from 1 October, will include improvements to services for a number of islands, but the Scottish Government rejected the case for a new route between Mallaig and Lochboisdale in South Uist due to high costs.

There is also no mention of a Sunday service between Ullapool and Stornoway, although a renewed campaign for a seven-day crossing will be discussed by the CalMac board next week. The tendering process, which cost taxpayers more than £15 million, had been strongly criticised. CalMac's routes had to be offered to tender to comply with EU competition regulations, first revealed in 1999.

Initially, 17 companies expressed interest, but only two submitted bids. Western Ferries and V Ships later withdrew, leaving CalMac's alone in the field.

However, the firm had to split into separate vessel-owning and service-providing companies to comply with the rules on the tendering process.

Last year, the then-Scottish Executive said the tendering exercise had cost at least £15.3 million. Of this, £11 million was due to a one-off clawback of tax relief by the Treasury.

Tax relief was previously claimed by CalMac as it both owned and operated its ferries, and related to its past investment in new vessels, but this was no longer applicable.

When in opposition, the SNP opposed the tender exercise, calling it an "expensive exercise in futility from a supine [Scottish] Executive".

Stewart Stevenson, the transport minister, said yesterday: "I am aware of the strong feelings around the need for this tender, but completing the process was the quickest way to protect these vital services."

But Alex Johnstone, the Conservatives' transport spokesman, said: "This sorry episode disgraces the previous Liberal Democrat and Labour ministers, who presided over years of chaos and delay since the tendering of these routes was announced.

"Vast sums of taxpayers' money have been squandered to restore the status quo."

Yesterday's announcement leaves just one route, Gourock-Dunoon, outstanding. Last year, it was the first service to be put up for grabs, but neither CalMac, which received a subsidy of £2.5 million to run the route, nor Western Ferries, which runs a rival service, put in bids.

Gordon Ross, managing director of Western Ferries, said: "Having seen the closing of the tender for the main bundle of services, hopefully this will mean the Gourock-Dunoon situation becoming a priority for the Scottish Government as it is now an anomaly."

The new contract includes additional sailings to Gigha, Arran, Coll, Tiree and Mull in winter and an improved summer service to Islay. It also includes the introduction of a performance regime, giving CalMac an incentive to deliver the services to the standard set in the contract.

However, it does not include a service between Mallaig and Lochboisdale in South Uist which had been called for.

A Scottish Government spokesman said that the route was "unaffordable" as it would require a new ferry costing £25 million and running costs of £4 million a year.

The spokesman added that the increased subsidy was due to inflation, increases in pension contributions for staff, berthing dues and running costs of two new vessels.

SYNONYMOUS WITH SHIPPING


THE MacBrayne name has been synonymous with shipping services to the islands and west coast for more than 150 years.

In 1851 a steamer firm, David Hutcheson & Co, was set up in partnership with David MacBrayne and later renamed after him. CalMac was an amalgamation of MacBraynes and the Caledonian Steam Packet Co in the 1960s.

Today, Caledonian Maritime Assets, which owns 31 ferries and 30 terminals, leases vessels and piers to CalMac Ferries.

CalMac Ferries carries more than five million passengers a year.

Page 1 of 1

  • Last Updated: 21 September 2007 12:21 AM
  • Source: The Scotsman
  • Location: Edinburgh
  • Related Topics: Caledonian MacBrayne
 
1

Navvy,

21/09/2007 03:04:37

'The earth belongs unto the lord, and all that it contains, except the Western Isles for they belong to MacBraynes

EU madness

Mind you, CalMac needs to pull its socks up campare teh job spec and manning levels of the CalMac ferry at Colintraive with Western Ferries to Dunoon

2

Guga II,

Rockall 21/09/2007 07:19:31

Apart from the tendering farce, which, according to the EC was unnecessary, a fact the Hootsmon omits to mention, they also omit to mention the MacBraynes is actually owned by the Scottish Government. It operates as a sort of Quango.

In any event, when are we going to get RET on the ferries?

3

Boy Wonder,

21/09/2007 07:28:41

I don't know anything about the Ferry service, so I expect to get shot down in flames ... so here goes ...

Can't the other companies, Western Ferries and V Ships, take up the routes Calmac won't run, such as Mallaig and Lochboisdale?

Surely there are independent companies that can operate, even on Sundays, and open up new routes. Look at the cities. There isn't a single bus company or taxi service.

Are the islands so dependent on Calmac??

4

Olav,

Gdynia 21/09/2007 08:33:48

I wish my bank would give my business free cash like this each time I asked. I suppose its too much to ask for a state-run business to be run properly. That's the problem with a state-owned business - it's always having to be bailed out. By the way, the £15m cost was hardly for the tender process - it was for restructuring the company and related bits and bobs (pension fund etc), such are excuses in the public sector. A better form of restructuring would have been to sell it off entirely like all the other 'utilities' and get it out of state ownership.

5

Guga II,

Rockall 21/09/2007 09:09:45

#3 BW. The islands are totally dependant on MacBrayne's as it is the only ferry company on the go to the Western Isles. We need it for supplies of food and many other things. Bear in mind also, that air fares to and from the islands are extortionate. The standard fare from Stornoway to Glasgow, one way, is £174.

MacBrayne's is probably one of the dearest ferry companies in the world, despite the fact that it is owned by the Scottish government.

As for the cost of running it, it is the equivalent of our "main road", and the costs are much smaller than maintaining roads and motorways on the mainland. This is also the reason that we should have Road Equivalent Tariff (RET) for the ferries.

6

Mercutio,

Falkirk 21/09/2007 11:39:38

5 Guga! Shouldn't it be MacBrayne is one of the dearest ferry companies in the world BECAUSE it is run by the Scottish Executive. The booze at MacLennans is cheap though.

7

decent one,

21/09/2007 13:40:31

The solution is to start building tunnels between the islands and the mainland, and between the islands and other islands. This is the only long term solution.

Start with the smaller crossings first. Invite the Norwegians to build the first ones at a fixed price, so there will be no over-spend. If it proves successful continue the process.

8

Andrew Wilshaw,

Edinburgh 21/09/2007 21:43:42

All Dunoon wants is an unlimited service from its pier to the railhead at Gourock to compete with Western in order to drive prices down. The boats can either go to the new linkspan or the old pier to keep it in use, if and when it receives its much-needed renovation. Is this quite simple solution really too much to ask?

9

Conan,

Graighouse 21/09/2007 23:04:55

What's needed is a large fleet of large flying boats providing a network of service all throughout Scotland and to be funded as part of the highways budget, so that you can fly direct to/from almost all of Scotland's outlying areas and any other place that has a water surface large enough for the aircraft - maybe we need a network of large 'curling ponds' instead of all these very expensive concrete airports.

10

Yonthing!,

22/09/2007 11:00:11

What it needs is for selfish people to stop living in the middle of nowhere. Why should we city dwellers have to pay for their transport. My bus isn't subsidised.

They should all move to one of the big towns on the mainland, then all the taxes saved from the ferries could be spent on more important transport systems.

Like a second tram line in Edinburgh.

11

Just Deserts,

10/07/2009 06:17:09
Maybe they should all but themselves a row boat to keep fit as well.

 

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