30.03.2016

BC Ferries awards contract to Poland for Spirit-Class mid-life upgrades

Following the completion of a competitive bidding process, BC Ferries has awarded Remontowa Ship Repair Yard S.A. of Gdansk, Poland a contract totalling $140 million to conduct the Spirit-Class mid-life upgrades (MLUs), which includes the conversion of both vessels to dual-fuel so they can operate on LNG, beginning in 2017 and completing in 2019.

Following the completion of a competitive bidding process, BC Ferries has awarded Remontowa Ship Repair Yard S.A. of Gdansk, Poland a contract totalling $140 million to conduct the Spirit-Class mid-life upgrades (MLUs), which includes the conversion of both vessels to dual-fuel so they can operate on LNG, beginning in 2017 and completing in 2019.

BC Ferries conducted an extensive competitive bidding process to ensure that the company secured the best bid for its customers and the taxpayers of British Columbia. One shipyard from B.C., Seaspan’s Vancouver Shipyard, was among the three shipyards shortlisted and invited to participate in the RFP process, however decided to withdraw from the process.

Remontowa Ship Repair Yard is the largest ship repair yard in Poland and ranks amongst the largest in Europe. Annually, approximately 200 ship projects are conducted there. The shipyard has a strong record for delivering the required engineering and production capabilities for complex large scale conversion projects on schedule. The company is well experienced and proven with LNG fuelled ships. All of these elements factored heavily into the decision of contract award.

“Last fiscal year, we spent approximately $118 million on diesel fuel of which the two Spirit Class vessels consumed approximately 16 per cent,” said Mark Wilson, BC Ferries’ Vice President of Engineering. “The conversion of the two largest ships in the fleet along with the three new dual-fuel Salish-Class vessels currently under construction will go a long way to help with fare affordability for our customers as LNG costs significantly less than marine diesel.”

“In addition to the financial benefits of LNG, BC Ferries is committed to converting to more environmentally-friendly fuel sources to improve our environmental footprint,” said Wilson “By utilizing LNG to fuel the Spirit-Class vessels, we expect to reduce CO2 emissions by 12,000 tonnes annually, which is the equivalent of taking approximately 2500 vehicles off the road per year.”

In order to help make the project financially viable, BC Ferries pursued funding under incentive programs to help offset any incremental capital costs associated with the use of LNG. The company has signed an agreement, subject to certain conditions, to receive up to $10 million contribution from FortisBC Energy Inc. as part of the Natural Gas for Transportation (“NGT”) incentive funding. This funding will be used to partially offset the capital cost of converting our two Spirit Class vessels to dual fuel capability.

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