Who Pays the Ferryman?: The Great Scottish Ferries Swindle
By Roy Pedersen
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About this ebook
Roy Pedersen
Roy Pedersen's former career with development agencies HIDB and HIE, where he pioneered numerous innovative and successful ventures, and his subsequent services as an SNP Highland councillor, have given him a matchless insight into world shipping trends and into the economic and social conditions of the Highlands and Islands. He is now an author and proprietor of a cutting-edge consultancy.
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Who Pays the Ferryman? - Roy Pedersen
WHO PAYS THE FERRYMAN?
Born of a maritime family, Roy Pedersen’s former career with development agencies Highlands and Islands Development Board and Highlands and Islands Enterprise, where he pioneered numerous innovative and successful ventures, has given him a matchless insight into world shipping trends and into the economic and social conditions of the Highlands and Islands. He is now an author and the proprietor of a cutting-edge consultancy.
OTHER BOOKS BY THE SAME AUTHOR
One Europe – A Hundred Nations
Loch Ness with Jacobite – A History of Cruising on Loch Ness
Pentland Hero – The Saga of the Orkney Short Sea Crossing
George Bellairs – The Littlejohn Casebook: The 1940s
Fiction
Dalmannoch – The Affair of Brother Richard
Sweetheart Murder
This eBook edition published in 2013 by
Birlinn Limited
West Newington House
Newington Road
Edinburgh
EH9 1QS
www.birlinn.co.uk
Copyright © Roy Pedersen 2013
Foreword copyright © Professor Alfred Baird 2013
The moral right of Roy Pedersen to be identified as the author of this work has been asserted by him in accordance with the Copyright, Designs and Patents Act 1988
All rights reserved.
No part of this publication may be reproduced, stored or transmitted in any form without the express written permission of the publisher.
ISBN: 978 1 78027 122 4
eBook ISBN: 978-0-85790-603-8
British Library Cataloguing-in-Publication Data
A catalogue record for this book is available from the British Library
This book is dedicated to the memory of my father.
He opened my eyes to the world of shipping and boats.
His most precious gift: he taught me to think for myself.
CONTENTS
List of Illustrations
Foreword by Professor Alfred Baird
Preface
Acknowledgements
List of Abbreviations
Introduction
CHAPTER 1 – THE SCENE
The Regulatory System
The Operators
The Subsidy Mountain
CHAPTER 2 – EVOLUTION
Muscle and Wind
Steam
Internal Combustion
The Second World War and Its Aftermath
New Ideas
Roll-on/Roll-of
CHAPTER 3 – THE HIGH COST OF THE PUBLIC SECTOR
Ship Shapes
Fuming Ferries
Crewing Excesses
Short Crossing Theory
Fair Fares
Ferry Mafia
High Hopes Dashed
The Ferries Plan
CHAPTER 4 – SOME LESSONS FROM AROUND THE WORLD
The Norse Way
Beautiful British Columbia
Antipodean Catamarans
CHAPTER 5 – A BETTER FUTURE
Some Key Principles
Shortest Feasible Crossings
Efficient Vessel Procurement
Cost-Effective Operation
A Better Tendering System
Route Alternatives
A Way Forward
APPENDICES
Appendix 1: Ferry Crossings and Traffic 2010
Appendix 2: Fleet Lists 2013
Appendix 3: Caledonian MacBrayne Losses by Route 2006
Appendix 4: Subsidy Estimates Per Head of Population for Selected Islands
Appendix 5: Fixed Links
Bibliography
Index
LIST OF ILLUSTRATIONS
P&O Ferries’ 40-knot catamaran Express.
Western Ferries Sound of Shuna.
Highland Council’s MV Corran.
CalMac’s Clansman departing from Castlebay, Barra.
CalMac’s Loch Alainn at Eriskay slipway.
Daggri and the simple ‘lock-on’ Norwegian style link-span terminal.
Orkney Ferries’ North Isles ferry Varagen at Kirkwall.
NorthLink’s £30-million Hamnavoe at the £20-million Scrabster terminal.
Pentland Ferries’ £7-million Pentalina berthing at the £2-million Gills Bay terminal.
MacCallum Orme’s Dunara Castle in the Sound of Iona.
St Clair, the last steam ship built for the North of Scotland Orkney and Shetland SN Co.
Paddle steamer Waverley at Iona.
Derrick-loading motor vessel Locheil at West Loch Tarbert.
Firth of Clyde side-loading car ferry Arran.
Western Ferries’ revolutionary drive-through, Sound of Jura.
Glenachulish; Scotland’s last turntable ferry operating between Glenelg and Kylerhea (Skye).
The go-anywhere 16-metre catamaran, Orca III, operated by Atlantic Marine Services.
Moss–Horten shuttle: a typical Norwegian pendelferje.
SeaLink Kangaroo Island 16-knot, 378-passenger, 55-car catamaran ferry Sealion 2000.
Foveaux Express arriving at Oban, the tiny capital of New Zealand’s Stewart Island.
The first of ten new 49-metre Sea Transport Corporation 50-car ferries for the Philippines.
The Author and Professor Alf Baird being presented with best paper prize at the May 2012 STAR Conference.
FOREWORD
By Alfred Baird, Professor of Maritime Business, Edinburgh Napier University
This book is a wonderful mix of history, economics, commercial success and failure, the latter so often nowadays associated with public sector (mis)management. Roy Pedersen provides an invaluable contribution to the ongoing story of Scotland’s ferry industry. As a former officer with Highlands and Islands Enterprise and its predecessors, Roy has developed over the last 40 years and more an eye for what is good and what is bad about ferry services.
The historical perspective is provided for readers so that they might better understand how we have got to where we are today. We should not forget that Roy, as the inventor of Road Equivalent Tariff (RET), is well acquainted with the economics of ferry services. And here we see in full technicolor the interception of immense and ever-increasing subsidies for publicly run ferry operations in Scotland.
So, who intercepts these ‘economic rents’? Well, the evidence presented tells us that the ‘key stakeholders’, namely the public operators, trade union members, local authorities, port trusts, and other vested interests intercept most of the subsidy long before what is left reaches the user. This leaves little for the benefit of users in terms. A case in point is the immense subsidy paid to Serco NorthLink to run its Pentland Firth service, only for users to express surprise when they find out that lower rates and a quicker, more frequent, passage can be obtained by using the unsubsidised Pentland Ferries service.
Roy Pedersen illustrates very clearly the difference in the competence of private ferry operators, most notably Western Ferries and Pentland Ferries, compared with the extraordinary inefficiencies of state-managed ferry operations and assets. The tragic consequence of this gross mismanagement brings him back to his former role at HIE in helping island and remote communities improve their accessibility and through that to bring about a better chance to compete in whatever market. His identification of and preference for short ferry routes, where operators can offer higher levels of frequency at lower cost, and hence lower subsidy (or none), and ensure better accessibility, is compelling. The evidence on this from Western Ferries, Pentland Ferries and countless overseas operators is overwhelming. Yet the state, for the most part, continues to specify and is paying over the odds for the wrong routes and the wrong designs of ships and port facilities.
The cause is multi-facteted. Well-meaning civil servants ‘responsible’ for ferries start with limited knowledge of the sector, and take their advice from the vested interests. Ministers have even less knowledge, so take their advice from the officials. State-owned ferry entities are staffed by individuals who have limited commercial ferry expertise, or are from a military background where over-spending and over-specifying has been the norm.
If Roy Pedersen demonstrates anything, it is that the state should not be buying ferries, never mind operating them. The mistakes are endemic and long-term. A ship lasts 25 years or more, which implies that an expensive and inefficient ship will carry with it a significant financial burden for the same period.
The ongoing ferry fleet and port procurement activities sponsored by the state make the Edinburgh Tram debacle look like a very good deal indeed. And PFI is not dead; it lives on, not least in the newly ordered Stornoway ferry. And so long as a budget is made available for ferries, this tragedy will continue to be acted out, and vested interests will prevail.
Reform? How to do it? Roy Pedersen illustrates what can be done. The rather obvious solution is to shift to shorter routes, using less expensive vessels, which in turn allows for greater frequency, higher capacity and rising demand, and to leave ship procurement to people who at least understand what they are doing.
PREFACE
My parents met on a day cruise from Ardrossan to Rothesay on the old ex-Glasgow & South Western Railway turbine steamer Atalanta. In due course they married and I was born in an Ardrossan Harbour Board house as the Second World War was heading for Allied victory. I suppose I can attribute my existence to that Clyde steamer and the attractions of Rothesay.
One of my earliest memories, aged three, is a rough passage on Messrs Burns & Laird’s fast and famous daylight boat Lairds Isle from Ardrossan to Belfast to visit relations. Then when I was four the family moved to Aberdeen where my father took up the post of Harbour Works Superintendent. Aberdeen harbour and its ships became my year-round playground, but we returned every summer to the Clyde Coast where steamer trips were always top priority. For several years from the age of thirteen, while my parents toured the Continent, I was lodged with my indulgent Aunt Peggy and given an ‘Any Pier and Any Pier’ season ticket to lose myself on the – then still substantial – fleet of railway steamers that plied the Firth. I wonder how many parents today would abandon their thirteen-year-old son, alone, to the vagaries of the railway and steamer timetable. Anyway, I’m glad they did and it’s way too late now to call in the social services.
Distant Inveraray, Campbeltown, Arrochar and Tighnabruaich became as weel kent as the nearer joys of Brodick, Millport, Rothesay and Dunoon. So familiar were the ships, we boastful urchins of the Firth could identify them in seconds at two or three miles’ distance; such is a boy’s obsession. Happy days indeed.
Life and times moved on, but the fascination with matters maritime remained and, over the intervening years, I have been a keen observer and analyst of both the Scottish scene and comparators internationally. This book is in some small way a distillation of that experience.
ACKNOWLEDGEMENTS
The list of people who have contributed one way or another over many years to this work is a long one. Space does not permit mention of them all, but I am nonetheless grateful to everyone who has thrown light on the development of Scotland’s ferries.
There are a number, however, I have to mention by name. First among these is Professor Alfred Baird, Head of the Maritime Research Group of Napier University’s Transport Research Institute (TRI). His worldwide experience of shipping issues and his clear analytical mind have made an invaluable contribution.
I am grateful also to a wide range of ferry operators who have provided information at different periods on their vessels, and insights into their operational activities. Special thanks go to Gordon Ross, Managing Director of Western Ferries; Andrew and Susan Banks, owners of Pentland Ferries; Colin Manson, Resources Manager and Nina Croad, Ferry Services, Shetland Islands Council, Martin Gorringe, Marine Operations Manager at Argyll and Bute Council; Councillor John Laing, former chair of Highland Council TEC Services and Sam MacNaughton, Head of Transport and Infrastructure; Donald Ewen Darroch, Chairperson of the Overland Route Company Ltd; Stuart Ballantyne, CEO of Sea Transport Corporation; Craig Elder, Head of Strategy and Corporate Planning BC Ferries; Ian Munro, Managing Director of Stewart Island Marine Services; George Hudson, former Chairman of Fullers Ferries; Seumas Mackinnon, Misty Isle Boat Trips; Lyle White and Sunny Newitt of Brisbane CityFerries; Peter Wotherspoon of Jura Ferry; Duncan McEachran, Kerrera ferry; David Cannon and the late Colin Patterson, former CEO of Caledonian MacBrayne.
Among officials in public bodies who provided useful information, I must thank Guy Platten of CMAL; Dave Duthie and Ranald Robertson of HITRANS; Tony Usher, General Manager of Highland Council Harbours Authority; and Colin Grieve and Judith Ainslie in Transport Scotland. I would also like to thank Howie Firth for facilitating the CO2 presentation at the Orkney Science Festival and Ian Mathie of SESTRAN for information about the North Berwick – Anstruther ferry. Among the many other individuals who have provided advice, inspiration or data, thanks are due to Bill Banks; Arthur Blue; Councillor Jim Foubister; Catrina Howard, Marketing Coordinator, SeaLink – South Australia; Harold Jordan; James Knight; Bill Mowat; John Mowat; Hugh Raven; Uisdean Robertson; John Rose; Duncan Swinbanks; Captain Torgeir H. Røyset; Steven Watson; ‘Scotships’ correspondents; and my second cousin and naval architect Øyvind Wilhelmsen.
Numerous websites have been referred to – too many to be listed, had a list actually been kept. Three deserve special mention, however, for the comprehensiveness of information contained. These are www.shipsofcalmac.co.uk; www.shetland.gov.uk/ferries; and www.bcferries.com.
Finally I must once again thank Marie Kilbride who kindly agreed to proofread the text in the pursuit of accuracy. With regard to that aim, the final responsibility rests with me. If any errors are found, then the fault is mine alone.
Roy Pedersen, Inverness, May 2013
LIST OF ABBREVIATIONS
AB – able seaman
BC – British Columbia, Canada
BR – British Railways, later British Rail
BTC – British Transport Commission
CalMac – Caledonian MacBrayne
CMAL – Caledonian Marine Assets
CO2 – carbon dioxide
CPR – Canadian Pacific Railway
CSPCo – Caledonian Steam Packet Company
CV – commercial vehicle
DMG – David MacBrayne Group
GPK&A – Glasgow Paisley Kilmarnock & Ayr Railway
GSWR – Glasgow & South Western Railway
HFO – heavy fuel oil
HIDB – Highlands and Islands Development Board
HIE – Highlands and Islands Enterprise
HITRANS – Highlands and Islands Transport Partnership
IC – internal combustion (engine)
IMO – International Maritime Organisation
KIMO – Kommunenes Internasjonale Miljøorganisasjon or Local Authorities International Environmental Organisation
km/h – kilometres per hour
LMS – London Midland & Scottish Railway
LNER – London & North Eastern Railway
LNG – liquefied natural gas
MCA – Maritime and Coastguard Agency
mph – miles per hour
MRF – Møre og Romsdal Fylkesbåter
MSP – Member of the Scottish Parliament
OIC – Orkney Islands Council
Pax – passengers (numbers)
RET – road equivalent tariff
RIB – reinforced inflatable boat
RMT – National Union of Rail, Maritime and Transport Workers
RoPax – RO-RO vehicle and passenger (vessel)
RO-RO – roll-on/roll-off (ferry)
SEA – Strategic Environmental Assessment
SIC – Shetland Islands Council
SMT – Scottish Motor Traction Company
SNP – Scottish National Party
SOLAS – International Convention for Safety of Life at Sea
STAG – Scottish Transport Appraisal Guidance
STG – Scottish Transport Group
TEU – twenty-foot equivalent (container) unit (a measure of container ship capacity)
TUC – Trades Union Congress
WA – Washington State, USA
INTRODUCTION
When my book Pentland Hero was published in 2010, it caused something of a sensation. It told of how Andrew Banks, a quietly spoken Orkney farmer’s son and his tiny team of trusted colleagues, without a penny of public funds, started operating Pentland Ferries on a new frequent, cheap, short sea ferry crossing between Orkney and the Scottish mainland. The enterprise has been a huge success despite predatory competition from the heavily subsidised NorthLink, a misguided and wasteful national ferry policy and a sustained official campaign to undermine his efforts.
Then the announcement that the Scottish Government intended to undertake a ‘route and branch’ review of Scotland’s internal ferry operations was an occasion for celebration. It was hoped that the injustice with which Andrew and others had been treated would have been addressed and a more cost-effective national policy adopted. In the event, sadly, the plan that emerged was a disappointment. There were a few enhancements, but little attempt to tackle the underlying inefficiencies.
It is against that background that this book continues the theme of Scottish coastal maritime entrepreneurship on a Scotland-wide canvas. It describes the main players in the current provision of ferry and coastal passenger services. It highlights how half of Scotland’s ferry traffic is handled by efficient and innovative commercial operators while the other half is in the hands of a public sector that in some instances swallows up scandalous and world-beating amounts of public funds while providing an indifferent service.
How this came to pass was the result of changing economic, technological and political forces over not just decades, but centuries. The effects of these forces, good and bad, are examined, as are the growing environmental problems associated with the state-controlled ferry sector.
There are other countries where things are done differently in terms of better ferry services for less money. Norway, British Columbia, Australia and New Zealand in particular have cracked many of the issues that bedevil Scotland’s state-funded ferry operations. These exemplars are examined and lessons drawn.
Finally, as an antidote to the present inadequacies of Scotland’s national ferry policies, an analysis is set out as to how ferry operations could be organised and developed so as to provide much improved access to our island and peninsular communities, to aid their economic and social development, while actually reducing costs and environmental impact.
CHAPTER 1
THE SCENE
From our vantage point we take in the sweep of the bay sheltered behind the rocky headland. It is topped by some old fortification. On the horizon to seaward we can make out the blue-grey outline of distant hills. The scudding clouds throw moving shadows across a choppy sea. It’s a pleasing scene. The sun bursts through a widening gap in the clouds and suddenly shooting out from behind the headland appears a ferry brightly bathed in sunlight. She is heading purposefully into the bay, white feathers of spray rising from her bows and a creaming wake behind her.
Soon she is slowed, swung and berthed at the terminal. Cars, vans, cycles and passengers stream ashore. After a time, a fresh load of passengers and vehicles is taken onboard and she is off again to disappear behind the headland.
This is a ritual that can be witnessed daily in dozens of Scottish coastal and island locations. The ritual is part of the very fabric of island life; the means by which supplies are imported, local produce is exported, and business, social and leisure contacts are maintained. And, of course, the business of tourism generates wealth in many a community.
It was Sir Walter Scott who really sparked off Scotland’s tourist trade. He opened the minds of the world to the romance of Scotland’s story set against its dramatic backdrop – Caledonia stern and wild. And who can deny the allure of our coastal landscape? In fact, Scotland has the world’s second most indented coastline,¹ featuring long sea lochs, firths and extended peninsulas. This, coupled with a rocky mountainous terrain and the ever-changing light and weather, accounts for the country’s magical and at times breathtaking scenery. This magical quality is further enhanced by the 790 or so islands and islets that lie off the Scottish coast. Of these 94 are populated, with just under 100,000 inhabitants in total. Four inhabited islands are found on inland freshwater lochs.
Most of the inhabited islands, a number of peninsulas and loch-side communities are linked to the mainland communication network by 145 public