Ferry Falseness as Scottish Con/Labour combine to ignore what matters and to undermine Scottish jobs and prospects

Does anyone know just how many ‘ferry fiasco feeding-frenzy’ reports we’ve have had now? The main SNP-bad narrative must now be well ahead of the ‘dead babies in infected hospitals‘ meme.

Today BBC Scotland give Labour’s Neil Bibby and the Con’s Graham Simpson a platform to blame the SNP Government and excuse the man who signed the contract.

The willingness to talk-down your own industry and workers in an infantile attempt to hurt the SNP is stunning.

A full year ago, reader Tom Hodgens had a far healthier approach:

This is a long post about vision and ambition.

Let’s start with a BBC article by Calum Watson from 2020 which asks the question…

www.bbc.co.uk/news/uk-scotland-51114275.amp

“Why are we building gas-powered ships?”

The article begins with

“The two new ferries still being built in Port Glasgow have been making headlines for all the wrong reasons.

Glen Sannox and “hull 802″ are the first UK-built ships capable of running off liquefied natural gas, or LNG, as well as conventional diesel.”

He asks

“Was LNG the wrong choice – or a wise decision, poorly executed?”

It continues

“What is LNG ?

If you have a gas boiler or cooker in your home, you’ll already be familiar with natural gas – which mainly consists of methane.

If you cool this gas to minus 162C it turns into a liquid occupying only 1/600th of its original volume.

This Liquefied Natural Gas (LNG) is much easier to transport and can be used as a portable fuel for ships or even trucks and cars.

But it is still a fossil fuel that produces carbon dioxide when burned.

Ending our reliance on natural gas in our homes is seen as a key climate change goal – so why are we building gas-powered ships?

Advocates of LNG argue it’s less harmful to the environment than traditional marine fuels such as oil or diesel.

LNG engine manufacturers say they produce up to 30% less carbon dioxide than diesel equivalents.

But that doesn’t take into account greenhouse emissions during extraction and transport of the gas.

The UK currently has no facilities to liquefy natural gas so LNG would have to be imported – probably from the Gulf state of Qatar.

The LNG for CalMac’s new ships first has to make an 8,000-mile journey by sea, arriving at the Isle of Grain terminal on the Kent coast.

It will then travel a further 460 miles by road tanker to Ardrossan in North Ayrshire or more than 600 miles to Uig on the Isle of Skye.

Together, the two ships would require between four and six road tanker loads of LNG a week.

There are other problems – methane, the main component of natural gas, is itself a greenhouse gas, 28 times more potent than carbon dioxide.

A small amount of this methane can pass through an engine unburned – something known as methane slip – and enter the atmosphere.

CMAL, the government-owned agency which owns the ships used by CalMac, says the latest engines minimise methane slip.

It also hopes Scotland will eventually have its own bulk LNG storage capacity, which would improve the overall carbon footprint.”

It is an excellent article. It explains the issues, why it is was done, and the challenges. But, there has been progress. In 2020, CalMac announced Scotland’s first LNG bunkering facilities will be built in Uig and Ardrossan harbours as part of multi-million pound projects. Covid restrictions will have played havoc with the timetable but with the Scotsman website recently reporting Ferguson Marine had given CalMac a delivery date for the two ferries, it means there will be LNG bunkering facilities in place at both harbours when the two ferries begin service.

There is a UK Government report, published in January 2019, called  

“Maritime 2050: navigating the future 

The government’s vision and ambitions for the future of the British maritime sector”

A download available.

www.gov.uk/government/publications/maritime-2050-navigating-the-future

On page 24 of 338, under a subheading – “Towards zero emission shipping” 

Paragraph 43 says –

“Air pollution is a significant risk to human health in the UK, and as the volume in global trade increases, shipping may represent a growing source of GHGs (Greenhouse Gases)  Regulation has historically been predominantly at the international level with important milestones in recent years the agreement of a global sulphur cap to be implemented by 2020 and the adoption in 2018 of the Initial IMO (International Maritime Organisation) strategy on reducing GHG emissions from ships by at least 50% by 2050. These and other developments are sending a strong signal to the sector of a global transition in zero emission shipping”

Paragraph 44 says

“By 2050, the UK will actively drive the transition to zero emission shipping in its waters, moving faster than competitor countries and international standards to capitalise on economic benefits and be seen as a role model in the field. Close collaboration between industry, government and different parts of the supply chain, will enable lessons to be learned from other sectors, ensuring new regulation is appropriate and helping maritime companies realise the benefits of research and investment. Ultimately this will lead to the development and swift uptake of clean technologies”

Scotland is leading the way, and the Scottish Government’s investment in Ferguson Marine, has also given the Port Glasgow based shipyard a head start in the construction of LNG ships in the UK.

A report from 2019

www.seatrade-maritime.com/asia/lng-powered-ships-account-60-new-orders-2025-korean-study

“LNG-powered ships to account for 60% of new orders by 2025: Korean study”

5 thoughts on “Ferry Falseness as Scottish Con/Labour combine to ignore what matters and to undermine Scottish jobs and prospects

  1. Aye, and HMS James Cook is back flogging yet another conspiracy angle with the FOI ruse https://archive.ph/7cIPj to keep the Ferry Stories alive…

    Neil Bibby and Graham Simpson do all the heavy innuendo, with the BBC’s Calum Watson filling in the smaller ones.

    🙄

    Liked by 1 person

  2. Cheaper fuels will save £Billions. £10,000 to dock in a harbour. Subsidised by Scottish Gov. Cheaper subsidised flights for residents.

    Fracked Gas is imported from US into Grangemouth. UK Gov policies. Nuclear costs £Billions. Westminster funding decommissioning nuclear £13Billion for 10 years+. £130Billion. UK Gov Accounts. 2019/20. Published June 2022.

    Scotland in surplus and nearer the sources pays more for fuel and energy. No parity.

    New technology. Prototype. Ferries will cost less over time. Saving future fuel costs. The funding went into the local economy.

    Like

  3. I suspect BBC Scotland believes that they are still perceived as being truthful, balanced etc. In fact, just as their Charter says it should be.

    Trouble is dear BBC, you lost that trust in Scotland a long time ago with your antics and once that trust is lost it will be very hard to regain it. Rather than being viewed as truthful, most Scots, apart from those who think Gordon Brown is still the PM and that Brexit was a good thing, view BBC Scotland with a mixture of ranging from pointless to abject disgust.

    How about a FOI on the drop in BBC Scotland Viewer / Listener figures since 2014, oh but that’s not allowed is it 🙂

    BBC Scotland ha, seen more honest reporting on the back of a lavvie door,

    Liked by 1 person

  4. A long read but explained has got through to me, with a little knowledge, I understand the reasons for these two ships being built in Scotland more progressive than regressive, unlike 13 Type 26 Frigates late at what cost?. Why are we co-joined to these idiots.

    Like

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