UK government has terminated a contract with Seaborne Freight to provide extra
ferries in the event of a no-deal Brexit that would see Britain leave
the EU on March 29 without a transition period to minimise economic
disruption.
The government’s decision to award the £14m contract in December even
though Seaborne Freight did not have any ships has been heavily
criticised by opposition politicians and others.
A department for transport spokesperson said on
Saturday the contract
was terminated after Seaborne Freight’s backer, Irish firm Arklow
Shipping, decided to step back from the deal.
“It became clear Seaborne would not reach its contractual
requirements with the government. We have therefore decided to terminate
our agreement,” she said.
The spokesperson said the government was in advanced talks with a
number of companies to secure additional freight capacity — including
through the Port of Ramsgate — in the event of a no-deal Brexit.
She said no taxpayer money had been transferred to
Seaborne, adding that for commercial reasons the government had
previously not been able to name Arklow Shipping’s involvement.
The opposition Labour Party called the latest development “a national embarrassment”.
“I
do ask what on earth has [transport minister] Chris Grayling got to do
before he is sacked?” Labour’s transport spokesperson Andy McDonald told
the BBC.
“This is yet another episode in a long catalogue of catastrophes on his watch.”
Grayling
had defended the awarding of the contract in January , telling the BBC:
“I make no apologies for supporting a new British business.”
Britain
awarded contracts worth more than £100m in total to three shipping
firms to provide extra ferries. The other two — French firm Brittany
Ferries and Danish group DFDS — are established operators.
Britain’s
EU membership means that trucks now drive smoothly through border
checks within the 28-nation bloc. But after a no-deal Brexit, even a few
minutes’ delay at customs for each truck could mean vehicles backed up
at ports and queuing on feeder roads on both sides of the Channel.
The department for transport spokesperson also said the government stood by the due diligence carried out on Seaborne.
The
company had also been criticised when its business terms and conditions
showed references to placing “any meal/order”, prompting speculation on
social media that it had copied the format from a takeaway delivery
company. Seaborne has since updated its website.
Britain is on
course to leave the EU at the end of March without a deal unless Prime
Minister Theresa May can convince the bloc to reopen the divorce
agreement she reached in November and then sell it to sceptical British
legislators.
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