Dunoon ferry meeting revealed more than it knew

Dunoon ferry meeting 2

Thursday night’s (24th November 2011) public meeting on Dunoon’s ferry services between Gourock and Dunoon was some event. Continue reading

Ardyne Point development issues

A planning application first lodged in 2007 by Sir Robert McAlpine’s Continue reading

The Ileach breaks big story on new Islay ferry incompatability with existing ports

Funnel of Juno CalMacThe Ileach, Islay’s cracking newspaper whose jourmalism is after our own heart, broke a major story in its last issue. (The latest is due out at the end of this week.)

The paper has been systematically pursuing a serious omission in strategic forethought in CMAL’s commissioning of its new, larger, £21 million Islay ferry – like whether it can actually dock at and use existing facilities at the ports for the route.

The Ileach was well informed that there was a problem and raised the issue with CMAL, The company’s first response was to say that it, at Port Ellen and Kennacraig, it proposed ‘to instigate a modernisation programme to precede the delivery of the new ferry in 2011′ -  with the comforting qualification: ‘Whilst the existing infrastructure on Islay and the mainland will accommodate the new ferry’.

The Ileach then enquired whether the developments at the mainland port of Kenacraig and the Islay port of Port Ellen would be simultaneous or consecutive. A good question – there would be little value in having port facilities enabling, say, a ferry to depart from the mainland but unable to get into Port Ellen.

CMAL’s reply was that: ‘the new vessel will be able to use the existing ports as they are at present, however this is not ideal and some minor modifications are being developed’.

The Ileach’s research continued and on 23rd February they told CMAL: ‘We are being told that significant work will have to take place to modify the new linkspan at Port Askaig (Editor’s Note: this linkspan has been installed quite recently as  part of a major re-engineering of the harbour facilities at Port Askaig, a contract which has been attended by long term and serious difficulties for the operation of the small car ferry over to Jura) and that this work has been costed at approx £500,000′.

The newspaper said that it understood that: ‘works costing a similar amount will need to be carried out at Kennacraig … and that (the ferry) will not be able to operate from the present Port Ellen infrastructure at all – and that serious redevelopment costing at least £10 million will be required’.

The profound concern for Islay is that, as The Ileach went on to stress to CMAL, if its information is correct: ‘this would mean the de facto closure of  of Port Ellen as a ferry port when the new Islay ferry commences operations?  Certainly for years, if not for good?’

The company’s reply, following a long paragraph of the sort of self-justifying ‘corporate speak’ that degrades language, was: ‘With the design of the new Islay vessel now finalised and construction underway, detailed design work is currently ongoing in respect of the associated pier and harbour infrastructure.  The new vessel will be able to be berthed safely and securely at the recently completed Port Askaig facility.  The new vessel can also be accommodated at the existing Kennacraig facility.  At Port Ellen, detailed examination has revealed that passengers and vehicles could not be accommodated in its current form.

‘CMAL will continue to work very hard to consider how best to develop improvement works at Port Ellen and Kennacraig.’

CMAL say it is holding public meetings at Port Ellen and at Tarbert on the mainland on 10th and 11th March: ‘where we hope to feedback from the public consultation and detail our preferred construction timetable subject to funding’. Whatever that means.

The Ileach’s persistent enquiries have clearly forced into the open a serious problem for the development of ferry transort to and from Islay. This is local journalism at its very best. You can subscribe to The Ileach online and, wherever you are in the world, you will be emailed a link to download a pdf file of the latest issue.

UPDATE: Passengers still stranded for a second night onboard damaged Stena HSS Stranraer-Belfast ferry

Stena VoyagerThe 7.50pm Stena HSS Voyager (pictured) sailing from Stranraer to Belfast last night was five miles out on its journey – around the entrance to Loch Ryan, when passengers heard a loud bang. Shortly after this the ship came to a halt.

A large tanker had broken free, hurtled through the stern doors of the ship and become entangled in the mechanism. It was found dangling vertically off the rear of the ship.

The captain made the decision to turn and head back to Stranraer, accompanied by the Stranraer Lifeboat and the Stranraer Coastguard rescue team which Clyde Coastguard, who were monitoring the situation, had put out to stand by the ship for safety reasons.

When the ship got back into Stranraer it was unable to berth at the linkspan because of the lorry hanging across the stern doors. This means that the 156 passengers and 33 crew on board remain stranded on the ship.

At the moment (2.00pm 29th January) a large crane is manoevering into position to lift the lorry off the ship. This should mean that it can go to its normal berth and passengers – said to be exhausted – can then be taken off. They will be transferred to a ferry run by a rival operator for the trip to Belfast and Stena is said to be discussing compensation.

The company say that the safety of the ship and of the passengers was never compromised and that the hole in the stern is 30 feet above the waterline. The tanker was carrying non-toxic ferrous sulphate powder. Police say that none of this had leaked but that, as a precaution, advice has been obtained from the Scottish Environment Protection Agency (SEPA) in case any leakage occurs during the removal of the tanker. There is no danger to the public.

The maritime agencies and Stena Line are to conduct a full investigation into the incident.

!8.15 UPDATE: The ship has not been able to move to the linkspan because the crane has not yet lifted the renegade tanker free of the ship. At the moment passengers are being taken off one by one in a Heath Robinson arrangements via a ‘Cherry Picker’s’ lifting platform. This is taking up to 10 mins per passenger. With a complement of 156 passengers, this operation is going to go on for a considerable time. While some passengers may well get on to a ferry for Belfast tonight, many will not be free to do so until tomorrow.

21.30 UPDATE: It now looks as if most of the passengers will have to spend another night on board the Stena Voyager. A second crane has arrived to try to lift the suspended lorry clear of the ship. Until this can be done the ferry cannot move to the linkspan and the passengers cannpt leave normally. The small ‘cherry picker’ crane is removing one passenger every ten minutes but this too is now more difficult as wind stength is increasing.

30th January UPDATE: All the passengers were finally off the ship by this morning.

The photograph above, of the Stena Voyager leaving Stranraer and travelling down Loch Ryan en route for Belfast, is reproduced here under the Creative Commons licence.