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P&O Ferries

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P&O Ferries
Company typePrivate
IndustryTransport
Founded2002
HeadquartersDover, United Kingdom
Key people
Products
  • Ferries
  • Port services
  • Passenger transportation
  • Freight transportation
ParentDubai World
Websitewww.poferries.com
Footnotes / references

P&O House Flag
Pride of Rotterdam

P&O Ferries is a British company that operates ferries from the United Kingdom to Ireland and Continental Europe (France, Belgium and the Netherlands). These were previously operated at different times as separate subsidiaries of P&O under the names Pandoro Ltd, P&O European Ferries, P&O Portsmouth, P&O North Sea Ferries, P&O Irish Sea and the joint venture P&O Stena Line.

History

P&O originally established ferry services in the United Kingdom in the late 1960s in the North Sea and the English Channel. In the late 1970s P&O was affected by a reduction in traditional shipping activities which saw the sale of a number of its businesses and assets. This continued into 1985 with the sale of its cross-channel ferry activities to European Ferries,[1] which at the time consisted of services on the DoverBoulogne and SouthamptonLe Havre routes.[2]

In January the following year, P&O purchased a 50.01% interest in European Financial Holdings Ltd, which held 20.8% of shares in European Ferries,[1] followed in 1987 with the purchase of the remaining shares of the European Ferries Group whose ferry services were trading as Townsend Thoresen. Following the Herald of Free Enterprise disaster in March 1987, the operations of Townsend Thoresen were renamed P&O European Ferries on 22 October 1987, with operations from Portsmouth, Felixstowe and Dover.

Following a consultation with the Competition Commission beginning 28 November 1996,[2] P&O European Ferries split into three separate subsidiaries: P&O Portsmouth, P&O North Sea and the creation of a joint venture between P&O and the Swedish ferry company Stena AB's UK subsidiary Stena Line (UK) Ltd to create P&O Stena Line in Dover.[2]

In April 2002, P&O announced its intention to purchase Stena Line's 40% share of the joint venture. The purchase was completed by August, and in October 2002[3] the Portsmouth and North Sea operations were merged with the Dover operations to create P&O Ferries Ltd, jointly managing all services from its head office, Channel House in Dover.

In September 2004, P&O Ferries Ltd conducted a business review that concluded with the announcement of closure of several of its long-term Portsmouth-based routes, leaving only the Portsmouth – Bilbao route in operation. These closures were predominantly blamed on the expansion of low-cost airlines and the increasing usage of the Channel Tunnel as a faster alternative to ferry operations.[4]

On 15 January 2010, P&O Ferries announced that it would be closing the Portsmouth–Bilbao route by the end of September to coincide with the end of its existing charter for the Pride of Bilbao. This meant the closure of the final route served by P&O Ferries in Portsmouth.[5][6]

Operations

Throughout its history, P&O Ferries has operated in five main areas, centred around Dover, Portsmouth, Southampton, the Irish Sea and the North Sea.

Dover

P&O began ferry operations in Dover in the 1960s with a route to Boulogne in France under the Normandy Ferries brand. This route was sold to European Ferries on 4 January 1985[7] which rebranded them, along with its SouthamptonLe Havre route, as Normandy Ferries Ltd. Following the purchase of European Ferries, P&O operated routes from Dover to Calais in France and Zeebrugge in Belgium, initially trading under the Townsend Thoresen brand; however, due to the bad publicity that the Herald of Free Enterprise disaster brought to that brand in March 1987, the services were subsequently rebranded to P&O European Ferries, with most vessels named with the prefix Pride of.

Prior to the acquisition, European Ferries had ordered two purpose-built vessels for the Dover–Calais route. These were delivered in June and December 1987 as Pride of Dover and Pride of Calais, taking on the role of flagships for P&O European Ferries. P&O's Dover operations remained largely unchanged until 1998 when they were merged with Stena Lines Dover and Newhaven operations to form P&O Stena Line (P&OSL) in response to the increased competition from the Channel Tunnel which opened in 1994 and the coming end to duty-free shopping within the EU in July 1999. As a result, vessels were renamed from the recognisable Pride of prefix to instead be prefixed with P&OSL in 1999. P&OSL operated eleven vessels, eight of which provided a freight and passenger service on the Dover–Calais route and the remaining three a freight service on the Dover–Zeebrugge route.

In August 2002, P&O acquired Stena Line's 40% share of P&OSL, which were re-merged with the Portsmouth and North Sea operations under the P&O Ferries brand. In December 2002, the Dover–Zeebrugge route closed, leaving only the Dover–Calais route remaining. Vessel prefixes were again changed to PO before they were repainted into a new livery and then resuming the use of the Pride of prefix in 2003.

Spirit of Britain maiden arrival in Dover on Sunday 9 January 2011

On 8 August 2008, P&O Ferries announced it had placed a €360 million order with STX Europe for two new ships to replace the ageing Pride of Dover and Pride of Calais. The two new vessels, Spirit of Britain and Spirit of France, are 49,000 gross tonnes and 210 metres long, making them the largest ferries to operate in the English Channel. They were the first passenger ferries in the world to comply with the new SOLAS "Safe Return to Port" requirements.[8]

Spirit of Britain entered service on 21 January 2011 replacing Pride of Dover, which remained in layup in Tilbury before being sold and scrapped in late 2012. Spirit of France entered service on 9 February 2012. Pride of Calais remained in service primarily as a freight ferry to cope with demand following the collapse of SeaFrance, before being withdrawn on 20 October 2012 and subsequently chartered to TransEuropa Ferries although this charter was somewhat short lived and the Pride of Calais subsequently followed her sister (Pride of Dover) to the scrapyard and she was beached in Turkey in late 2013 [9]

Southampton

P&O began ferry operations in Southampton in the 1960s with a route to Le Havre in France in a joint venture with Société Anonyme de Gérance et d'Armement under the Normandy Ferries brand, later rebranded as P&O Ferries. This route was sold to European Ferries in January 1985 which rebranded them, along with its Dover-Boulogne route, as Townsend Thorosen.

Portsmouth

P&O's Portsmouth operations began with their acquisition of Normandy Ferries' Portsmouth-Le Havre route, branding it as P&O Normandy Ferries and offering a twice-daily service, initially competing with both Brittany Ferries and Townsend Thoresen. In 1985, P&O sold its ferry operations to European Ferries before returning to the market in 1987 with its takeover of European Ferries the same year, this time employing the P&O European Ferries brand.

Following the acquisition in 1987, P&O European Ferries operated routes from Portsmouth to Cherbourg and Le Havre. The Cherbourg route was operated by the 'Super Viking' class vessels Pride of Cherbourg1 and Pride of Winchester until 1994 when they were replaced by the two jumbo 'Super Vikings', the Pride of Cherbourg 2 and the Pride of Hampshire. On the Le Havre route the jumbo 'Super Vikings' Pride of Hampshire and Pride of Le Havre1 initially serviced the route supported at various times by chartered in freight vessels or transferred 'European' class vessels. However, their low capacity meant that by 1991 larger vessels were required; this was eventually solved by the introduction of two German-built vessels, the Pride of Le Havre2 and the Pride of Portsmouth in 1994.

Pride of Bilbao, an archetypical cruise ferry. Built for Viking Line and operated by P&O Ferries between Portsmouth in the UK and Bilbao in Spain from 1993 to 2010.

In 1993 P&O opened a new route from Portsmouth to Bilbao, Spain, using the Pride of Bilbao operating a twice weekly service. This was the longest route that P&O Ferries operated and was often late arriving due to the weather conditions in the Bay of Biscay.[citation needed]

1998 saw the introduction of a new high-speed service on the Portsmouth–Cherbourg route using the Superstar Express, being replaced by the larger Incat-built 91m long Portsmouth Express in 2000. The change to the larger vessel did not go smoothly, and the new ship suffered a number of technical problems, forcing P&O Portsmouth to recall the Superstar Express for a short time from its new home on the CairnryanLarne route until the problems were solved. The Portsmouth Express gained a reputation of being unreliable, and services were frequently cancelled due to technical problems and the weather, but her larger size and long-term charter agreement meant she remained on the service for a number of years. For her 2003 season she was painted in standard P&O Ferries livery and her trading name was shortened to "Express", with her official name becoming Catalonia A. In her final season in 2004, the vessel was officially renamed Express but adopted the trading name Cherbourg Express.

In summer 2004 P&O Ferries operated a PortsmouthCaen route using the Incat 91 model catamaran Max Mols from Mols-Linien, trading under the name Caen Express. However, this was short lived, with P&O Ferries announcing on 28 September 2004 its planned closure of the Portsmouth–Cherbourg and Caen routes and the transfer of the Portsmouth–Le Havre route to Brittany Ferries due to falling passenger numbers and rising costs. The Caen Express was returned to Mols-Linien in October 2004, and the Portsmouth–Cherbourg route closed on 14 January 2005. Following the intervention of the Office of Fair Trading and the Competition Commission, Brittany Ferries backed out of the deal to take over the Le Havre route, so Portsmouth–Le Havre remained under P&O Ferries until its closure on 30 September 2005.[10]

The Bilbao route remained as the only Portsmouth operation, until on 15 January 2010, P&O Ferries announced they would withdraw the service at the end of the Pride of Bilbao's charter. The vessel completed its final voyage on 28 September 2010 and was returned to Irish Continental Group, from whom it had been chartered since the route's inception.[6] This marked the end of P&O's operations from Portsmouth.

North Sea

P&O's involvement in the North Sea ferry routes began with a 35% stake in North Sea Ferries owned by its subsidiary General Steam Navigation Company.[11] North Sea Ferries had begun operations on 17 December 1965 sailing on the HullRotterdam route, a route which critics predicted would not survive. The numbers proved them wrong, however, and in the first year, 54,000 passengers were carried.[11] By 1974, demand for capacity was greater than could be supplied, and two vastly bigger vessels, Norland and Norstar, which were at that time the largest ferries in the world,[11] were introduced to the route.

The two vessels Norwind and Norwave were transferred to a new route, Hull–Zeebrugge, operating a nightly service departing 30 minutes after the Rotterdam service sailed. The two routes remained unchanged, with the exception of the Ministry of Defence chartering Norland for service with the British Task Force to the Falkland Islands in 1982. The two routes were becoming increasingly popular, and in 1987 the larger Norsun and Norsea were introduced on the Hull–Rotterdam route, the two displaced vessels moving to Hull–Zeebrugge and the sale of both Norwind and Norwave.

A tug passes M/V Norqueen at Teesport, which operates the freight-only RORO route to Rotterdam.

As part of the success of the routes, dedicated freight routes were introduced from Teesport to both Rotterdam and Zeebrugge on a nightly basis. However, the ships quickly began to struggle to cope with demand, and in 1994 new superfreighters were introduced on the Hull routes. A new river berth was therefore constructed to accommodate the freight only vessels, however they were still small enough to pass through the lock at King George Dock if required.

By 1996 P&O owned a 50% stake in North Sea Ferries, the other 50% owned by Royal Nedlloyd Group. In a multimillion-pound deal, P&O purchased Royal Nedlloyd Group's stake, and North Sea Ferries was rebranded to P&O North Sea Ferries. Continuing success saw the purchase of two new superferries weighing 60,000 tonnes from Fincantieri, entering service in 2001 as Pride of Rotterdam and Pride of Hull and once again holding the title of 'world's largest ferry'. The Norsea and Norsun were refitted and returned to P&O North Sea Ferries on the Hull–Zeebrugge route as Pride of York and Pride of Bruges.

Following P&O's acquisition of P&O Stena Line in 2002, P&O North Sea Ferries was merged and rebranded with P&O's Portsmouth and Dover operations under the current P&O Ferries Ltd name.

P&O Ferries host many themed minicruises on the renowned Hull to Rotterdam route. These include the now traditional 'Hulloween' minicruise on 28 October and music minicruises with 50s and 60s music.

Irish Sea

In 1971 P&O purchased the remains of Coast Lines which had been operating in the Irish Sea since 1913. In December 1974, P&O founded Pandoro Ltd to provide transport operations to Ireland.[12] A number of different routes were started and ceased operating as the 'Troubles' affected the car/passenger market to Northern Ireland.

In 1993 Pandoro added a service operating between Rosslare, Ireland, and Cherbourg, France, to its ArdrossanLarne, LiverpoolDublin and Fleetwood–Dublin routes.

P&O Irish Sea was formed in 1998, following the merger of the Cairnryan-based service of P&O European Ferries (Felixstowe) Ltd and Pandoro Ltd (who operated routes between England, Scotland and France to Ireland).[13] The following year (1999), the new P&O Irish Sea announced its intentions to purchase a purpose-built Ro-Pax (roll-on, roll-off, vehicle/passenger) vessel from Mitsubishi of Japan for the Liverpool to Dublin route. This would see the transfer of the European Leader to the Fleetwood route.

In 2004, P&O closed its Fleetwood – Larne services with the sale of all interests. In addition to the service rights, European Leader, European Pioneer and European Seafarer were sold to the Swedish Stena Line group. At the same time, P&O announced the closure of the Mostyn – Dublin service due to low passenger numbers. This led to the sale of European Ambassador and European Envoy for further service in Europe.[citation needed] In 2010, P&O Irish Sea was merged back into being part of its parent company again.

In January 2016, it was announced that the seasonal Troon to Larne service would cease with immediate effect due to the unprofitability of the route.[14] The service had ended for the 2015 season in September of that year.

Present fleet

Name Built Route(s) Tonnage Port of Registry Notes
European Seaway October 1991 Dover–Calais 22,986 Dover,  United Kingdom
Pride of Burgundy March 1993 Dover–Calais 28,138 Dover,  United Kingdom
Pride of Canterbury December 1991 Dover–Calais 30,365 Dover,  United Kingdom Rebuilt in her present form in 2003.
Pride of Kent June 1992 Dover–Calais 30,365 Dover,  United Kingdom Rebuilt in her present form in 2003.
Spirit of Britain June 2010 Dover–Calais 49,000 Dover,  United Kingdom
Spirit of France January 2012 Dover–Calais 49,000 Dover,  United Kingdom
Pride of Bruges August 1986 Hull–Zeebrugge 31,598 Rotterdam,  Netherlands
Pride of York September 1986 Hull–Zeebrugge 31,785 Nassau,  Bahamas
Pride of Hull April 2001 Hull–Rotterdam 59,925 Nassau,  Bahamas
Pride of Rotterdam September 2000 Hull–Rotterdam 59,925 Rotterdam,  Netherlands
European Highlander June 2002 Cairnryan–Larne 21,188 Nassau,  Bahamas
European Causeway March 2000 Cairnryan–Larne 20,646 Nassau,  Bahamas
European Endeavour September 2000 Liverpool–Dublin 22,152 Nassau,  Bahamas
MS Norbank October 1993 Liverpool–Dublin 17,464 Rotterdam,  Netherlands
MS Norbay March 1994 Liverpool–Dublin 17,464 Hamilton,  Bermuda
MS Norsky April 1999 Tilbury–Zeebrugge 19,992 Rotterdam,  Netherlands
MS Norstream September 1999 Tilbury–Zeebrugge 19,992 Rotterdam,  Netherlands
MV Bore Song July 2011 Middlesbrough–Zeebrugge 25,235 Helsinki,  Finland
MV Wilhelmine July 2012 Middlesbrough–Rotterdam 21,020 Luxembourg,  Luxembourg

Former fleet

Name Built Service Route(s) Tonnage Port of Registry Fate
MS European Mariner October 1977 1993-2011 Larne-Troon (freight) 5897 Nassau,  Bahamas Scrapped at Aliağa in 2011, Replaced by MS Norcape.
MS Norcape 1979 1979-2011 Liverpool-Dublin, Larne-Troon (freight) 14,087 Nassau,  Bahamas Scrapped at Aliağa in 2011.
MS Pride of Dover 1987 1987-2010 Dover-Calais 26,433 Dover,  United Kingdom Replaced by MS Spirit of Britain and Laid up in Tilbury until 2012. Scrapped at Aliağa.
MS Pride of Calais 1987 1987-2012 Dover-Calais 26,433 Dover,  United Kingdom Replaced by MS Spirit of France, Spent three months with Transeuropa Ferries as MV Ostend Spirit and Scrapped at Aliağa in 2013.
MS Pride of Portsmouth 1989 1994-2005 Portsmouth-Le Havre 33,336 Portsmouth,  United Kingdom Sold to SNAV, renamed SNAV Lazio.
Pride of Le Havre2 1989 1994-2005 Portsmouth-Le Havre 33,336 Portsmouth,  United Kingdom Sold to SNAV, renamed SNAV Sardegna.
MS Pride of Bilbao 1986 1993-2010 Portsmouth-Bilbao 37,799 Portsmouth,  United Kingdom Chartered from Irish Continental Group, sold to St. Peter Line and renamed SPL Princess Anastasia.
Express May 1998 2005-2015 Larne–Troon/Cairnryan 5,902 Nassau,  Bahamas Laid up in Landskrona, Sweden.

Routes

P&O Ferries has operated the following routes:

Passenger / freight routes

  • Ardrossan–Larne (?–2001) – transferred to Troon
  • Dover–Calais (1987–present)
  • Dover–Boulogne (~1965–1985)
  • Dover–Zeebrugge (1987–2002)
  • Felixstowe-Zeebrugge (1987-2002)
  • Fleetwood–Larne (1973–2004) – transferred to Stena Line
  • Hull–Rotterdam (1996–present)
  • Hull–Zeebrugge (1996–present) – Eladdy Belgium
  • Larne–Cairnryan
  • Larne–Troon (2001–2015) - ceased at end of 2015 season due to unprofitability
  • Liverpool–Belfast (1971–1981)
  • Liverpool–Dublin
  • Mostyn–Dublin (2001–2004)
  • Portsmouth–Cherbourg (1987–2005)
  • Portsmouth–Le Havre (1987–2005)
  • Portsmouth–Caen (2004)
  • Portsmouth–Bilbao (1993–2010)
  • Rosslare–Cherbourg (1993–2005) – transferred to Celtic Link Ferries
  • Southampton–Le Havre (1967–1985) – transferred to Normandy Ferries Ltd

Freight-only routes

  • Dover–Zeebrugge (1991–2002)
  • Teesport–Rotterdam
  • Teesport–Zeebrugge
  • Tilbury–Zeebrugge

References

Notes

  1. ^ a b "Report into the Merger of P&O and European Ferries Group Plc". Monopolies and Mergers Commission. December 1986. Retrieved 24 January 2013.
  2. ^ a b c "Report into the Merger of P&O and Stena Line AB". Monopolies and Mergers Commission. November 1997. Retrieved 24 January 2013.
  3. ^ "P&O FERRIES LIMITED - Overview (free company information from Companies House)". beta.companieshouse.gov.uk. Retrieved 9 July 2016.
  4. ^ "P&O to slash workforce by 1,200". BBC News. 28 September 2004. Retrieved 24 January 2013.
  5. ^ "P&O Ferries withdraw from Bilbao". P&O Ferries. 15 January 2010. Archived from the original on 27 September 2011. Retrieved 24 January 2013.
  6. ^ a b "Portsmouth to lose Pride of Bilbao ferry service". BBC News. 15 January 2010. Retrieved 24 January 2013.
  7. ^ "Ferry Fantastic: The Cross-Channel Ferry Companies". Ferry Fantastic. Retrieved 24 January 2013.
  8. ^ Reinikainen, Kari (3 March 2009). "STX Europe starts production of first of P&O Ferries' two new buildings". Cruise Business Online. Retrieved 4 March 2009.
  9. ^ https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=D-fTpCi9PNc
  10. ^ "Pride of Portsmouth". On Board P&O. Retrieved 15 November 2011.
  11. ^ a b c "North Sea Ferries". On Board P&O. Retrieved 16 November 2011.
  12. ^ "Coast Lines". P.O.S.H. Retrieved 16 November 2011.
  13. ^ "History 1". Retrieved 24 January 2013.[dead link]
  14. ^ "P&O Ferries: Larne to Troon route to close with immediate effect". BBC News. Retrieved 13 January 2016.

Bibliography

  • Cowsill, Miles, ed. (2016). P&O 180: the history of P&O Ferries. Ramsey, Isle of Man: Ferry Publications. ISBN 9781911268031.
  • Dawson, Philip; Peter, Bruce (2012). P&O at 175: a world of ships and shipping since 1837. Ramsey, Isle of Man: Ferry Publications. ISBN 9781906608392.
  • Hendy, John (1993). Ferries of Dover. Staplehurst, Kent: Ferry Publications. ISBN 0951350692.
  • Hendy, John (1997). Ferry Port Dover: the development of cross-channel vehicle ferries, their services and allied infrastructure. Staplehurst, Kent: Ferry Publications. ISBN 1871947472.
  • Hendy, John (2011). Two New Ships, One New Era: P&O Ferries' Spirit of Britain and Spirit of France. Ramsey, Isle of Man: Ferry Publications. ISBN 9781906608156.
  • Hendy, John; Cowsill, Miles (2012). P&O Ferries: through five decades. Ramsey, Isle of Man: Ferry Publications. ISBN 9781906608385.