Caledonian MacBrayne

Caledonian MacBrayne (Scottish Gaelic: Caledonian Mac a' Bhriuthainn), in short form CalMac, is the trade name of CalMac Ferries Ltd, the major operator of passenger and vehicle ferries to the west coast of Scotland, serving ports on the mainland and 22 of the major islands. It is a subsidiary of holding company David MacBrayne, which is owned by the Scottish Government.[5]

CalMac Ferries Ltd
Caledonian MacBrayne,
CalMac
Company typeGovernment-owned service
IndustryTransport
Founded1973
HeadquartersGourock, Scotland[1]
Number of locations
50 ports and harbours across Scotland
Area served
Firth of Clyde,
Outer Hebrides,
Inner Hebrides
Key people
Robbie Drummond (Managing Director)
ServicesFerry operations between mainland Scotland and islands
Revenue£227 million[2]
£28 million[3]
-£3.7 million[3]
OwnerScottish Government
Number of employees
1,700 (about 1,000 sea going)[4]
ParentDavid MacBrayne
DivisionsArgyll Ferries (2011 to 2019)
SubsidiariesCaledonian MacBrayne Crewing (Guernsey) Ltd
(employer of sea going staff)
Websitewww.calmac.co.uk
The funnel of MV Juno

Its predecessor, the government owned Caledonian MacBrayne Ltd, was formed in 1973 as a ferry owner and operator. In 2006 these functions were separated to meet EU requirements for competitive tendering. The company, renamed Caledonian Maritime Assets (CMAL), continued to own the Caledonian MacBrayne fleet and assets. The contract for operating Clyde and Hebrides Ferry Services using these vessels was put out to open competitive tender. and CalMac Ferries Ltd was created in October 2006 as a separate company to bid for the work.[5] CalMac was awarded the contract, as well as a later competitive procurement process, and since 1 October 2007 has operated the services.[6]

CalMac operates 33 vessels to over 50 ports and harbours on the west coast of Scotland (CMAL owns 16 of these ports and harbours). Caledonian MacBrayne operate on average over 162,700 sailings annually. 2018 was the company's busiest in terms of passenger numbers, carrying an estimated 5,309,771 passengers.[4][7]

History

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Previous logo
The Caledonian MacBrayne headquarters building at Gourock pierhead and a visit from MV Caledonian Isles and MV Isle of Mull

David MacBrayne

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MacBrayne's, initially known as David Hutcheson & Co., began in 1851 as a private steamship operator when G. and J. Burns, operators of the largest of the Clyde fleets, decided to concentrate on coastal and transatlantic services and handed control of their river and Highland steamers to a new company in which Hutcheson, their manager of these services, became senior partner. One of the other partners was David MacBrayne (1817-1907), nephew of Messrs. Burns. In 1878, the company passed to David MacBrayne.[8]

Their main route went from Glasgow down the Firth of Clyde through the Crinan Canal to Oban and Fort William, and on through the Caledonian Canal to Inverness. Services were later added to Islay and the Outer Hebrides. In 1928, the company ran into financial difficulties, and the business was acquired by Coast Lines and the London, Midland and Scottish Railway (LMS Railway).[5] In 1948, the shares in the company owned by the LMS Railway passed to the British Transport Commission, thus partially nationalising it. In July 1969, Coast Line's 50% shareholding passed into state ownership, so that the company became wholly nationalised, and all the shares were transferred to the state-owned Scottish Transport Group.

Caledonian Steam Packet Company

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The Caledonian Railway at first used the services of various early private operators of Clyde steamers, then began operating steamers on its own account on 1 January 1889 to compete better with the North British Railway and the Glasgow and South Western Railway. It extended its line to bypass the G&SW's Prince's Pier at Greenock and continue on to the fishing village of Gourock, where they had purchased the harbour.

After years of fierce competition between all the fleets, the Caledonian and G&SW were merged in 1923 into the LMS Railway and their fleets were amalgamated into the Caledonian Steam Packet Company. Their funnels were painted yellow with a black top. At the same time, the North British Railway fleet became part of the London and North Eastern Railway (which built the PS Waverley in 1947). With nationalisation in 1948, the LMS and LNER fleets were amalgamated under British Railways with the name Clyde Shipping Services. In 1957, a reorganisation restored the CSP name, and in 1965 a red lion was added to each side of the black-topped yellow funnels. The headquarters remained at Gourock pierhead.

At the end of December 1968, management of the CSP passed to the Scottish Transport Group, which gained control of MacBrayne's the following June. The MacBrayne service from Gourock to Ardrishaig ended on 30 September 1969, leaving the Clyde entirely to the CSP.

Caledonian MacBrayne

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MV Jupiter leaving Dunoon
MV Caledonian Isles at Gourock

On 1 January 1973, the Caledonian Steam Packet Co. acquired most of the ships and routes of MacBrayne's and commenced joint Clyde and West Highland operations under the new name of Caledonian MacBrayne, with a combined headquarters at Gourock. Funnels were now painted red with a black top, and a yellow circle at the side of the funnel featuring the red Caledonian lion. In 1974, a new car ferry service from Gourock to Dunoon was introduced with the ferries MV Jupiter and MV Juno.

In 1990, the ferry business was spun off as a separate company, keeping the Caledonian MacBrayne brand, and shares were issued in the company. All shares were owned by the state, first in the person of the Secretary of State for Scotland, and (after devolution) by the Scottish Government.

A joint venture between Caledonian MacBrayne and the Royal Bank of Scotland named NorthLink Orkney and Shetland Ferries won the tender for the subsidised Northern Isles services, previously run by P&O Scottish Ferries, commencing in 2002. The ambitious programme ran into financial difficulties, and the service was again put out to tender. Caledonian MacBrayne won this tender, and formed a separate company called NorthLink Ferries Limited which began operating the Northern Isles ferry service on 6 July 2006.[9] On 29 May 2012, NorthLink Ferries Ltd lost the contract for provision of the Northern Isles ferry services to Serco.[10]

Restructuring – Caledonian Maritime Assets and CalMac Ferries Ltd

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To meet the requirements of a European Union guideline on state aid to maritime transport, the company's routes were put out to open tender. To enable competitive bidding on an equal basis, Caledonian MacBrayne was split into two separate companies on 1 October 2006. Caledonian Maritime Assets Limited (CMAL) retained ownership of CalMac vessels and infrastructure, including harbours, while CalMac Ferries Ltd submitted tenders to be the ferry operator. Their bid for the main bundle, Clyde and Hebrides Ferry Services, succeeded and on 1 October 2007 CalMac Ferries Ltd began operating these services on a six-year contract. The Gourock to Dunoon service was the subject of a separate tender, but no formal bids were made. In an interim arrangement, CalMac Ferries Ltd continued to provide a subsidised service on this route,[9][11] until 29 June 2011, when Argyll Ferries took over the service.

Business

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The company enjoys a de facto monopoly on the shipment of freight and vehicles to the islands, and competes for passenger traffic with a number of aircraft services of varying quality and reliability. Nonetheless, few if any of the routes currently operated by CalMac are profitable, and the company receives significant government subsidies due to its vital role in supplying the islands: these routes are classified as "lifeline" services. In 1996, CalMac opened its first route outside Scotland, winning a ten-year contract to provide a lifeline service to Rathlin Island in Northern Ireland. This service continued until 2008, when CalMac lost the tender.[12]

Various versions of a local poem (based loosely on Psalm 24) refer to MacBrayne's long dominance of Hebridean sailings:

The Earth belongs unto the Lord
And all that it contains
Except the Kyles and the Western Isles
And they are all MacBrayne's

Several groups have proposed privatising the service, and there has been a long commercial and political struggle with a privately owned company, Western Ferries, which has run a rival unsubsidised service from Gourock to Hunters Quay (near Dunoon) since 1973. In 2005, the Scottish Executive put the collective Hebrides routes out to competitive tender, with the Dunoon route being a separate tender.[13] Some island and union groups opposed the tendering process, fearing it would lead to cuts in services and could be a prelude to full privatisation.

During the tendering period, the company of David MacBrayne Ltd, which had been legally dormant for many years, was re-activated on 4 July 2006. David MacBrayne Group Ltd acquired the full share capital of NorthLink Ferries Ltd, and took over operations of the NorthLink routes on 6 July 2006. Three operators submitted bids for the block of routes,[14] but CalMac retained all its existing routes. During September 2006, David MacBrayne Group Ltd acquired the entire share capital of CalMac Ferries Ltd. Thus, from leaving the hands of David MacBrayne 78 years earlier in 1928, the west coast ferry service returned to the fold in 2006, vastly enlarged.

At the time, no bids were made for the separate Gourock–Dunoon route and the service continued as before. In August 2006, David MacBrayne Group Ltd directed two of its subsidiary companies, Cowal Ferries Ltd and Rathlin Ferries Ltd, to take over operation of the Gourock to Dunoon, and Rathlin to Ballycastle services. Following a European Commission decision not to subsidise a passenger and vehicle service, the route was again put out to tender. In May 2011, Argyll Ferries Ltd, a newly formed subsidiary of David MacBrayne, was named as the preferred bidder for a passenger-only Dunoon-Gourock service. The timetable was extended into the early hours at weekends, with additional sailings integrated with rail services. Two passenger-only ferries, MV Ali Cat and MV Argyll Flyer (formerly MV Banrion Chonomara), were arranged for the run.[15] When the service began on 30 June 2011, preparation of the Argyll Flyer was incomplete, and as an interim measure the cruise boat MV Clyde Clipper was leased from Clyde Cruises.[16]

Argyll Ferries was incorporated into Caledonian MacBrayne on 21 January 2019.[17]

On 14 July 2009, it was announced that CalMac would begin Sunday sailings to Stornoway on Lewis from Sunday 19 July. These had historically faced strong opposition from Sabbatarian elements in the Lewis community, particularly the Lord's Day Observance Society and the Free Church of Scotland. However, CalMac stated that EU equality legislation made it unlawful to refuse a service to the whole community because of the religious beliefs of a part of it.[18]

Routes

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Map of ferry services in Scotland, CalMac services shown in red
Loch Shira departing Largs
MV Hebridean Isles at Scrabster
MV Isle of Mull leaving Oban harbour with Kerrera in the background
Loch Seaforth departing Stornoway
Mainland or inner portIsland or outer portCrossingVoyage timeRegular vessel(s)
Portavadie, CowalTarbert, Kintyre PeninsulaLoch Fyne25 minutesMV Isle of Cumbrae (summer)
MV Catriona (Winter)
Gourock, InverclydeDunoon, CowalFirth of Clyde25 minutesMVs Argyll Flyer & Ali Cat
Gourock, InverclydeKilcregganFirth of Clyde13 minutesMV Chieftain
Wemyss Bay, InverclydeRothesay, ButeFirth of Clyde35 minutesMVs Argyle & Bute
Colintraive, CowalRhubodach, ButeKyles of Bute5 minutesMV Loch Dunvegan
Largs, North AyrshireCumbrae Slip, CumbraeFirth of Clyde10 minutesMV Loch Shira
MV Loch Riddon (summer)
Troon, North AyrshireBrodick, ArranFirth of Clyde1 hour 20 minutesMV Alfred[19]
Ardrossan, North AyrshireBrodick, ArranFirth of Clyde55 minutesMV Isle of Arran [19]
Claonaig, Eastern Kintyre Peninsula
(summer only service)
Lochranza, ArranKilbrannan Sound30 minutesMV Catriona
Tarbert, Kintyre Peninsula
(winter only service)
Lochranza, ArranLoch Fyne / Kilbrannan Sound1 hour 25 minutes
Tayinloan, Western KintyreArdminish, GighaSound of Gigha20 minutesMV Loch Ranza
Kennacraig, Western KintyrePort Ellen, Islayvia West Loch Tarbert, Argyll2 hours 10 - 20 minutesMVs Finlaggan &
Hebridean Isles
KennacraigPort Askaig, IslaySound of Islay1 hour 55 minutes - 2 hours 5 minutes
Port AskaigScalasaig, Colonsay1 hour 10 minutes
ObanScalasaig, Colonsay2 hours 15 - 35 minutesMV Clansman
MV Hebridean Isles
MV Isle of Mull (winter only)
ObanCraignure, MullFirth of Lorne50 minutes - 1 hourMV Isle of Mull
MV Loch Frisa
ObanAchnacroish, LismoreLynn of Lorne55 minutesMV Loch Striven
ObanArinagour, CollFirth of Lorne / Sound of Mull2 hours 40 minutesMV Clansman
Arinagour, CollScarinish, TireeLittle Minch55 minutes
ObanScarinish, TireeSound of Mull / Little Minch3 hours 20 minutes
ObanCastlebay, BarraSound of Mull / Little Minch4 hours 45 minutesMV Isle of Lewis
Oban (winter only service)Lochboisdale, South UistLittle Minch / Sound of Mull5 hours 30 minutesMV Lord of the Isles
GallanachBalliemore, KerreraSound of Kerrera5 minutesMV Carvoria
Lochaline, Morvern PeninsulaFishnish, MullSound of Mull18 minutesMV Lochinvar
Kilchoan, Ardnamurchan PeninsulaTobermory, MullSound of Mull35 minutesMV Loch Tarbert
Fionnphort, Ross of MullIonaSound of Iona10 minutesMV Loch Buie
MallaigArmadale, Sleat Peninsula, SkyeSound of Sleat30–45 minutes
varies dependent on which vessel
MV Coruisk (summer)
MV Loch Fyne (summer)
MV Lochnevis (winter)
MallaigSmall Isles (Eigg, Muck, Rùm & Canna)Small IslesVariesMV Lochnevis
MallaigLochboisdale, South UistLittle Minch3 hours 30 minutesMV Lord of the Isles
Sconser, SkyeRaasayNarrows of Raasay25 minutesMV Hallaig
Ardmhor (Barra)Eriskay
(connected to South Uist by causeway)
Sound of Barra40 minutesMV Loch Alainn
Uig, SkyeLochmaddy, North UistLittle Minch1 hour 45 minutesMV Hebrides
Uig, SkyeTarbert, HarrisLittle Minch1 hour 40 minutes or 4 hours via Lochmaddy
Leverburgh, HarrisBerneray
(connected to North Uist by causeway)
Sound of Harris40 minutesMV Loch Portain
Ullapool, Wester RossStornoway, LewisThe Minch2 hours 40 minutesMV Loch Seaforth

Other vessels

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Emergency lifeline timetable

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During the COVID-19 pandemic, CalMac operated a much reduced timetable. From 22 March 2020, they provided a turn up and go service to ensure essential goods and services were delivered to the islands. There were no reservations and no onboard retail facilities. Timetables were modified to meet local needs, with occasional additional crossings and extended layovers.[33]

The Portavadie, Campbeltown and Armadale services were cancelled. Crossing frequencies were reduced on other routes, with single vessels at Rothesay, Largs and Kennacraig.[34] On the smaller vessels, vehicle occupants were required to remain in their vehicle.[35]

Until Hebrides returned from dry dock in Liverpool, Clansman remained on the Uig triangle, with Lord of the Isles and Isle of Arran providing services to Lochboisdale, Coll/Tiree and Colonsay from Oban. Hebridean Isles operated to Arran (22 April – 2 May) and Islay (27 May – 2 June) while Caledonian Isles and Finlaggan were out of service.[36]

Unused vessels were laid up:Hebridean Isles in Campbeltown; Coruisk at Craignure; Loch Riddon, Loch Linnhe and Loch Fyne at Sandbank; Loch Bhrusda in Mallaig (covered Sound of Barra service while Loch Alainn in Troon); Argyle and Isle of Cumbrae in Rothesay and Isle of Arran in Troon.[36]

Passenger numbers

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Passenger numbers on the 10 busiest CalMac routes (2017)[37]
Route20172016Change
(2016–17)
% change20142006
Ardrossan–Brodick844,198828,262 15,936 1.92%715,048735,928
Largs–Cumbrae745,619738,549 7,070 0.96%706,172722,561
Wemyss Bay/Gourock–Rothesay713,906675,714 38,192 5.65%674,088759,680
Oban–Craignure670,248644,827 25,421 3.94%572,084640,426
Mallaig–Armadale285,483250,764 34,719 13.85%239,453188,929
Ullapool–Stornoway275,699264,055 11,644 4.41%226,061181,160
Fionnphort–Iona250,311243,211 7,100 2.92%223,978255,501
Colintraive–Rhubodach216,204232,015 15,811 6.81%214,550264,644
Kennacraig–Islay214,334203,219 11,115 5.47%189,822152,526
Uig–Tarbert/Lochmaddy195,752188,138 7,614 4.05%194,416148,587

Current Fleet

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Vessels are owned by Caledonian Maritime Assets Ltd (CMAL) and operated by CalMac Ferries Ltd. There are 34 vessels in current service, with ten "major units" – ships of 80 m (262 ft) or more in length. The largest is MV Loch Seaforth at 116 m (381 ft) in length. MV Finlaggan is almost 90 m (295 ft) long and able to carry 550 passengers with 88 cars.[38] She was built in Poland at a cost of £24.5 million and operates the Islay service.[39] The others are MV Isle of Lewis, MV Clansman, MV Hebrides, MV Caledonian Isles, MV Isle of Mull, MV Hebridean Isles, MV Isle of Arran and MV Lord of the Isles.[38]

There are 13 "Loch Class" vessels in different shapes and sizes. These double-ended ferries are mostly symmetrical when viewed from the side, with no operational bow or stern (although in official documents the designation of such is given). MV Loch Portain is able to handle Force 7 gales and carry 36 cars and 149 passengers, with a crew of five.[citation needed] The smallest vessel in the fleet is MV Carvoria, built in Shetland for the Kerrera route.[40] Since June 2020 CalMac leases MV Chieftain from Clyde Marine Services for the Gourock to Kilcreggan service.[41]

The company is adapting to the demands of the 21st century. MV Lochnevis (2000) was designed for the Small Isles service. MV Bute (2005) and MV Argyle (2007), both built in Gdańsk, are on the Wemyss BayRothesay route. A new "super loch", MV Loch Shira, entered service in 2007 on the LargsCumbrae route. MV Hallaig (2013; for Raasay), MV Lochinvar (2013; for Tarbert) and MV Catriona (2015; for Lochranza), built by Ferguson Marine Engineering are pioneering seagoing roll-on roll-off vehicle and passenger diesel-electric hybrid ferries.[42] In 2022, a Norwegian ferry was purchased for the Mull service; after modification it entered service as MV Loch Frisa.

Future Fleet

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Two dual fuel ferries are under construction by Ferguson Marine Engineering. The first, Glen Sannox (for the Arran service[43]) was launched on 21 November 2017,[44] and is expected to enter service in early 2024.[45][46] Repeated delays saw the delivery date of the second, MV Glen Rosa (the second Arran ferry)[47] slip to between late summer and the end of 2024.[48]

A £91 million contract to build two ferries for the Islay service was awarded to Cemre Shipyard in Turkey in March 2022.[49][50] The first steel for two ferries was cut at a ceremony in Turkey in October 2022,[51] with the second vessel's being done in January 2023, in the same week as the first vessel's keel was laid. In May 2023, the same week as the second vessel's keel was laid, it was announced that these ferries would be named MV Isle of Islay and MV Loch Indaal.[52][53] Isle of Islay is expected to be delivered by October 2024, with the second vessel following in February 2025.[54][55][56]

In October 2022 it was announced that two further vessels would be built to a very similar specification as the ferries under construction for Islay. CMAL signed a contract in January 2023 for Cemre Shipyard to also build the two ferries, which would allow a dedicated, peak season services to Tarbert and Lochmaddy from Uig and provide additional resilience in the fleet.[31][57] The two vessels, MV Claymore and MV Lochmor are expected to be delivered by the end of 2025.[58][59]

See also

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References

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Notes

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Bibliography

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  • Clark, Andrew (2022). The making of MacBrayne: a Scottish transport monopoly spanning three centuries. Catrine, Ayrshire: Stenlake Publishing Ltd. ISBN 978-1-8403-3897-3.
  • McCrorie, Ian (1987). Clyde Pleasure Steamers: an illustrated history. Greenock: Orr, Pollock & Co. ISBN 978-1-869850-00-5.
  • McCrorie, Ian (1987). Steamers of the Highlands and Islands: an illustrated history. Greenock: Orr, Pollock & Co. ISBN 978-1-869850-01-2.
  • McCrorie, Ian (1989). To the Coast: one hundred years of the Caledonian Steam Packet Company. Fairlie: Fairlie Press. ISBN 978-1-871209-01-3.
  • Meek, Donald E.; Peter, Bruce (2011). From Comet to Cal Mac: Two Centuries of Hebridean and Clyde Shipping. Ramsey, Isle of Man: Ferry Publications. ISBN 9781906608361.
  • Preston, Robert (1994). Days at the Coast. Ochiltree: Stenlake Publishing. ISBN 978-1-872074-42-9.
  • Robins, Nick S.; Meek, Donald E. (2006). The Kingdom of MacBrayne: from steamships to car-ferries in the West Highlands and Hebrides, 1820-2005. Edinburgh: Birlinn. ISBN 978-1-84158-500-0.
  • Smith, Colin; Cowsill, Miles (2016). Caledonian MacBrayne Hebridean and Clyde Ferries: the fleet. Ramsey, Isle of Man: Ferry Publications. ISBN 9781911268055.
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