Displaying items by tag: Shipyard delays
Shipyard Delays As CalMac ferries’ Unused Engines Experts Fear Risk of Failure after Years Left Idle
Costing £4m are the engines bought for two much-delayed and over-budget (CalMac) ferries which as The Sunday Port writes, have not been tested since being delivered more than five years ago as experts warn they may now fail.
The Scottish government-owned shipyard, Ferguson Marine took delivery of four dual-fuel engines and two back-up engines from Finnish firm Wartsila but on Saturday confirmed the engines – which can use diesel or liquefied natural gas (LNG) – have never been run and will not be tested until late summer at the earliest.
One expert warned the lag in running the engines threatens their performance while another, a former Scottish Government adviser, said the years of idleness risks them seizing up if the ferries, which, it is feared, may cost at least £400m, are ever launched.
Dr Spyros Hirdaris, a professor of maritime safety, based at a Finnish university near Helsinki, where engine manufacturer Wartsila is based, said: “There is a high possibility that the ferry engines won’t work and it seems very high risk to expect everything will go according to plan. If you have a car for a long time and never switch on the engine it’s probably not going to work. It’s extremely important the engines are tested on board so it’s not a good thing that they haven’t been tested for all this time.
More here from the Clydeside shipyard saga.
The completion of the first of two long-delayed CalMac ferries by the shipyard's revised date of September will be “challenging”, with Covid cases likely to cause “significant” disruption this month, a Ferguson Marine chief has told MSPs.
The Port Glasgow shipyard said the latest delivery date for Glen Sannox, earmarked for the main Arran route, remained between July 25 and September 25 – four years late.
But its turnaround director Tim Hair said in a report published today that was “achievable, but remains challenging”, and a planned increase in production in January and February was “critical to the achievement of this delivery schedule”.
He warned cases of the Omicron variant were increasing among staff, leading to more self-isolation.
Mr Hair said: “It seems likely that we will experience significant disruption in January and that, in turn, might result in lost productivity.
The Scotsman has more on the development.