Irving Shipbuilding fires back at shipbuilding association criticism - Action News
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Irving Shipbuilding fires back at shipbuilding association criticism

The association that represents some Canadian shipbuilders says it's "surprised and disappointed" Halifax's Irving Shipbuilding Inc. and Seaspan in Vancouver are urging the Trudeau government to stall a contract previously awarded to a Quebec shipyard.

Shipbuilding Association of Canada says Irving is trying to delay Davie contract

Shipbuilding Association of Canada says Irving is trying to delay a contract with Chantier Davie. (Irving Shipbuilding)

The association that represents some Canadian shipbuilders says it's "surprised and disappointed" Halifax's Irving Shipbuilding Inc. isurging the Trudeau governmentto stall a contract previously awarded to a Quebec shipyard.

Chantier DavieCanada Inc.ofLvis,Que., wants toconvert acivilian cargo ship into a badlyneeded military supply vessel that would providefuel, food and ammunition toRoyal Canadian Navy ships at sea.

CBC News reported last week that Irving Shipbuildinghad sent letters tofour cabinet ministersasking the new Liberal government to delay final approval ofthe $700-millionDavie contract. The deal had been awarded by the Harper government during thefederal election campaign.

But theShipbuilding Association of Canadasays the supply ship deal should not be delayed. The group's membership includes Davie, but not Irving or Seaspan of Vancouver, the two largest beneficiaries of thegovernment's$39-billion national shipbuilding procurement strategy.

The organization essential scolds Irvingand says neither it nor Seaspan may be able to build a supply shipfast enough to satisfy the navy's urgent requirement.

"The Association strongly recommends that the government do not delay the signing of the contract for this urgent operational requirement. It has been awarded fairly," says a news release from the group.

'The wrong ship'

The group says Seaspan has claimed it's at "maximum capacity" and is having two ferries destined for Canadian waters built in Istanbul. And it says a JD Irving company, Atlantic Towing, is having vessels builtin Galati, Romania.

If the new government decides to forfeit the Davie contract, taxpayers may have to pay $89 million as a penalty. The company has already bought the ship it plans to convert.

Even so, Irving Shipbuildingis asking the federal government to reconsider Irving's earlier bid to convert a roll-on/roll-offvessel intoa supply ship for the navy.

"We looked at a container ship which is proposed by another shipyard [Davie]and we immediately dismissed it as the wrong ship," Kevin McCoy, president of Irving Shipbuilding Inc., said Monday.

"It requires too much conversion, it's too risky, too expensive and it doesn't provide the large interior payload that could be easily accessed by trucks in a humanitarian emergency such as Haiti, where I served and saw first hand."

Pictou company to benefit from Davie contract

Irving says its roll-on/roll-offvessel would be capable of refueling two ships simultaneously, as well as landing helicopters and allowing large trucks and emergency response vehicles to drive on and off.

"We are not interested in delaying vital, critical capability to the Royal Canadian Navy. We know they need this capability," said McCoy.

"But we think we have a better, faster, less expensive alternative with much less conversion risk and bringing tremendous additional capability."

Irving Shipbuilding saysfour supply ships are presently being built in Romaniabecausetwo years ago, when Irving won the contract, the Halifax Shipyard was undergoing a $350-million expansion and modernization to handle the next phase of the 30-year national shipbuilding contract.

McCoy says with the shipyard's makeover complete and work underway on the first Arctic ship, it has plenty of capability to refit a temporary supply vessel for the navy. Hequestions whether the process used by the previous Harper government to award the work to Davie was ever finalized.

"The government didn't come out and say, 'Here were the pros and cons of each offer, here is the cost, the schedule,and we picked that shipyard for the following reason,'" said McCoy.

"That's what we are looking for and that's the reason Mr. Irving wrote the letter last week."

If the Davie shipyard does get final approval from Ottawa to proceed, the shipbuilding association says the Aecon Fabco shipyard in Pictou, N.S., would benefit as subcontractor.

Aecon marine is currently working on two massive tidal turbines that have been delayed and are now expected to be deployed next spring in the Bay of Fundy.