Displaying items by tag: Emergency ferry
Ferry for £1m-a-Month Emergency Relief Role Finally Sets Sail in Scotland after Weeks of Delays
A 430 passenger /98 car carrying catamaran, chartered by CalMac for £9m, which is to ease the strain on their Forth of Clyde ferry link to the Isle of Arran has set sail on Friday after weeks of delays.
The Scottish Government so writes STV News, announced in March that it had chartered the 2019 built MV Alfred from Orkney Isles operator Pentland Ferries for nine months to supplement their west coast service at a cost of £9m.
MV Alfred which can also handle 16 lorries, normally serves the Pentland Forth crossing from the mainland at Gills Bay, Caithness (near John o'Groats) to St Margaret’s Hope on South Ronaldsey.
The charter of the 2,963 gross tonnage catamaran was due to begin on April 18, however a fault with its hydraulic systems delayed the start of operations.
On completion of successful berthing trials, CalMac made an announcement on Thursday that the Alfred would finally commence service between Ardrossan and Brodick on Arran.
CalMac said that it will carry passengers on a “turn up and go basis” as part of a two-week trial. This is to determine whether it is a viable vessel for the route on which more can be read here.
Afloat adds that the service's main ferry, Caledonian Isles is operating to its timetable.
In addition to Alfred conducting berthing trials at Ardrossan (Irish Berth) and Brodick, such activity also took place at Campbeltown, Lochmaddy, Port Askaig, Ullapool and Troon.
Emergency Manx Ferry Maintains Scottish Island Lifeline Service At Taxpayer's Expense
In Scotland, the taxpayer is footing an £11,760 a day bill to charter an emergency ferry from an Isle of Man government-owned company.
As HeraldScotland.com writes, the charter is to help support (CalMac's) beleaguered fleet and help maintain lifeline passenger and freight services.
The charter of MV Arrow - which was out of service for 10 days after needing a repair - is costing the state-owned ferry operator CalMac an "eye-watering" £588,000 for seven weeks.
More from the Herald here on the charter of the freighter running between the mainland port of Ullapool that links Stornoway, Isle of Lewis in the Western Isles.
Afloat adds the ro-ro vessel is sub-chartered from the Isle of Man Steam Packet and according to CalMac's website, the MV Arrow is operated by Seatruck on behalf of CalMac to provide a dedicated freight service up to 7 September.
Arrow will deliver MV Loch Seaforth’s evening freight sailing six days a week and the latter ferry will also operate two additional passenger sailings per week.
The Arrow since 2014 has been chartered on long-term from Seatruck, the ro-ro freight operator of three Irish Sea routes. The freighter acts as a reserve/back up vessel for the Steam-Packet when support is required to boost ferry capacity between Douglas and Heysham, England.
Other sub-charters have led Arrow to include another Scottish service, Serco-Northlink, where last summer the freighter ran aground in Aberdeen Harbour following a crossing from Lerwick on the Shetland Isles.