One
of BAE Systems' major shipyards could be closed, the company's UK chief executive Nigel
Whitehead has said.
He told the Sunday
Telegraph a decision would be made by the end of the year.
The firm was working with ministers to explore all options
for maintaining the UK 's shipbuilding capability, he said.
The future of its three main shipyards - in Portsmouth , and Govan and Scotstoun on the
River Clyde - after two new aircraft carriers are completed has been in doubt
for some time.
There are fears there will be insufficient work available to
keep all three busy and profitable as cuts in defence spending take their toll.
"The issue is how to consolidate... but make sure that
we've preserved the capability to design and manufacture complex
warships," Mr Whitehead told the newspaper.
"We anticipate that there will be a reduction in
footprint and we anticipate... that part of that might actually be the
cessation of manufacturing at one of the sites."
Earlier
this year the company appointed consultants to carry out a review of the
business. The firm's yard in Portsmouth is widely believed to
be the most vulnerable, with 1,500 jobs at risk.
However, two bases on the River Clyde, at Govan and
Scotstoun (The old Yarrow shipyard) are also under scrutiny.
BAE Systems says it is working closely with the government
to explore all options for maintaining the UK 's shipbuilding capability.
The Ministry of Defence says that it is up to the company
itself to decide how best to deliver the naval vessels
For
more on the story see BBC Scotland website
While the above news is not new to the shipbuilders involved what is pretty new is being regarded as “A Footprint” you just have to love the buzzwords being used today, the British Isle’s losing yet another hard pressed shipyard, is it any wonder that the last two ships ordered by the U.K. Government went to a yard in Korea, this was for the build of two new fleet oil tankers for the Royal Fleet Auxiliary a job that was only tendered by one of the remaining shipyards in Britain and even they dropped out of the running as they felt they did not have the required expertise anymore to build such a vessel,
along
with another less well publicised ship to be built that being a research ship
for work in the Antarctic by the National Environmental Research Centre.
All
in all a pretty damming indictment on a country that just gives up on it’s
skills base because the bean counters run it all now.
This
ship is being built in Northern
Spain and is due to be
launched next autumn.
A
ship to do the same work as the RSS BRANSFIELD which was built at the Leith
Shipyards of Henry Robb in 1970
Nothing
against the shipbuilders of Northern Spain they have been building ships for
many years but why is this work not being done in a British yard and helping to
secure the future of the skills required to build ships of this type, a
question that has been asked of successive governments since the demise of the
fiasco which was British Shipbuilders in the 1980’s.
A picture above of the RSS BRANSFIELD at work in Antarctica (Photo by G.Hart)
doing the type of work that the new ship will also be doing the one that is just now being built in Northern Spain.