Menu

Ireland's sailing, boating & maritime magazine

RBC Brewin Dolphin proudly supporting Afloat and Irish Boating

Harland & Wolff’s New Ferry Company's Craft to Serve Scilly Delayed Due to Too Much Rain

4th June 2024
Harland & Wolff’s new subsidiary, Scilly Ferries with the high-speed-craft Atlantic Wolff in a dry dock in Portsmouth, where it has been delayed due to torrential rain hampering paint work. However, the 42m craft is due to go back into the water tomorrow (5 June), but will remain in the UK south coast port. The new service was initially to start in May but is now likely to take place around mid-June.
Harland & Wolff’s new subsidiary, Scilly Ferries with the high-speed-craft Atlantic Wolff in a dry dock in Portsmouth, where it has been delayed due to torrential rain hampering paint work. However, the 42m craft is due to go back into the water tomorrow (5 June), but will remain in the UK south coast port. The new service was initially to start in May but is now likely to take place around mid-June. Credit: Scilly Ferries / Facebook

A new operator, Harland & Wolff (Scilly Ferries) Ltd., was to introduce a ferry service from Cornwall, England, to the Isles of Scilly, but it has been delayed again because rain has hampered a paint job of their dry-docked fast-craft.

The craft Aquabus Jet 1, renamed Atlantic Wolff, following a competition with Scilly school children, is the new passenger high-speed ferry that Cornwall Live reports Scilly Ferries is aiming to take on the competing conventional passenger-cargo ship Scillonian III. The veteran vessel operated by the historic service provider, the Isles of Scilly Steamship Group, links Penzance and Hugh Town on St. Mary's, the largest of the Isles of Scilly.

Announced by the Belfast based shipbuilder last year was a second-hand ferry from Vietnam in Asia, but this could not be secured, due to conflict in the Middle East. However, as Afloat also reported, identified and tracked an alternative fast-ferry, Aquabus Jet 1 which was sourced in Spain, has been undergoing work to prepare the craft for its debut in UK domestic duties. The chartered fast craft, which will be operated by H&W’s Scilly Ferries, was due to enter into service on the same route in May and aside from being faster, it will also be cheaper to run than the existing service from the Steamship Company, which was formed in 1920.

Due to the torrential rain, this has caused several setbacks for the passenger ferry undergoing dry-docking in Portsmouth, as the launch date was postponed until June. This has led the boss of Harland & Wolff, John Wood to reveal that the date for early June will now likely be delayed too, because the rain over the past few months has delayed the paint job, which will see the craft sporting the black and yellow colours that also represent the corporate branding of the shipyard group.

More here on the newcomer competitor.

Published in Ferry
Jehan Ashmore

About The Author

Jehan Ashmore

Email The Author

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. 

We've got a favour to ask

More people are reading Afloat.ie than ever thanks to the power of the internet but we're in stormy seas because advertising revenues across the media are falling fast. Unlike many news sites, we haven't put up a paywall because we want to keep our marine journalism open.

Afloat.ie is Ireland's only full-time marine journalism team and it takes time, money and hard work to produce our content.

So you can see why we need to ask for your help.

If everyone chipped in, we can enhance our coverage and our future would be more secure. You can help us through a small donation. Thank you.

Direct Donation to Afloat button

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!