Following almost a month of delays, DFDS Ferry finally launched its high-speed craft Tarifa Jet with its inaugural sailing to Jersey at the weekend, writes Jehan Ashmore.
The Tarifa Jet entered service on Saturday from St. Malo to Jersey, with a morning departure from the French port. The route, which DFDS took over from Condor Ferries of the past 60 years, was due to start on 28 March, following the Danish firm’s awarding of a Jersey Government contract for the provision of lifeline passenger and freight services to and from the UK/France for the next two decades.
This followed the Guernsey government, which instead went ahead alone by awarding the contract to Brittany Ferries as its preferred bidder, despite the ferry tendering process being meant to be a joint decision with Jersey. This had led to causing a rift, drawing considerable criticism and controversy between the bailiwicks and businesses. Effectively, both islands are served by different ferry companies following six decades of all-island services run by the predecessor, Condor Ferries, with Brittany Ferries as the majority shareholder since last year.
As for fast-ferry crossings by Tarifa Jet on the St. Malo-Jersey run, they were to have commenced last month; however, they were cancelled due to technical issues of the former Spain-Moroccan serving ferry, where DFDS also operates between Europe and Africa. It was at St. Helier where it was rejoined by Levante Jet, also redeployed from the Strait of Gibraltar, as it launched the Poole-Jersey route on 17 April.
Earlier this month, the UK’s Maritime and Coastguard Agency (MCA) said the Tarifa Jet was undergoing surveys for the issue of a passenger certificate, having initially arrived in the UK, berthing at Portland, England. The Dorset port is where Afloat tracked (likewise of Levante Jet) on completion of its delivery voyage from Spain to undergo a refit but missed out on entering service in advance of the busy Easter holidays.
Operating instead on the St. Malo route was Stena Vinga, as Afloat previously reported, is on charter to DFDS, but designated to serve Jersey-Portsmouth as part of the DFDS contract with Jersey, which includes freight-only ro-ro Arrow chartered from the Isle of Man Steam Packet.
The former Scandinavian-serving ropax, stood in for Tarifa Jet as a temporary measure on the shorter link between the largest of the Channel Islands and Brittany. This led initially to no ferry serving the Jersey-UK route while the 'Vinga' was covering until Transmanche Ferries (SMPAT), operated by DFDS, deployed one of their Newhaven-Dieppe twins, Côte D’Albâtre, to provide a service during the absence.
The striking yellow-hulled ferry only last month made its Irish debut on another France route from Dunkirk, where DFDS operates to Rosslare Europort.
Also recently at the Wexford ferryport was a DFDS fleetmate, Patria Seaways, which, having completed its charter to Stena Line on the Cherbourg route last week, has since returned to Scandinavia, in particular to its Baltic Sea registered homeport of Klaipeda, Lithuania. This took place on Monday, two days after Stena Horizon, also from its stint on Dublin-Holyhead, following its long-running Rosslare-Cherbourg role replaced by Stena Vision, repositioned for a new career, still with Stena, by traveling to Travemunde, Germany. The ropax arrived on Saturday, to recap, the same day when DFDS debuted Tarifa Jet on the French run.
When the Tarifa Jet’s commercial maiden crossing from St. Malo arrived at St. Helier Port's (Elizabeth Harbour), the reflagged (UK Red Ensign') fast-ferry was greeted by the Ports of Jersey tug, Duke of Normandy, with a traditional water cannon salute to mark the ooccasion. To watch the slick video of its arrival, click here.

















































