We have two evidence sessions this morning and the first is a continuation of our inquiries into the Audit Scotland report âNew vessels for the Clyde and Hebrides: Arrangements to deliver vessels 801 and 802â. Joining us this morningâin the room rather than remotely, I am pleased to sayâwe have Kevin Hobbs, the chief executive officer of Caledonian Maritime Assets Ltd, and Morag McNeill, the interim chair of the board; we also have Erik Ăstergaard, who was formerly the chair of CMAL and is now the chair of David MacBrayne Ltd.
I will invite Morag to give us a short opening statement. Thank you for providing us with a written submission, which we found very helpful. It has been published on our website. We got some further material yesterday; we have to make sure that it is cleansed, data-wise and so on, so we have not been able to publish that yet and we cannot refer to that material this morning. We hope to be able to publish it over the next few days. That may well mean that we will return to you to seek further particulars and search a bit more into what you have provided us withâwe may even invite you back to give us more oral evidenceâbut we will see how things go this morning.
Thank you for inviting us to share evidence with the committee today and to answer the committeeâs questions. We will endeavour to answer all the questions today if we can. If we are unable to do so, we will respond in writing to the committee, as is normal practice.
As the convener mentioned, I am currently the interim chair of the CMAL board. I have been a non-executive director on the board since 2014. Erik Ăstergaard was my predecessor as chair of the board. Both Erik Ăstergaard and I were in post when the dual-fuel ferries contracts were awarded. Kevin Hobbs, CMALâs chief executive officer, joined CMAL in April 2016, several months after the contracts were awarded, but he has a solid understanding of the issues that emerged in the early stages of the construction of the vessels and thereafter. We have been involved previously in the Rural Economy and Connectivity Committeeâs hearings. We were also extensively questioned by and asked to provide evidence to Audit Scotland; we welcome its report, which we consider fair and balanced.
We are acutely aware that the delay in completion of these vessels is having a significant impact on island communities, who are, quite rightly, frustrated and worried. However, the problems that arose around the MV Glen Sannox and hull 802 are not representative of our past and current vessels and harbours projects and the quality of our work to support Scotlandâs ferry infrastructure.
We have submitted lengthy written evidence to the committee, as we are concerned about the accuracy of some of the information shared in previous sessions. That is perhaps understandable, as many of those who have appeared before the committee were not in post at the time when the contracts were awarded. A number of these matters are addressed in our written submission, but I would highlight the announcement of Ferguson Marine Engineering Ltd as the preferred bidder and the subsequent award of the contracts, the issues around the refund guarantee, the acceleration of milestone payments, the dispute resolution process and the fact that the payment of instalments of the ÂŁ30 million Scottish Government loan was personally sanctioned by the expert appointed by the director general economy against designated progress events that had, in reality, not been achieved by Fergusons.
We are also happy to address the more technical aspects of the choice of liquefied natural gas fuel, which was a requirement of CalMacâs vessel specification, and the sequencing of the construction of the vessels. If it will assist the committee, I am more than happy for committee members to direct questions to me and I will bring in colleagues as required. The committee is of course free to direct questions to my colleagues. Thank you.
Thank you very much indeed. You set out quite a lot of the ground that we want to cover this morning. To pick up on one point that you made, do you accept the recommendations of the Audit Scotland report?
We do.
Thank you. The deputy convener, Sharon Dowey, has a series of questions.
Good morning. On procurement, which you mentioned in your opening statement, one of the stated aims on your website is to be cost effective. To what extent do you consider the procurement of vessels 801 and 802 to be cost effective?
We believe that the procurement process provided for value for moneyâthat was part of the procurement evaluation. We have made some improvements in our procurement process but we believe that the procurement was thorough and robust. I will ask Kevin Hobbs to say something more about the procurement.
The procurement itself was anonymised. Obviously, it is a fixed-price contract, a design and build contract, or international standard Baltic and International Maritime Council contract. I was not in post at the time, but that is the process that we always go through. At the time, the ÂŁ97 millionâI know that you will ask later on why it is no longer ÂŁ97 millionâwas deemed to be the best value for money.
Section 3 of your submission is on âProvision of Refund Guaranteesâ. In section 3.6, you state that
âCMAL had no awareness of, or involvement in, these exchanges.â
That was in reference to exchanges between łÉČËżěĘÖ and so on about the non-provision of the refund guarantee from Ferguson Marine Engineering Ltd. When did you find out that FMEL was not giving the builders refund guarantee and why did you not go back to the tendering process at that point?
We became aware that FMEL could not provide a Clyde Blowers Capital guarantee on 21 August 2015. We were not aware until about 25 September that it was also having problems in producing a guarantee from a bank or an insurance company, and it gave its final position in relation to that on 7 October, by which time it was already the preferred bidder and we had stood down the other bidders.
When you found out that it was not going to give you the builders refund guarantee, which was part of the tendering process, why did you not cancel the contract at that point and go back to the tendering process? In the communication that you have sent through, that seemed to be your preferred choice.
That was indeed the preferred option.
Why did it not happen?
Because the minister authorised us to proceed.
What minister was it?
My understanding is that it was a transport minister but we are not sighted on the conversations that Transport Scotland had with the minister. What we have is a letter authorising us to proceed towards the contract, by the Scottish ministers, as sole shareholder of CMAL. That is contained in a letter that John Nicholls wrote at the time that the contract was awarded.
Why did you not get a copy of that? It says in the paperwork somewhere that you asked for a letter of comfort. You state:
âThe chair requested that Transport Scotland provide CMAL with a letter of comfort if required. John Nicholls agreed that a letter of comfort would be provided to CMAL.â
However, there does not seem to be a lot of communication or evidence to show that the letter of comfort was put in.
The letter of comfort is the letter that John Nicholls wrote at the time of the award of the contract.
Were you happy to accept that at the time?
The letter from John Nicholls said that ministers had read and approved the contents of that letter, and we relied on that. That letter did two things. It gave a shareholder authorisation under the articles of association of CMAL, which was an instruction to proceed by the minister. It also gave CMAL an unconditional financial undertaking, unlimited in time and amount, to protect the solvency of CMAL if there was a problem with the contract. I was heavily involved in the drafting of that letter. I am a lawyer by training. That letter was agreed. Some of it was drafted by me and it was also reviewed by the Scottish Government legal department and approved by it.
At the time, were you happy to go forward with the contract, or did you feel that you were being forced into it?
Our preference was to retender. We were authorised by our shareholder to proceed. That was an instruction to proceed.
Section 6.9 of your submission states:
âCMAL were told that they should not seek a Ministerial direction by the Ministers in relation to contract award of the Vessels to FMEL. However, the Board were sufficiently concerned about the Contracts in all the circumstances instead to seek a letter from the Ministers holding CMAL harmless in the event that the Contracts encountered the financial and technical issues identified in the risks paper.â
At that point, you seemed very, very concerned. I still do not understand why CMAL did not just go in and cancel the contract.
Because we were authorised to proceed by the minister. We were given a direct instruction in the letter from John Nicholls as our shareholder. If your shareholder instructs you to do somethingâ
That is what you do.
You do.
Therefore, you were told to go inâ
We were authorised to enter into the contract, yes.
In some of the further evidence that we got, we spoke to Roy Brannen. He said:
âTransport Scotland did not have a role in the contractâit was between CMAL as the buyer and FMEL as the builder. CMAL had to satisfy itself that it was able to enter into that contract and resolve whatever issues were apparent.ââ[Official Report, Public Audit Committee, 26 May 2022; c 12.]
Roy Brannen is saying that the decision was not to do with ministers and it was not to do with Transport Scotland; the decision was for CMAL.
I would disagree with that.
You disagree with that.
If I may comment on the ministerial direction point, it is true that we were told not to ask for a ministerial direction, but I was not entirely sure in any event that a ministerial direction was competent in relation to the board of a non-departmental public body. David Middleton perhaps alluded to that in his written evidence to the committee.
What clearly was competent was a shareholder authorisation in relation to the shareholderâs reserved powers under the articles of association. That protects the directors in terms of their fiduciary duties, so that was what we sought. It was a shareholder authorisation by the Scottish ministers, and that is contained in the letter from John Nicholls.
I might come back to more questions on that later on.
How fit for purpose is the current ferry procurement process in Scotland, and how does it compare with processes in other countries? That question is based on previous evidence that we have had. We are now procuring ferries from Turkey, but the ferries that we have procured are double the price that Norway is paying.
I will ask Kevin Hobbs to answer that question.
That is simply not true. The ferries that we have ordered are very, very specific. We went through a robust procurement process. The price of the ferries that we have ordered is ÂŁ45.5 million. The ferries that are being built for the Norwegian waters have a completely different specification. They cost ÂŁ33 million, but the technical specification for waters in Scotlandâacross the Minch, for exampleâis completely different from the specification for vessels that are being built for fjords. It is comparing apples and pears; it is not a good comparisonâand ÂŁ33.5 million is not half of ÂŁ44.5 million.
That is fair. That is me for now but I might come back in later, convener.
Can I follow up some of those lines of questioning from Sharon Dowey? I go back to the point about written authority or not written authority, and the difference between instruction from your sole shareholder and written authority. To all intents and purposes, it was equivalent, was it not, because your advice was being overridden?
Our advice was that the preferred option was to retender, as Erik Ăstergaard said in his email. Some evidence has been given that that was two weeks before we got to a final position with CBC and FMEL, and therefore the matters had resolved themselves to our satisfaction. That is not the case. That was why the risk letter went along with the submission from Transport Scotland. That letter referred to Erik Ăstergaardâs email of September, because we were still very far away from the market-standard builders refund guarantee. There was no recommendation contained in those papers from CMAL.
09:15
Mr Ăstergaard, do you want to come in at this point?
Yes. To supplement what Morag McNeill says, section 6.17 says:
âAs explained in the risk paper, CMAL were not content with the final draft contracts. In these circumstances the Ministerial approval process was not normal. CMAL made no recommendation to Transport Scotland or to the Minister.â
I heard Roy Brannenâs evidence, and he stated, as far as I recall, that âCMAL was contentâ with the contract, and we were not. However, the combination of the undertakings that were given to us as a company by ministers with the end contents of the contract made it up. Basically, seen from our perspective, it was back to back in terms of guarantees. It is not correct to state that we were content with the contract. We were not, and that was clearly expressed also in the email that was submitted to board members and Transport Scotland at the time.
We would not have proceeded had we not had the undertakings contained in that letter.
Again, just for the record, you mentioned evidence that we have received that suggested that, Mr Ăstergaard, your letter was dated two weeksâor 12 days, I thinkâbefore the decision was taken by ministers. The submission says:
âWhile it may have expressed his frustrationââ
your frustration, Mr Ăstergaardâ
âthe email makes clear that it dated from two weeks earlierââ
it was 12 daysâ
âand before the latest round of negotiations. (The Auditor Generalâs report does not make that fact clear, and it could be taken to read as a final position.)â
However, you are telling us this morning that that was the final position of the board.
Yes, because the mitigation did not address the key concern in Erik Ăstergaardâs email, which was that we did not have a 100 per cent builders refund guarantee. That was why that letter was referred to again in the submission that we made.
Mr Ăstergaard, in one biography that I have read about you, when you were appointed to the board of the Isle of Man Steam Packet Company, you were described as possessing
âextensive experience with a number of European shipping concerns in a career that has spanned over 30 years in shipping.â
Have you ever known a ship to be built without a builderâs refund guarantee?
Not that I recollect.
In the context of what we have heard this morning and what we have seen in the written submission, did you at any point consider resigning as chair of CMAL?
No, I did not. I have heard statements that the board was threatening to resign. I do not know who dreamed that up, but that has not been the case.
There was reference in relation to mediation, which we may come on to at some point in these discussions, that a letter had been sent by lawyers saying that the board had threatened to resign en masse. That is absolutely not true.
That was evidence that we heard from Jim McColl, who said that he had been in a private meeting with Derek Mackay, which the civil servants had been asked to leave, when he was told that there was what he described as a legal letter from the board of CMAL threatening resignation en masse.
We do not know of the existence of any such letter.
We did not send any such letter; we did not instruct any such letter to be sent. The board did not threaten to resign en masse.
Again, just for the record, Mr Ăstergaard, neither did you, as chair of the board, notwithstanding the very strong terms of the email that you sent on 26 September, in the afternoon, saying, quite starkly:
âIn my opinion the best option would be to bin the present result and start from scratch on the basis of our initial requirementsâ.
Those are quite strong terms, are they not?
They are.
But when that advice was overridden, you did not consider your position at that point.
As I said, we got what we needed. It was obvious that there was an interest from the Scottish Government to see that that contract was awarded to FMELâI presume in consideration of economic development, job creation with the yard and in the area of the yard, and the subcontractors that would be involved in the contract. From a Government perspective, that has probably been its interest. When we were looking at it as directors of the company, we had to safeguard that we were acting within the Companies Act and taking care of the companyâs interest. The contract in isolation did not satisfy our test to do that, but, in combination with the undertakings from the Scottish Government and the guarantees provided by FMEL, we were of the opinion that we would not put the company at risk and thereby we were prepared to enter into the contract. However, we have also expressly said that the guarantee that was provided was not up to market standards.
We have an attachment in an email that was sent to ministers, which is a note from CMAL at the time, back in October 2015, which says:
âWithout guarantees for all payments made, there is a substantial risk. Under normal circumstances it is probably unlikely that a company of the size of CMAL would take on this risk.â
It says, âUnder normal circumstancesâ. What were the abnormal circumstances that you were operating under?
The circumstance was that we got an unconditional financial guarantee from the Scottish Government to put us in fundsâthat if there was a problem CMAL would not be insolvent.
We may return to some of these themes.
Mr Ăstergaard, you have a reputation as being quite a tough cookie in this industryâsomebody who understands the industry and somebody who would fight his corner. When he came before us, I asked Roy Brannen from Transport Scotland about the correspondence that he had had. I asked him:
âIf I advise you not to do something in pretty strong terms and you then proceed to do it, I am either being ignored or overruled, am I not?â
The response that we had from Mr Brannen was:
âAre you referring to the letter from the chair at the end of September and to the subsequent exchanges that went to the minister? As I understand it, from the moment that the chair expressed concern to the point at which the advice went up to the minister, quite a bit of negotiation had taken place between CMAL and FMEL on getting the contract to a place where both parties were content. At that point, CMAL was content to award the contract and was seeking approval from the minister to do so. That approval was sought and given, CMAL was responded to, and the board accepted that and then signed the contract on 19 Octoberâ. â[Official Report, Public Audit Committee, 26 May 2022; c 13-14.]
Was Mr Brannen giving a misleading account there? You were saying that youâ
That is what I just referred to. As I recall the statement from Roy BrannenâI do not have it in writing but as far as I understand itâhe said that the board was content with the contract, and we were not. If we had not been given the undertakings from the Scottish Government, we would not have placed that order.
Specifically, he is saying that you sought the authorisation to proceed from ministers.
Which we got.
Morag McNeill said that ministers told you that the deal was authorised and that you should proceed. Therefore, you were effectively overruled, were you not?
We did not take a decision not to award the contract. That sounds like a double negativeâI am sorry. Butâ
I know that you are lawyer but we are getting into lawyerspeak here.
We got to a point where we had got to the position of negotiation with FMEL. It was going no further. At that point, I think that it is fair to say that Transport Scotland was keen to get something to the minister. We agreed that we would write the risk paper, which referred to Erik Ăstergaardâs email, and agree the terms of the letter of comfortâall the board members of CMAL were absolutely unanimous that we would not proceed without that letterâand that that would go, via Transport Scotland, to the minister. However, there is no recommendation to award the contract.
The normal approval process is that we get the contract to the point where we are happy with it, we then recommend to Transport Scotland that the minister approves the award and we enter into the voted loan agreement. That is not what happened here. To that extent, it was not the normal process. The normal process is not to get a letter in the form that we got it, with a shareholder authorisation and a financial undertaking in it, or indeed to have to change the voted loan agreement at the last minute to provide that the loan would not be repayable until the vessels were in service. That is not a normal process.
Kevin Hobbs would like to come in.
I was not involved at the time but I have done a lot of research on this, as you can probably imagine. Between the preferred bidder decision and the contract, which took the best part of two months, the executive team, with the board, negotiated with FMEL, FMEL Holdings and Clyde Blowers Capital to make that contract as good as it could be. The initial position was âThere is no refund guaranteeâ; where we ended up was with a 25 per cent refund guarantee. The initial position was that, for the final payment, which ordinarily is 20 per cent, they were offering 0.5 per cent; that improved to 25 per cent. We also agreed with them that as any material, equipment or machinery came across the yardâs doorstep, effectively we vested it. Vesting means that it is then legally in our ownership. Therefore, we moved from a position of being extremely uncomfortable to being more comfortable. Were we completely comfortable? Absolutely not.
As I said, I was not there at the time, but it is very, very clear that the normal process is that we go through an assessment, we make a recommendation and we get a voted loan letter. This was a process of doing an assessment, being unhappy and not recommending it. We then went into a process of negotiation and we came out the other end being happier than we were when we started off. Were we 100 per cent happy? Absolutely not.
To follow up on what Kevin Hobbs has said, Roy Brannen said, âAnd the minister approved it.â An approval would not have been enough for us. Had the minister simply come back and said, âApprovedâ, we would not have proceeded on that basis. We wanted a letter that had an authorisation and a financial undertaking in it.
Mr Brannenâs account says that you went to the minister and sought his approval and that you were recommending to proceed with the vessels. That is what you would read into Mr Brannenâs statement, would you not?
That is not correct.
Did you ask to see ministers in the closing phases of the negotiation? Did you ask to sit down with ministers and express your concerns to them face to face?
Erik Ăstergaardâs email said that he would be more than happy to sit down and speak to ministers, and that offer was not taken up.
Were you given any reason as to why that was not taken up?
No.
If I may come in, the normal process is that we have a sponsor, which is Transport Scotland and which attends our board meeting. Our correspondence generally is between CMAL and the sponsor team. The sponsor team makes recommendations to the minister. We are not involved in that. We would very rarely see anything that goes between Transport Scotland and ministers. Our direct line of communication under normal circumstancesâindeed, under all circumstancesâis with our sponsor team.
Once a year, under normal circumstancesânot in a pandemicâthe minister attends a board meeting for a period of time. Therefore, our direct communication in these respects is not directly with the minister; it is with our sponsor.
It does slightly beggar belief that, when you got to such an intense period of negotiations where there were clearly issues, you would not just connect the two main parties.
Did anybody from CMAL attend the ceremony to mark the preferred bidder status being awarded?
None of the non-executives did.
Why was that?
Because we were concerned that it would appear to be a fait accompli at that point. You will see from our submission that our preference was for that to be done on a confidential basis and for there not to be a public announcement. We thought that there was risk to the procurement process, because we had not yet issued the Alcatel standstill letters. Inevitably, if a negotiation is undertaken in a very public domain, that makes it quite difficult.
09:30
Did you feel that, by announcing that with such fanfare, the ministers were in effect forcing your hand?
It made negotiations more difficultâthat was our reason. That was particularly because, by then, we knew that we were in discussions on a refund guarantee. At that point, prior to 31 August, all that we were hearing from CBC and FMEL was that CBC could not grant a guarantee. We were not hearing at that stage that there was no guarantee on offer. However, you will see from the minutes of the 25 August CMAL board meeting, which took place at Victoria Quay, that we were very concerned about it. The refund guarantee was discussed, but Transport Scotland was clear that the announcement was going ahead.
In relation to the issue of the contract, if you did not ask to speak to a minister and you did not have further negotiations with Transport Scotland, what were those last 24 hours like? Talk me through them. What was the dynamic internally in the organisation?
Sorry, but which point are you referring to?
It is the 24 hours where it appears that you changed your mind. From memory, it was 8 to 9 October. What discussions were you having within the organisation?
We had exchanges of emails. From memory, Erik Ăstergaard sent one saying that the minister clearly wanted to do this, and the board members said that, if we were going to do it, we needed an authorisation letter and a letter of comfort and, until we got those, we were not proceeding. A variety of emails went back and forth over a period of 24 hours.
There seems to be some dispute about the builders refund guarantee. In an email to Stuart McMillan, Derek Mackay suggested that you had waived the requirement in the past for a builders refund guarantee and that that was not pertinent or relevant to the discussions. Is that something that you are aware of?
We were completely unaware of that until it came out in evidence.
Why would Derek Mackay have that impression and communicate that to Stuart McMillan?
I cannot comment on Derek Mackayâs thinking or why he said that. We have no knowledge of it at all.
FMEL told us that it told relevant parties that it could not provide a builders refund guarantee.
It had not told us until the point at which it said that it had a problem with the CBC guarantee. I will let Kevin Hobbs come in.
The standard BIMCO newbuildcon basically is the contract, although it is logically amended in some circumstances. The process at the invitation to tender clearly asks all the tenderers whether there are any problems with what is proposed. At that stage, FMEL made no comment that it would struggle with a builders refund guarantee. It stayed silent on that. Normal practice in shipbuilding and other contractsâwe also do civil engineering contractsâis that, if somebody stays silent, it is tacit acceptance of what is written. Therefore, we had no clue. To be perfectly frank, if any of the bidders had said that they could not provide a refund guarantee, they would have been redlined and struck out.
What we saw when we did the assessment was that all the bidders could provide refund guarantees. It was only after the preferred bidder status was given that, all of a sudden, the rules were changing in front of our eyes. I was not there, but I can see exactly what had happened. That is not a good starting place, as you can probably imagine, for a contract that says, âYes, we promise to do things.â FMEL knowingly and willingly entered into that contract. All sorts of things have been said after the contract, but the reality is that the bid was very clear that FMEL could provide what was neededâit made no comment about the fact that it could not.
There is something a bit fishy about this, is there not? In effect, you have the minister and, in effect, the person who won the contract having one account of this fundamental issue of the builders refund guarantee, and you as the agency responsible were blissfully unaware of that. There is something fishy in this, is there not?
I cannot comment on whether it is fishy or not. It is just the position.
It is unconventional.
It is not normal practice.
It is not normal practice, but we were not involved. Until we heard the evidence, that was the first time that we had any inkling that there had been any discussion. We were certainly not made aware of the issue. Transport Scotland did not make us aware of it. I cannot comment on whether Transport Scotland knew.
I have one final question. There are lots of contradictory accounts of what went wrong and why it went wrong, but Jim McColl says that one of the fundamental issues as to why the two vessels have gone so far over budget and so far off track in terms of schedule is your alleged meddling in the construction process. Did you tell FMEL in what order to build things?
I will leave that one to Kevin Hobbs.
No, not at all. It is a very standard international contract. It is a design and build contract, and it does what is written on the tin. In effect, it is up to the builder to decide how it wants to build the vessel. What we have seen in the narrative, recently and in the past, is that there were significant changes in views of how the vessel was going to be constructed. I think that there has been the rewriting of history in relation to our involvement. We do not meddleâwe cannot meddleâbut, when something goes catastrophically wrong, it is easy to slope your shoulders and basically blame somebody else.
As we say in our written evidence, ordinarily in a contract, we would accept that there will be some changes from time to time. That is about 3 per cent of the contract, which in this instance was ÂŁ2.9 million. The changes that we agreed amounted to ÂŁ1.55 million. I will not get too technical, because that would take too much time, but we had 111 changes that were discussed between us. Thirty of them we both agreed would not go forward. Forty-five of the changes were as a result of things that CBC and FMEL wanted to change. That left the balance for us, which was 36.
That is a completely normal process. With other contracts and in international shipbuilding, we would expect 3 per cent-worth of changes, which would have been ÂŁ2.9 million. The actual figure of ÂŁ1.55 million is far below what you would ordinarily expect with a contract. Therefore, we do not accept any comment about us meddling or interfering. There was complete confusion by the shipyard and, let us be honest, Mr McColl has no shipbuilding pedigree whatsoever.
We are going to pursue those issues in a moment, but I want to take you back to the 31 August announcement. We now know from internal emails that were released in 2019 that there was an email to Keith Brown on 20 August 2015, copying in Alexander Anderson, the senior special adviser to the First Minister. Under the heading âPresentational issuesâ, paragraph 16 says:
âIt would be appropriate for Mr Mackay as Minister for Transport and Islands to lead on this announcementâ.
However, we know that, 11 days later, the First Minister was accompanying Mr Mackay and presumably leading on the announcement. What did you know about what was going on behind the scenes at the Scottish Government at that point?
Not terribly much. We received an email on 21 August from our then chief executive, Tom Docherty, to say that Richard Hadfield at Transport Scotland had gone to Keith Brown to seek approval. We were not aware of that until we were told that ex post facto. At that point the email said that the public relations machine was getting into gear, that the public announcement was going to be on 31 August and that the First Minister would be doing that. From memory, we knew on 21 August that the First Minister would be making that announcement.
Again, Tom Docherty explained the risks to Richard Hadfield and Transport Scotland about doing that so publicly when we were still in negotiations with our preferred bidder on a number of technical aspects as well as a number of issues on the contract, but we were told that it was going ahead.
There was an internal email, issued on 20 August, that recommended that Mr Mackay lead on the announcement, but you are saying that, by the next day, there had been an intervention that meant that the First Minister was leading on the announcement.
The email from Tom Docherty said that our PR consultants had been contacted by the First Ministerâs press officer. I took that to mean that it was going to be the First Minister making the announcement. I do not think that that email expressly said that she was, but certainly the press officer had been in contact with our PR agents.
So that was the clear inference. Were you invited to that event, as non-executive members of the board?
Formally, I do not think so.
I do not think that we were. I think that there were limited spaces, and I do not think that we were the most important people to be on the platform.
Maybe it was implied that we should show up, but I do not know.
I am trying to establish whether there was a boycott.
No.
There were issues around the number of places available. We were concerned that it would be seen as a fait accompli with the public, when we still had significant miles to go on the contract.
As Kevin Hobbs said, there were nearly two months of negotiations ahead of us, so we did not consider at that stage the contract negotiations to be completed at all.
Was your non-attendance because of a lack of spaces, or was it because you had misgivings about the announcement or you felt that it would compromise the negotiations that you were involved in?
I cannot speak for the other directors, but I was uncomfortable.
To be honest, I actually do not know whether I was out travelling or why I could not attend, but I could not. However, I shared Morag McNeillâs concerns that it could be interpreted in the wrong way.
Had you been available to attend, would you have attended?
I do not know. I do not think so. I think that we discussed it at a certain stage.
Yes, there was an email exchange where we decided that we would not attend, but I do not think that we were invited and declined. I think that Tom Docherty asked whether we wanted to come, in which case he would have to find us space on the platform, and I think that we said no.
So it was a case of, âWhen is an invitation not an invitation?â
Before I get into the main line of my questioning, I would like clarification on one or two points that we have already been talking about.
The first is about decision making on the contract. Audit Scotland has had access to the same exchanges, documentation and so on as everybody else. On 21 April, Audit Scotland said that it was
âclear in our judgment that there was no formal written authority.ââ[Official Report, Public Audit Committee, 21 April 2022; c 36.]
Its contention relates mainly to that approval.
The CMAL paper said:
âCMAL was effectively instructed to proceed with the purchase from FMEL despite the concerns raised ... As explained in the risk paper, CMAL were not content with the final draft contracts. In these circumstances, the Ministerial approval process was not normal. CMAL made no recommendation to Transport Scotland or to the Minister.â
There is a clear trail of key decisions and the basis on which they were taken.
We have seen all the documents that have been published. I mention in particular the email from Transport Scotland dated 9 April 2015. It says:
âThe Scottish Ministers have also seen and understood that [the Director of Vesselsâ] paper and have noted and accepted the various technical and commercial risks identified and assessed by CMAL and have indicated that they are content for CMAL to proceed with the award of the Contracts.â
It is clear from the published documents that ministers were advised of the risks that had been identified by CMAL and of the mitigations that were put in place, and came to a decision on that basis. Is that a fair assessment?
09:45
Yes.
Yes.
Good, thank you. That was an easy one.
I hope that they are all that easy.
Here is another easy one for you. Coming back to the BRG, which is a great bone of contention in this, when and how did CMAL first became aware that FMEL was unable to provide a full BRG?
There were stages in that. On 21 Augustâwhich was, ironically, the day on which we were told that the First Minister was going to attend the event on the night of 31 Augustâthe email from Tom Docherty advising us of that came in at 5.05. The email from CBCâs lawyers came to our vessels director, Andrew Duncan, at 5.38, about half an hour later. That was the first we knew that CBC would not grant a parent company guarantee. What we did not know until much laterâpost Erik Ăstergaardâs email of Septemberâwas that it could not provide any form of builders refund guarantee from a bank or from anyone else, and that what we were going to get was a surety bond from Investec for 25 per cent of the price. That was after, as Kevin Hobbs said, a huge amount of negotiation, with our lawyers pushing them to get the refund guarantee and to mitigate some of the effects of not having a full refund guarantee.
On about 6 or 7 October, we hit the buffers: there was no further movement. CBC and FMEL were saying âThis is itâthereâs nothing more.â
For clarification, which year was that?
That was in 2015.
Were you aware that in March 2015 Scottish ministers advised FMEL that a full BRG was not required?
No.
When was that?
That was in March 2015. This relates to assertions that were made by Mr McColl.
We were completely unaware of that.
Therefore, you were not aware from the outset that FMEL could not provide a full BRG.
Could I just check my papers, for my clarification?
If you are saying that that was in March 2015, that was even before the preferred bidder had been selected.
YesâMarch 2015.
That was during the ITT.
Yes. Okay. Noâwe were not aware.
That is about the reported letter and/or discussion between Derek Mackay and Stuart McMillan, of which we had absolutely no awareness until this inquiry, six years later.
In Mr McCollâs evidence on 16 June, he said that you were aware from the outset that FMEL could not provide a BRG. Is that correct?
That is not correct.
It is not correct.
At the pre-qualification questionnaire stage, did FMEL explicitly state that it could not provide the full BRG, which was a requisite for shortlisting to the ITT stage?
At that point it made no comment. Was that at the pre-QQ stage? I think it said that it noted the requirement for a guarantee.
Did FMEL not raise that; did it not question thatâ
At that point FMEL did not say that it could not give us a guarantee.
Was it reasonable for you to assume at that point that it was not a matter of contention?
Yes, indeed.
In normal contractual negotiations, unless there is a comment to the contrary you accept that the framework that you are putting forward within the four corners of the contract is accepted. That is the case unless somebody says that something will not be accepted.
Is that normal?
That is normal practice in contractual law, full stop. That is not just for shipbuilding contracts, but for any form of contract.
At the ITT stage, FMEL had not stated, one way or the other, whether a BRG was available, therefore the assumption was that there was.
Indeed.
That was in line with what would happen with any bidder.
Okay, that is fair enough.
I will turn to the money, which is always far more interesting. There were comments in the report of 9 December 2020 by the Rural Economy and Connectivity Committee that highlighted the fact that some milestone payments or stage payments were somehow out of order. The clear finding was that they were being constructed in such a way that qualification for payments was not necessarily in the order that it should have been, and so on. We have also heard that that is normal for the industry. Is it normal for the industry?
I ask Kevin Hobbs to answer that one.
Yes. It is very, very normal to enter into negotiations over milestone payments. At the end of the day, the buyer will pay only what is required, which in this instance was ÂŁ97 million, but it is often the case that there is a negotiation between the buyer and the shipbuilder about the stages at which money is to be paid. What happened was not out of order, at all.
Shipbuilding contracts historicallyâI genuinely mean âhistoricallyââinvolved five payments of 20 per cent. I have been involved in many shipbuilding contracts in which there were 10, 12, 15 or 20 payments because, at the end of the day, people want the contract to succeed. As long as you are not overpaying, there is nothing wrong with negotiating different milestone payments. The payments were absolutely in sequence. If you look at the milestone payments you will see payments for 25 per cent of the steel, 50 per cent of the steel, 75 per cent then 100 per cent. That is not abnormal.
I am a layman. I have no idea how to build a ship, but in any contract, milestones exist to say that a certain sequence of events has taken place leading to a critical point at which payment is triggered. The Rural Economy and Connectivity Committee found that that was not the case and heard evidence that that was not the case. Why is that practice okay in the industry? I am trying to understand that. To have one isolated event that will result in a payment then another isolated event that will result in a payment, although the bits in between have not been done, seems odd to me. I do not understand.
Those things were done. There has been a misinterpretation by the REC Committee. They were done.
We receive certificates at points in time in this contractâor any other contract that we have in shipbuilding or civil engineeringâto say that a payment is due. We cannot interrupt that process. That is contract law. If something has happenedâif a milestone has been reachedâwe have to pay that money.
You took legal advice on that, I believe.
Of course.
Your taking legal advice implies that you had some doubts about it.
No. We take legal advice every day of the week.
Was there nothing specifically unusual in taking legal advice as to whether you were obliged to pay the milestone payments?
No.
Okay. You paid FMEL ÂŁ83.25 million. That is about 85 per cent of the contract value.
We paid ÂŁ82.5 million plus ÂŁ750,000 for the variations to contract.
That is explained in the other papers. Why, then, were the ships not 85 per cent built?
There are a number of moving parts. You will recall that I said earlier that the final payment was due to be 25 per cent of the contract value. That was negotiated. You will also see in our written submission that at one point we accelerated some payments to FMEL, which changed the contract. The final payment went from 25 per cent to only 10 per cent, which represents a ÂŁ14.55 million difference.
Can I check that that was CMALâs decision?
Can I come in here?
By all means.
CMAL eventually agreed to that. It is in the Audit Scotland report that the acceleration was requested by FMELâby Jim McColl, as I understand itâand that Derek Mackay agreed to that before it had been approved by the CMAL board. The CMAL board subsequently rejected the proposal twice. What we eventually agreed to was accelerated payments against specific invoices for specific equipment, because we were concerned, at that stage, that FMEL was clearly not paying its suppliers; there was a backlog with suppliers and it could not get equipment on order. There was concern that FMEL might have a liquidator or an administrator appointed to it. The last thing that we wanted was ÂŁ14 million of public money sitting in FMELâs bank account.
What we agreed to doâKevin Hobbs can talk about the very laborious process that we went through to ensure itâwhen we sat down next to FMEL was to transfer into its bank account money that was then immediately transferred out to pay suppliers. That was done instantaneously. We also refused to pay any of FMELâs direct costs. All the money that was accelerated was used to buy equipment that we vested ownership in and is now being installed, or has been installed, on the vessels.
Do we have evidence of Derek Mackayâs approval? I presume that he must have signed off on something to authorise the change in the terms.
We were not sighted on anything.
Did anything come from Transport Scotland?
Transport Scotland requested a change to accelerate the payments, whichâas I saidâwe refused to do twice.
We did receive a letter of comfort.
Another letter of comfort.
Another letter of comfort. The original one was about the contract signing, the other one was about the change from the final delivery payment of 25 per cent to 10 per cent. We received a letter of comfortâwhich I think is in the pack, in the appendicesâthat narrates that that was acceptable. At the end of the day, we receive voted loans from the Government, so we are effectively using public money. We must have a trail that says, when there is a substantive changeâÂŁ14.55 million is a substantive changeâthat we have approval for that change, because we do not have that kind of money. We draw money from the Government via the voted loans system.
What checks did CMAL make prior to making the milestone payments? Were the payments simply made against invoices?
Are you talking about the ÂŁ14.55 million or are you talking about any milestone payment?
I am talking about any milestone payment.
We have a site team and a project director through whom it is agreed whether a milestone has been reached. We receive a request and a certificate from the yard and we have to sign that off as the milestone having been met.
To do that, do you visit the works?
We have between three and six people on site permanently. That is normal shipbuilding practice. Effectively, they are checking the quality of the build against the specification and so on. We have people on site not 24/7, but for 12 hours a day, every single day, seven days a week.
Therefore, you were satisfied that the milestones had been achieved and that the payments were justified, up to 85 per cent of the value of the vessel.
Yes.
Did you ever challenge FMEL on how the money was being spent, given what was uncovered about it not paying its suppliers and so on? Was it ÂŁ9 million or something?
10:00
If we are talking about the ÂŁ14.55 million, weâmyself and Jim Anderson, who is the director of vesselsâreceived four arch-lever folders. We spent literally 18 hours a day for two days going through each invoice, sifting out those we recognised as being part of our new-build contract from those that we did not. As an example of that, within the package, there were some invoices that related to the redevelopment of the yard and the head office and stuff like that. We went through a sifting process of reading every invoice and verifying whether it was to do with our vessel, because at the time there were other vessels being built. Basically, we ended up with two large piles, which were, effectively, payable and not payable. When we ended up with the payable amounts, we found that, of the ÂŁ14.55 million, about ÂŁ9.5 million was a backlog of invoices. We knew that that was happening because we had been contacted over several months by international and local suppliers to say that they were not being paid. We knew that there were some problems.
At the time of nationalisation, there was every indication that the vessels were far from ready to be launched. Did you have any questions about the amount of public funds that had been paid in, the lack of progress on these vessels and the fact that they were far behind where they should have been? Surely the milestones and the robust checks that took place should have thrown up quite clearly that some of these works were not happening.
Yes, of course we had concerns. We had concerns throughout the contract. You will see in our written evidence that we were first flagging concerns back in December 2015 that what we would consider normal shipbuilding practice was not being followed. Yes, we were concerned. Part of the story that gets us to ÂŁ82.5 million includes the accelerated ÂŁ14.55 million, so if the figure of 25 per cent for the final payment had remained in place, the sum would not have risen to ÂŁ82.55 million; it would effectively have been ÂŁ68 million at that stage.
At this point, we are not touching the loans that came from the Scottish Government. My understanding is that you were not part of that particular discussion.
We did not know about it.
We were completely unsighted.
Surely there must be some linkage between these significant milestones that trigger the payments and the quality of what has been done. It cannot just be to do with checking the invoices and so forth. Was there quality control in there? If there was, why was that not evident at the point of nationalisation?
The quality of the build is not in question. You heard evidence previously that the guys on the ground that do the welding and steel cutting and so on were going about their daily business. This is a catastrophic failure of management; it is not a catastrophic failure of the workforce.
At what point did you identify that catastrophic failure of management?
I arrived in March 2016. I have said already that we were flagging up problems in December 2015, so at that point I was reading emails and receiving the handover from the previous chief executive, but the way that the shipyard was going about the build, at risk, was not normal shipbuilding practice as we had seen it previously. Between usâthat is, Erik Ăstergaard, myself and our vessels teamâwe have literally hundreds of yearsâ worth of experience.
Can you give an exampleâ
I am anxious to bring Willie Coffey in. There are only 60 minutes in this hour, so I am afraid that I will have to cut you off at that point, Colin. If we have time, I will you bring back in, but I want to bring in Willie Coffey, who has a series of questions to ask.
Morag McNeill, I hope to get into this issue about quality and the statement in CMALâs submission that says quite clearly:
âCMAL consider that the primary cause of the Vesselsâ delay and associated cost overrun is a catastrophic contractor failure between October 2015 and August 2019.â
We were beginning to get into that territory during Colin Beattieâs questioning. Could you explain to the committee why you are using such strong words, and could you offer the committee a few examples to justify those comments?
Kevin Hobbs, over to you.
I will go back to Mr Beattie here. We have heard, âWhere has the money gone?â quite a lot. I think that the best way that I can explain it is to say that we believe that the money has been spent within the business, for sure. âCatastrophic failureâ are strong words, but what we saw was units being built in the shed that were basically built at risk. We had not commented on the drawings that we were presented with and neither had the class society, which is Lloyds.
If you build something undercover, it might cost one unit of price; when you do that in the open air to join the vessel up, it costs two units of price; and when you do that when the vessel is afloat, it will cost four units of price. Basically, we saw units being built at risk, not signed off by us and not signed off by Lloyds. What that meant is that, when they were inspected, there were many, many mistakes.
Mr McColl says that we interfered. This is not interference. This is pointing out that this is a unit that has been built incorrectly. If it takes one unit of cost to do something, it then takes another unit of cost to undo it, and it then takes another unit of cost to do it properly, you can easily see that what should be one unit of cost becomes three units of cost. That is the simplest way that I can explain what was going on. There were mistakes made at the outset by the builder because it did not have approved drawings and, when the units were inspected, they were riddled with errors that had to be undone and then the job had to be done again. Effectively, some of that was happening in the sheds, but if it is happening out on the berth, which is the new-build berth and the launch berth, that will cost twice as much and, if it is happening when the vessel is afloat, it costs four times as much. If you want to follow the money and see where the money has gone, I can tell you that, effectively, the money was wasted. That is what happened. Does that explain adequately?
It is getting there.
Well, ask some more.
It is difficult for us. In your response to Colin Beattie, you said that these were management failures, not workforce failures, but, with regard to the specification for the ship and the construction, surely the specifications were followed by the workforce. Where is that failure? Is it the managementâs failure to give the workforce correct specifications?
The management team, the planning team and the technical team deliver packages of work to the workforce to construct the vessel. The workforce follows what it has been told to do and, if that is wrong, it is not the workforceâs fault; it is because the planning and/or the technical detail has been sent down to the shop floor incorrectly. That was where the problem lay, which is why we say that it is a management failure and not a workforce failure.
You are saying that there were errors in the design and specification for these vessels and the workforce simply carried out the work as specified?
Yes. This gets slightly technical. Remember that, all the way through this, this is a design and build contract. We do something called a concept design, which, at the end of the day, specifies very clearly that what we are being asked to be built can physically be built. It is physics. We cannot ask somebody to build something that cannot be built. This might be a silly example but we cannot ask someone to build a 100m-long ship that has a beam of 80m and can carry 1 million passengers. It will not happen. You cannot say, âWe want this thing to be built and it has to take 5,000 cars.â That will not happen either. The concept design is us proving to ourselves that what we are asking any shipyard to bid for is fair and reasonable and can physically be delivered.
I will turn to the thorny issue of the cables, which has come up several times in the committee. Paragraph 138 of the Auditor Generalâs report highlights:
âThis process identified that some of the 1,400 cables that FMEL had installed at the end of 2018 were too short to reach required equipment.â
I put that point to Mr McColl last week, I think, and his response was that the specification changed constantly and equipment was moved around, making the cables shorter as a result. Could I ask for your view on that comment so that we can get that on the record?
There are an awful lot of cables on a ship, and the cables that were installed at that point made up about 30km of 250km of cables. The numbers are enormous, as you can imagine. Very simply, two things happened. Some of the cables that were installed were simply too short to reach the equipment that they were supposed to be connected to. That is part 1 of the story. Part 2 of the story is that the original installer did not come back to site after administration, so there was a change from a company called Kongsberg to one called Wärtsilä. The systems and control panels that Wärtsilä has in some instancesâonly a fewâhad to be in different compartments, because they were configured differently. There were short cablesâfull-stopâand there was some moving of equipment.
Mr McColl says that we moved the equipment. No, we did not. It was a design and build contract. It was up to the shipyard to decide how that was going to be built. Again, this is not interference from us; this is a shipyard working with its contractor, specifying in which compartment a control panel is going. In a few instances, the control panel ended up in a different compartment and, naturally, the cables were too short. Bearing in mind that only 30km of cable is installed out of 250km, it is only 12.5 per centâthank goodness. [Interruption.]
Can we just wait a minute until the helicopter passes over? [Interruption.]
Does that answer the question?
Thanks very much. It sounds as though it is a little bit of both. My interpretation is that cables were short but equipment was in different places as well. Is that fair?
Yes, that is true.
We did not move the equipment or ask for the equipment to be moved.
That is the responsibility of the shipyard.
On the broader issue of quality and quality standards, there is also commentary in the Auditor Generalâs report about there being little or no linkage to quality standards and no linkage between milestone events and quality checks. There is a comment that the quality was initially good but that, from October 2017-ish, he was beginning to highlight many quality issues, and those led to the owner observation reports, which were many and numerous. Can you say something about the application of quality standards and whether you considered it was correct, appropriate, fit for purpose and so on, or whether it was not?
Generally, yes, it was fine. When the yard got into difficulties, it started to cut some corners. That is when we started saying, âHold on a minute. We have owner observation reports. This is not normal shipbuilding practiceâit is not normal standards.â It is a two-part story. When everything was fine and the shipyard was operating as it should do, there were no issues. Issues started to arise when it evidently started to get into financial difficulty. That manifested itself first in corners being cut, but then the production of the ships slowed down substantially becauseâfairly obviouslyâif you cannot pay your subcontractors, they are not on site, building the ship.
10:15
In any process of constructing anything, you are bound to get comments and requests for changeâspecification changes, perhapsâas you go along. Is that natural in the process?
That is the variation to contract piece. There seems to be complete confusion in the mind of the previous owner as to what a comment is. There are formal variations to contract, which I have explained. There were 111 discussions and 81 actuals, 46 of which were proposed by the yard and 35 of which were proposed by us, resulting in the ÂŁ1.55 million. Owner observation reports are us attemptingâas we attempted an awful lotâto help the yard to say, âLook, this is not normal shipbuilding practice. Can you please rectify the problem that has manifested itself?â That is not a change; that is us simply saying, âYou are not a building a ship to normal shipbuilding standards.â That is not a change; that is asking for what we are paying for.
The documentation that we have says that there were 346 observation reports.
They are on-going every day, so it is a moving feast.
Are all of those commentary about the failure to apply standards?
Yes. Again, there are two elements. The first is whether the standards have been applied and normal shipbuilding practice is being followed. There is also the problem that you have with any shipyard, that it is building the ship and warrantying it for a year although you expect to operate it for 30 years. So, some of the comments are about the ability to maintain a ship. Imagine how you would want the pipes, for example. You would want the pipes side by side, so that you could access them. You would not want them on top of one another, so that, if the bottom one went wrong, you would have to dismantle many pipes to access the problem area. It is quite complicated.
To be totally clear, none of the observation reports is connected to specification changesâdesign changes or spec changes.
No, none whatsoever.
They are a commentary about the construction that is going on during the process.
As I say, the variations to contractâVTCsâare about actual changes that are being actively discussed and that have to be paid for. Some of the changes that were asked for by FMEL even resulted in our getting a credit. So, within the ÂŁ1.55 million are some credits, when the VTC says, âDo you really want this? We would like to do it in a different way,â and we agree with that. Other ones are us saying, âCan we change something?â One of the specific changes that was asked for involved building a couple of extra crew cabins for cadets, so that Caledonian MacBrayne could train more cadets.
I have one last comment on this area. The information that we have is that, in April this year, there were still about 211 observation reports outstanding. Is that normal practice, or does that tell us that there is a bigger issue?
No, it is normal. Basically, what happens is that it ebbs and flows. As you are building out a ship, some of the observation reports are dealt with and they fall away while others are raised. It is a dynamic process within a shipyard every single day of the week. When people say that there are a certain number of ORRs, that is the number at a particular point in time; it is not a definite number that is there forever.
The new chief executive officer, David Tydeman, wrote to the Net Zero, Energy and Transport Committee back in March, and I presume that another letter will go to the NZET Committee before the end of this month, or very early next month. That will call out the number of ORRs and you will see that those are dramatically reducing. However, as the vessel is built out, some additional ones will come in and will have to be resolved. It is about being agile.
Overall, they do not give you cause for concern about further delay or further costâthey are a normal part of the construction process.
Whether or not we were building at Fergusonâsâwe have built previously in Poland, at Remontowa, and at Flensburg, in Germanyâthat is normal and par for the course in every shipbuilding contract in every yard throughout the world.
Thank you very much for your answers.
We are coming towards the end of our session, but Craig Hoy and Sharon Dowey have indicated that they want to come back in with a very short question each. I will come to Craig Hoy first.
I might have picked up what he said incorrectly, but I have a technical question for Kevin Hobbs. You said that you attribute a lot of the cost overruns to the fact that vessel 801 was put into the water, which meant that costs were more expensive. Are you implying that the vessel was launched too early?
Absolutely. There has been discussion about that. Our opinion, in line with normal shipbuilding practice, is that you should do as much as you can under cover in the first instance, you should join things up outside and you should do as much as you possibly can when the ship is dryâit is only then that you should launch the ship. I will put it very simply: we could not dictate to the yard what it should do, but, on 21 November, when vessel 801 was launched, we had very active discussions with Jim McCollâs team in which we said that the launch would be too premature.
Mr McColl said:
âHad we not launched 801, it would have impaired the work on 802, so it was the proper logistical thing to do.ââ[Official Report, Public Audit Committee, 16 June 2022; c 28.]
Could it be that another photo shoot with the First Minister, to great fanfare, might have ended up costing the taxpayer millions of pounds?
Can I come in? As far as we are concerned, the launch was driven by FMEL. There is a note from Andrew Duncan, our director of vessels, saying:
âFMELâs main priority is putting the ship in the water on 21st November 2017, regardless of the problems that will be encountered later.â
That was Jim Anderson; you said Andrew Duncan.
SorryâJim Anderson.
At that point, FMEL had that view for, I think, two reasons. First, it released money from the Investec bondâI think that the sum was about ÂŁ5 millionâas well as a milestone payment, but, at that point, there were two versions of the truth about whether the vessels were delayed. We were saying that there were real issues and that we did not believe that the deadline dates and delivery dates would be met. FMEL was saying that that was nonsense, that CMAL was not telling the truth and that there was no problem. Therefore, there was a drive to launch to show that there was no problem and that FMEL was right and we were wrong.
Could there have been a political imperative in that? That was the second time the First Minister turned up when you seemed uneasy about the process.
I cannot comment on that.
Okay.
I have a question about the ports. The two ferries that are coming into service run on diesel and liquefied natural gas. Has work started on the bunkering facilities to store that? It has also been commented on that the vessels are larger than the ones that are currently in operation, so the ports are too short to take them. Again, has work started in that regard?
Yes. As is stands, one of the vessels is designated for the Arran route between Ardrossan and Brodick. Again, there is a bit of an urban myth. We have been accused by some people of spending money unnecessarily, but Brodick was our oldest portâit was more than 50 years oldâand it needed to be replaced, naturally. Structures do not last for ever.
As far as LNG is concerned, there is an intermediate tank. Tankers can deliver directly to the ship, but that is quite tricky because all operations have to stop, and we do not want that to happen. There is an intermediate 200m3 tank, so the road tanker can deliver to the intermediate tank and the vessel can then connect to the tank at the port and take the fuel on board.
Yes, the tanks are being built as we speak. In the Highland Council area, there will be one at Uig port, which is being redeveloped to take it. As it stands, the other one will be at Ardrossan, and that port will be redeveloped by its private operator. We will provide the intermediate tank, its bund and all the rest of it. We are talking about cryogenic materialâit is stored at 200 degrees below zeroâso it is quite specialist kit, but, yes, the tanks are on order.
Are they expected to be completed by the time the vessels come into operation?
Yes.
Okay.
I have a final question for Mr Ăstergaard. In your opinion, given your experience, do you think that the ferries will be fit for purpose?
They are coming in late, but they are highly needed in the network. It is quite obvious that, at the moment, the average age of vessels in the CalMac fleet is 24 years, so the ferries will not solve the entire problem by bringing down the average age of vessels in the fleet. The original specification was defined by CalMac, and the latest report that I have seen says that both vessels will go into service during the course of next yearâ801 in the spring and 802 at the end of the year, in October.
Interestingly, since January, you have been the chair of David MacBrayne Ltd, so you have gone from being part of the client body to being the chair of the body that will receive and operate the ferries.
That is correct.
That is why I am interested in your opinion on whether the ferries will be fit for purpose.
I am quite sure that they will be able to carry passengers, cars and trucks, as was intended in the contract, and that they will be operating on the routes.
I go back to what was said at the beginning of the evidence session. You were the chair of the board that signed off on the contractsâwhether by instruction or otherwiseâand you are now the chair of the board that will, I hope, be in receipt of the ferries.
I think that you need to distinguish betweenâ
Is there a conflict of interest, Mr Ăstergaard?
No, I do not see that there is a conflict of interest. The dispute about signing or not signing the contract was hooked up on one particular issue relating to refund guarantees; that had nothing to do with the ferries as such. Once they are delivered, they will enter the CalMac fleet in entirely the same way as was the case with MV Loch Seaforth, which was built in Flensburg, with MV Finlaggan and with the three hybrids. The ferries will go into service in a completely normal way following dialogue between the two bodies that, together, are responsible for delivering on the contracts, with the ferries operating to the islands.
For us, this is not just about the contractual relationship and the business refund guarantee arrangements; it is about the fact that the ferries are five years late and counting and are two and a half times over budget and counting.
They are. That is a fact.
You shareâ
Where do you see the conflict of interest?
My understanding is that CalMac cannot refuse the ferries, for example; it will be required to operate them. We have received evidence from people that suggests that there will be problems because of the length of time that it has taken to build the vessels. You do not see that.
No. I will come in here. This is a highly regulated business. Ultimately, any vessel that carries passengersâor any vessel of substance, full stopâoperates only if it receives a passenger certificate. Whether a vessel receives a passenger certificate is not up to CMAL, the builder or CalMac; it is a matter of flag state. In the UK, flag state is controlled by the Maritime and Coastguard Agency so, ultimately, it is the MCA that gives a passenger certificate. Such a certificate says that a vessel is good and safe to operate, and it can be taken away at any point, full stop.
To anybody suggesting that, somehow, corners will be cut, I point out that weâCMALâare the owners, the classification society does, in effect, the equivalent of a car MOT and, ultimately, the MCA, as the flag state representative, gives a vessel a certificate. If a vessel does not get a certificate, it will not operate. That is nothing to do with CMAL, CalMac or any of us sitting here today.
The ferries will have to pass.
Yes. We will come back and talk to you at length about that if you want us to.
CalMac is planning for the two ships to enter into service next year. That is in the planning.
That would be in 2023.
Yes.
We have run out of time. As you say, Mr Hobbs, we might want to explore further issues with you, but I thank all three witnesses for the time that they have given us this morning and for their openness. That has been appreciated.
As I mentioned at the start of the meeting, we have been able to publish some written evidence. We are keen to publish subsequent evidence, but we have to go through a certain due process in order to put that into the public domain. We will do that and give the matter further consideration. We might come back to the witnesses with questions that arise from that process. As a committee, we will also need to consider whether there would be value in having a further evidence session, because we have covered some areas in some detail, but we probably have not had the time to scrutinise other areas as much as we would have likedâit might not feel like that to the witnesses, from their end, but that is our take. I thank them once again.
I will suspend the meeting to allow for a changeover of witnesses.
Thank you for inviting us.
10:31 Meeting suspended.