British Broadcasting Corporation

Page last updated at 21:12 GMT, Tuesday, 30 June 2009 22:12 UK

Two navy shipyards 'could close'

Artist's impression of new carrier
The yards will complete the Royal Navy's super-carrrier contract in 2014

Plans are being drawn up for the possible closure of two navy shipyards after aircraft carrier work ends in 2014, BBC Scotland has learned.

It follows a leaked memo from BVT, the owners of yards at Scotstoun and Govan in Glasgow, and in Portsmouth.

The memo says the Ministry of Defence is willing to pay for thousands of redundancies to scale down Britain's capacity for building warships.

The MoD said negotiations were ongoing and no decisions had been made.

The leaked memo, seen by BBC Scotland, shows BVT Surface Fleet's chief executive Alan Johnston forecasting savings of up to half a billion pounds from the closure of two out of three yards after the contract for two super-carriers is complete in 2014.

Douglas Fraser
Douglas Fraser
BBC Scotland business and economy editor

While the shipyards have plenty of work to keep them going until 2014, we are now looking at a strong likelihood that half the Clyde's remaining shipbuilding capacity is going to shut within two years of the super-carrier work being complete.

If Portsmouth is the single site chosen to carry on Britain's specialist naval shipbuilding, then both Clyde yards would be forced to close.

Portsmouth, however, is in a weak position if there are to be closures, as I understand it can't build the size of ships necessary for replacement of the Royal Navy's Type 42 destroyers.

Only a Clyde yard can now do that.

This would be part of an agreement for an exclusive BVT deal with Whitehall to build the Royal Navy's future ships.

In the memo, Mr Johnston writes: "BVT has committed to review its industrial footprint in light of the projected reduction in UK shipbuilding requirements post completion of the CVF (aircraft carrier) programme (current projections show that at the time the MoD requirements could be delivered from a single BVT facility) and MoD has committed to underwrite the necessary closure costs.

"These one-off rationalisation/investment costs are estimated to be between £115m to £165m for redundancies, site closure, environmental clean-up, equipment disposal and asset write-downs. Discussions are under way to agree the specific mechanism by which they will be recovered (e.g. via overheads over an agreed time frame)."

BVT said that the memo was about "worse case scenario planning".

A spokesman said: "BVT continues to invest in designs, facilities and skills to secure the long-term future of both its Clyde and Portsmouth facilities.

"BVT continues to win orders both in the UK and overseas and is progressing well with a unique 15 years partnering agreement with the MoD that will further secure that future."

I will be contacting BVT ... to demand assurances over their commitment to the Clyde yards
Nicola Sturgeon
Scottish Deputy First Minister

A spokesman for the Ministry of Defence said it had to look at the consequences of reduced demand for navy shipbuilding.

"There will be a need for rationalisation and efficiency measures going forward," he added.

He said nothing had been decided.

Scottish Deputy First Minister Nicola Sturgeon said: "These reports will cause deep concern among the workforce and communities on the Clyde.

"I have recently spoken with Alan Johnston, chief executive of BVT, who had assured me the company was working to secure the long-term future of the yards and I will be contacting BVT ... to demand assurances over their commitment to the Clyde yards and the long-term future of Scotland's ship building expertise."



Print Sponsor


RELATED INTERNET LINKS
The BBC is not responsible for the content of external internet sites


FEATURES, VIEWS, ANALYSIS
Washington's reaction to the Honduran crisis
Chinese netizens denounce new filtering software
Afghan climbers aim for cloud nine with historic ascent

PRODUCTS & SERVICES

Explore the BBC

This page is best viewed in an up-to-date web browser with style sheets (CSS) enabled. While you will be able to view the content of this page in your current browser, you will not be able to get the full visual experience. Please consider upgrading your browser software or enabling style sheets (CSS) if you are able to do so.
Americas Africa Europe Middle East South Asia Asia Pacific