Shipmaker Harland & Wolff prepares to enter administration this week – business live | Business


Harland & Wolff to enter administration this week, and cutting jobs

Newsflash: UK shipbuilder Harland & Wolff is preparing to fall into administration this week.

The company, which owns the Belfast shipyard that once built the Titanic, has warned shareholders that its Board has concluded that the Company is insolvent on a balance sheet basis (where a company’s liabilities outweigh its assets).

Accordingly, contingency planning for the making of an administration order and appointment of administrators from Teneo is underway, Harland & Wolff explains.

That process is likely to start this week.

Trading update from Harland & Wolff, confirms the company “is insolvent on a balance sheet basis”, with preparations underway for the appointment of administrators from Teneo. “This process will likely commence this week.”

— Ryan McAleer (@RyanMcAleerbiz) September 16, 2024

Staff at Harland & Wolff have been told today that jobs are being cut in “non-core and certain central support areas”.

The company warns that “a further reduction in headcount in our core activities may be necessary”.

Harland & Wolff’s future has been uncertain since the UK government decided in July that it would not provide a £200m loan guarantee to the company.

In July the company hired Rothschild & Co to assess strategic options.

Today, it says that “a number of parties” have expressed an interest in buying some of Harland & Wolff’s assets, with a deadline for first-round bids due soon.

The key issue for the company is a major Royal Navy contract, called the Fleet Solid Support (FSS) programme, which Harland & Wolff hopes to hold onto.

Harland & Wolff says it believes it still has a “credible pathway” to continuing core operations built around a four-yard operation delivering the FSS contract.

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The Unite union is demanding that urgent action is taken to preserve the future of the workforce at Harland & Wolff’s yards in Northern Ireland, Scotland and England.

Unite hopes that a company with a history of shipbuilding will emerge as a buyer for Harland & Wolff’s four UK shipyards, following the news this morning that it will soon enter administration.

Unite Irish regional secretary Susan Fitzgerald says:

“Harland and Wolff is of huge strategic importance and it is essential that all measures are taken to protect the workforce to preserve skills and ensure continuity of employment.

“Unite has been regularly meeting the government and management to ensure the long-term future of the company’s yards and facilities. It is vital that the right buyer is found, failing that the government should be prepared to intervene

“Workers at Harland & Wolff should be in no doubt that Unite has their back and will leave no stone unturned in securing a long-term viable future for the workforce.”

Unite also reports that over 20 companies have shown an interest in either purchasing all or part of the company or providing an injection of investment, through the process being run by Rothschilds.

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Manufacturing activity expands in New York region for first time in almost a year

Manufacturing activity has expanded in the New York region for first time in almost a year, which may calm fears that the US economy was faltering.

September’s Empire State Manufacturing Survey, produced by the New York Federal Reserve, reports that business conditions in New York state are improving.

The headline general business conditions index rose sixteen points to 11.5, up from -4.7 points in June.

The survey aso found that delivery times and supply availability were steady, and inventories levelled off.

However, the region’s labor market conditions “remained soft”, with employment falling again.

Looking ahead, firms grew more optimistic that conditions would improve in the months ahead, though the capital spending index dipped below zero for the first time since 2020.

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BP to sell its US onshore wind business

Energy giant BP is looking for a buyer for its US onshore wind business.

Wind Energy currently has interests in ten onshore wind farms in seven US states – Indiana, Kansas, South Dakota, Colorado, Pennsylvania, Hawaii and Idaho.

In total, they can generate 1.7GW and are already providing power.

BP is selling up as it focuses on Lightsource, the solar power developer it took full ownership of last year. It plans to develop Lightsource as a developer of “cost-competitive, utility-scale renewable power assets worldwide” for solar and onshore wind.

William Lin, executive vice president for gas & low carbon energy at BP, says:

“Renewables are an important part of our strategy as bp transitions to an integrated energy company.

“bp Wind Energy’s assets are high-quality and grid-connected but are not aligned with our plans for growth in Lightsource bp. So we believe the business is likely to be of greater value for another owner. This planned divestment is part of our strategy of continuing to simplify our portfolio and focus on value.“

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Accountancy giant Deloitte is to equalise its maternity and paternity leave allowance.

It means that from the start of 2025, new fathers at Deloitte will get 26 weeks of fully paid leave, the same as new mothers.

Currently, fathers can only take four weeks off with full pay after the birth of their child.

The Times reports that Deloitte has also told its staff that it would give 12 weeks’ paid leave to staff whose newborn requires neonatal care, while those who are long-term carers for a relative or friend will be given an extra five days of annual leave. Women undergoing fertility treatment will also be given paid leave while they do so.

More here.

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Ofcom cracks down on telcos mis-selling full-fibre broadband

Mark Sweney

Mark Sweney

The UK’s media regulator is to begin cracking down on telecoms operators misleading consumers with contracts and online information that claims they are buying the fastest broadband service available, full fibre, when they are actually signing up for a slower technology.

Ofcom is to begin enforcing new rules from today that will only allow internet service providers to use terms like “fibre” and “full-fibre” on their websites and in contracts if customers will actually receive fibre optic cables all the way to their home.

The regulator said that companies have used the term fibre “inconsistently” when in fact the so-called “last mile” of technology to consumers’ homes could involve some copper wiring, or wireless connectivity, meaning a significantly slower and less reliable service than customers’ have signed up for.

Ofcom says:

“From today, broadband providers will need to be clear and unambiguous about whether the network they use is a new ‘full-fibre’ network – with fibre all the way to the customer’s home – or a ‘part-fibre’, ‘copper’, or ‘cable’ network.”

“Providers will no longer be able to use the term ‘fibre’ on its own.”

The way telecoms companies market their broadband services in their ad campaigns is covered by the Advertising Standards Authority, the UK ad watchdog.

With the explosive growth in popularity of digital services such as video streaming, bandwidth-hungry online gaming and the advent of artificial intelligence consumers are increasingly looking for the fastest broadband available.

As of January, 18.7m UK homes have the ability to sign up for full-fibre broadband, about 62% of all homes.

However, to date only around 5m homes have upgraded to take a full fibre connection.

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The interim executive chairman of Harland & Wolff, Russell Down, has acknowledged that the move into administration will be “extremely difficult” news for its staff, some of whom will be losing their jobs.

Down also points out that shareholders will also suffer losses – the company’s shares have been suspended at the start of July, and will be cancalled when it enters administration.

Down says:

“The Group faces a very challenging time given the overhang of significant historic losses and its failure to secure long term financing. Good progress has been made to test the market for investor appetite. The Board has reluctantly concluded that the Company’s own future as an AIM-listed company will likely come to an end in the near future, but that the core operations undertaken by the four yards and Islandmagee will continue to trade as usual.

“It is important to recognise that this is extremely difficult news for the Company’s staff directly affected and will impact many others within group. We will work to support our staff through this transition. Unfortunately, extremely difficult decisions have had to be taken to preserve the future of our four yards.

“This will clearly be very unwelcome news for shareholders who have shown significant commitment to the business over the last five years.

“The Board, the senior management and rest of the team are committed to deliver the best outcome for the four yards and communities they serve to ensure their continued operation into the long term under new ownership.”

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GMB: Government must provide support for Harland & Wolff yards

The GMB union is urging the government to help save Harland & Wolff’s four shipyards, and the jobs created by them.

Matt Roberts, GMB national officer, says:

“Workers, their families and whole communities now face their lives being thrown into chaos due to chronic failures in industrial strategy and corporate mismanagement.

“All the four Harland & Wolff yards are needed for our future sovereign capabilities in sectors like renewables and shipbuilding.

“The Government must now act to ensure no private company is allowed to cherry pick what parts are retained, in terms of which yards or contracts they wish to save.

“Leaving these vital yards – and the crucial FSS contract with all its promises for UK shipbuilding – to the mercy of the market is not good enough. The Government must provide support and oversight to get the market to the solution we need.”

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Harland & Wolff are aiming to refocus on its “core operations”, which it defines as its four shipbuilding yards and the Islandmagee Gas Storage project.

This means:

  • In Belfast, the company is in discussions with Spanish shipmaker Navantia on a possible plan to resume work on the FSS programme to build three support ships for the Royal Navy.

    Significant activity has been undertaken on the Sea Rose FPSO mid life extension work and this is nearly concluded.

  • In Appledore, Devon, work is continuing on the M55 Project (where Harland & Wolff is converting the HMS Quorn/Atherstone for the Lithuanian Navy).

  • The Group’s shipyards in Scotland, at Arnish and Methil, have continued to construct barges for recycling company Cory, to be used to ship recyclable and non-recyclable waste on the Thames

Workers in the hall during a visit by Scottish Labour leader Anas Sarwar to the Harland & Wolff construction yard in Methil. Photograph: Andrew Milligan/PA
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Yesterday, the Sunday Times reported that Harland & Wolff’s finance chief Arun Raman, who quit abruptly last week, is weighing up suing the company for constructive dismissal and racial discrimination.

Last week, Harland & Wolff announced that Raman has tendered his resignation and steps down from the board with immediate effect.

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You can read this morning’s announcement from Harland & Wolff here.

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