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Oscar's Final French Sailings Prior to Boosting Dublin Route Over Festive Season

16th December 2015

#ExtraCapacity - Oscar Wilde (1987/31,914gt) is set to boost capacity on the Dublin-Holyhead route to faciltate passenger demand over the busy Christmas period when extra sailings begin this weekend, writes Jehan Ashmore.

As previously reported on Afloat.ie the French routes cruiseferry with capacity for 1,458 passengers, 730 cars and 90 trucks, is to cover the Ireland-Wales route over the festive period with sailings also extending into the early New Year.

The additional capacity by Irish Ferries comes in direct competition with Stena Line, who for the first time have a larger second ship in service thanks to the ‘Superfast X’ introduced earlier this year in March.

Oscar Wilde is nearing the end of seasonal French duties for 2015 as the final Rosslare-Cherbourg is tonight. The return leg from France will see Oscar Wilde at the Wexford port on 18 December. A second seasonal route also operated by the cruiseferry and again from Roscoff to Roscoff ceased in mid-September. 

The 1987 built former Scandinavian ferry, Kronprins Harald of Color Line, was introduced on the Ireland-France services two decades later, having replaced Normandy. On her return to Rosslare this Friday, Oscar Wilde heads northbound to reposition in Dublin Port by making the short sea passage off the Leinster coast with an arrival in the capital on Saturday morning.

Later that same day on 19 December, Oscar Wilde will begin her roster on the Dublin route with a 14.05 sailing bound for Holyhead. She will join the company’s route fleetmates in the form of the flagship Ulysses, fast-craft Jonathan Swift, the only high-speed craft to operate a year-round service between Ireland and the UK mainland in 2015. 

In addition, Irish Ferries on the Dublin-Holyhead route have capacity in the form of the chartered Visentini built ro-pax, Epsilon. This routine third vessel is also utilized by Irish Ferries to still maintain a year-round option on French operations despite withdrawal of ‘Oscar’s' continental services. As at weekends, Epsilon provides a round-trip Dublin-Cherbourg service in between weekday duties on the Welsh route. 

The deployment of Oscar Wilde on the core Irish Sea route is the second successive year that Irish Ferries have had four ferries on the Dublin-Holyhead route during Christmas. In the case of 2014, it was the Isle of Inishmore (1997/34,031gt) with more capacity than the Oscar Wilde that assisted capacity during the festive season having transferred from her Rosslare-Pembroke role. 

Sailings on the southern corridor route were covered by the Oscar following the end of French services that season.

Published in Ferry
Jehan Ashmore

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Jehan Ashmore

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Jehan Ashmore is a marine correspondent, researcher and photographer, specialising in Irish ports, shipping and the ferry sector serving the UK and directly to mainland Europe. Jehan also occasionally writes a column, 'Maritime' Dalkey for the (Dalkey Community Council Newsletter) in addition to contributing to UK marine periodicals. 

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Ferry & Car Ferry News The ferry industry on the Irish Sea, is just like any other sector of the shipping industry, in that it is made up of a myriad of ship operators, owners, managers, charterers all contributing to providing a network of routes carried out by a variety of ships designed for different albeit similar purposes.

All this ferry activity involves conventional ferry tonnage, 'ro-pax', where the vessel's primary design is to carry more freight capacity rather than passengers. This is in some cases though, is in complete variance to the fast ferry craft where they carry many more passengers and charging a premium.

In reporting the ferry scene, we examine the constantly changing trends of this sector, as rival ferry operators are competing in an intensive environment, battling out for market share following the fallout of the economic crisis. All this has consequences some immediately felt, while at times, the effects can be drawn out over time, leading to the expense of others, through reduced competition or takeover or even face complete removal from the marketplace, as witnessed in recent years.

Arising from these challenging times, there are of course winners and losers, as exemplified in the trend to run high-speed ferry craft only during the peak-season summer months and on shorter distance routes. In addition, where fastcraft had once dominated the ferry scene, during the heady days from the mid-90's onwards, they have been replaced by recent newcomers in the form of the 'fast ferry' and with increased levels of luxury, yet seeming to form as a cost-effective alternative.

Irish Sea Ferry Routes

Irrespective of the type of vessel deployed on Irish Sea routes (between 2-9 hours), it is the ferry companies that keep the wheels of industry moving as freight vehicles literally (roll-on and roll-off) ships coupled with motoring tourists and the humble 'foot' passenger transported 363 days a year.

As such the exclusive freight-only operators provide important trading routes between Ireland and the UK, where the freight haulage customer is 'king' to generating year-round revenue to the ferry operator. However, custom built tonnage entering service in recent years has exceeded the level of capacity of the Irish Sea in certain quarters of the freight market.

A prime example of the necessity for trade in which we consumers often expect daily, though arguably question how it reached our shores, is the delivery of just in time perishable products to fill our supermarket shelves.

A visual manifestation of this is the arrival every morning and evening into our main ports, where a combination of ferries, ro-pax vessels and fast-craft all descend at the same time. In essence this a marine version to our road-based rush hour traffic going in and out along the commuter belts.

Across the Celtic Sea, the ferry scene coverage is also about those overnight direct ferry routes from Ireland connecting the north-western French ports in Brittany and Normandy.

Due to the seasonality of these routes to Europe, the ferry scene may be in the majority running between February to November, however by no means does this lessen operator competition.

Noting there have been plans over the years to run a direct Irish –Iberian ferry service, which would open up existing and develop new freight markets. Should a direct service open, it would bring new opportunities also for holidaymakers, where Spain is the most visited country in the EU visited by Irish holidaymakers ... heading for the sun!