The UK Defence Secretary is seeking legal advice about a £1.6bn shipbuilding contract for a trio of auxiliary replenishment ships to serve the Royal Navy as the struggling British company hired for the work faces a Spanish takeover.
Belfast-based Harland & Wolff Group was hired alongside Navantia, a Spanish state-owned shipbuilding giant, to build three Royal Fleet Auxiliary (RFA) vessels, however, H&W’s decision to call in administrators last week has plunged the project into crisis.
Defence Secretary John Healey and his team have asked civil servants to provide legal advice about the terms of the shipbuilding contract as the Ministry of Defence (MoD) examines options for the fleet solid support (FSS) programme. The FSS is a government-initiated plan to supply more navy support vessels.
Harland & Wolff, which has four shipyards on both sides of the Irish Sea is scrambling to find a potential buyer after calling in administrators, with Navantia seen as the frontrunner. Amid the turmoil, Admiral Sir Ben Key, the First Sea Lord, flew out to Cadiz in southern Spain two weeks ago for talks with Navantia executives.
More reports The Telegraph on the shipyard group,