Cammell Laird to build first new Mersey ferry in 60 years

From left: David McGinley, Steve Rotheram, Katherine Fairclough (LCRCA CEO)

Birkenhead shipyard, Cammell Laird, will build the first new Mersey ferry in 60 years in a move which marks a major milestone for the shipbuilder.

The facility – which is part of the APCL group – has put pen to paper with the Liverpool City Region Combined Authority on a deal which will see the new vessel designed and built exclusively on-site, for an estimated cost of £26m.

It dispels fears expressed last year when trade union, Unite, claimed the new ferry would be built in the Netherlands, with only minimal work carried out at Laird.

But the shipyard announced today (December 13) that the state-of-the-art vessel will be wholly constructed on the Mersey.

It will be designed to harness green technology, with a cutting edge Azi-pull propeller system for reduced fuel usage, along with a diesel-electric hybrid-ready propulsion system – with potential for future conversion to full electric propulsion as technology evolves.

The ferry will also have an exhaust after treatment system which will operate in excess of current UK and international standards to reduce harmful nitrous oxide emissions.

It comes six decades after the last Mersey ferry – which was also built at Cammell Laird – entered service.

The vessel will be designed by in-house Cammell Laird naval architects and constructed by the facility’s local workers and apprentices, with a target delivery date of the end of 2025.

The announcement marks the culmination of a process which started back in 2016 and represents a major vote of confidence in Cammell Laird.

Liverpool City Region Mayor, Steve Rotheram, said: “It’s always been my ambition to build our new ferry here in the Liverpool City Region, ensuring that we can retain the well-paid jobs and training opportunities it will create for local people. That’s why we’ve taken our time, working in partnership with trade unions, to make sure this doesn’t just deliver best value for money – but best value for our residents, too.”

He added: “It has taken a Herculean effort to reach this agreement that will bring the first new ferry to the Mersey in over 60 years – that’s before Gerry and the Pacemakers even recorded the song that would help make them world famous.

“Hundreds of thousands of people, both from the region and visitors from further afield, use the Mersey Ferries every year – but the current vessels are more and more difficult to maintain. With this investment we will guarantee the future of the iconic Ferry ‘Cross the Mersey for generations to come.”

Ferries on the Mersey date back to the early 13th century and have become one of the most iconic modes of transport in the world. Cammell Laird has a long history with Mersey ferries, having built 15 of the vessels dating back to 1836.

The new ferry will bear the hull number 1,395 – being the 1,395th ship built at the yard. Other recent ferry projects have included construction of Strangford II, Red Kestrel, Sound of Seil and Sound of Soay.

Cammell Laird has a rich shipbuilding history dating back 200 years. Its 130-acre site has four dry docks and one of the largest modular construction halls in Europe.

In addition to the polar research vessel, RRS Sir David Attenborough, which was launched in 2020 and was the last ship to be wholly constructed at Cammell Laird, major projects have included the block build for the Aircraft Carrier Alliance and critical units of the Astute and Dreadnought nuclear submarines on behalf of BAE. It will is also be building units for the Royal Navy’s Type 26 Frigates.

David McGinley, APCL Group chief executive, said: “We have always been a global business with a local heart, so it’s fitting that two things which are closely associated with the Mersey – ferries and Cammell Laird – should come together for this latest milestone in the rich maritime heritage of the area.

“It’s a point of pride that we built the last Mersey ferry to enter service and will be doing so again, cementing our place both in the rich history of the Mersey, but equally, in its future, too.”

He added: “Our apprentices will be working on this project alongside the rest of our highly skilled workforce, and I know this project is something they’ll be equally proud to be involved in.”

There are currently 171 apprentices in training throughout the business.

However, the threat of industrial action currently hangs over the yard after the GMB trade union said that more than 400 staff, who belong to the GMB and Unite the Union, could walk out on strike following a ballot over pay and conditions.

Dates for strike action will be announced in due course, said the GMB.

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