Two former offshore service vessels will be converted to freight ferries for use beginning summer 2024.
Courtesy SSA

SSA Votes $27 Million Contract to Convert Two Freight Ferries

Alabama Shipyard, LLC of Mobile, Ala. has won the contract to convert two former offshore service vessels into freight ferries, following a unanimous vote by the boat line board of governors Friday afternoon.

Alabama Shipyard, LLC of Mobile, Ala. has won the contract to convert two former offshore service vessels into freight ferries, following a unanimous vote by the boat line board of governors Friday afternoon.

At a cost per vessel of $13.6 million, the $27.2 million contract is less than the shipyard’s first bid of more than $20 million apiece — but remains significantly more than the $8 million to $9 million SSA general manager Robert Davis had estimated when the Steamship Authority purchased the boats last year, a fact that still rankles some of the governors.

“I think you’ve put the board in a very tough position, given the colossal failure in terms of the estimates for converting these boats,” said Peter Jeffrey of Falmouth. “Have we looked at selling these vessels, putting them on market and starting again?”

Mr. Davis said even with the higher-than-estimated costs, the former oil industry boats are important to the Steamship Authority’s future.

“These vessels remain a very viable avenue for us to be able to modernize our fleet,” he said, noting that the SSA’s existing freight boats are all more than 40 years old. “We’ve been spending more and more money on [fixing] items on those, and that will continue,” Mr. Davis said.

At the governors’ next regular meeting, Mr. Davis said, he will report on how the original estimate for conversion fell short by such a striking amount.

“We missed this by a wide margin, and we intend on looking back and finding out how this was done,” he said.

The Steamship Authority was able to trim the original bid by negotiating with the shipyard, lengthening the job’s timeline and reducing the scope of work, Mr. Davis and director of marine operations Mark Amundsen told the board of governors Friday.

The two vessels, renamed M/V Barnstable and M/V Aquinnah, will need less mechanical work in Alabama than previously thought, because documents showed they were both overhauled just before they were taken out of duty several years ago, Mr. Amundsen said.

At the shipyard, they will be lengthened, widened and reinforced with new bulkheads, tanks and other equipment, much of it required by Coast Guard rules for passenger ferries, he said.

The contract calls for delivering one ferry in early April 2024 and the second one about three weeks later, Mr. Davis said.

That schedule allows time for the Steamship Authority to bring each boat to New England, train crews and undergo Coast Guard inspections before next year’s summer season, he said.

Mr. Davis said the authority is now negotiating with the shipyard on converting the third former offshore service vessel, M/V Monomoy, which was not serviced as recently as its two sister ships.

Comments

Submitted by Anonymous (not verified) on Sat, 04/08/2023 - 05:56

Permalink

Islander Edgartown

One more total failure by the SSA BOG in its oversight of Robert Davis. How many more must we suffer through before they take needed corrective action?

Submitted by Anonymous (not verified) on Sat, 04/08/2023 - 06:53

Permalink

Frank Brunelle Vineyard Haven

Obvious question. What will this mean for rates for trucking service to the Vineyard and what will be the increases from merchants need to be?

Submitted by Anonymous (not verified) on Sat, 04/08/2023 - 11:56

Permalink

Hugh Weisman Chilmark

Why are these boats undergoing conversion now without being electrified? Will it add to the conversion cost? Sure, but the additional cost will be recouped by reduced operating costs over the lifetime of the vessels. It's likely to cost quite a bit more to bring then back at some later date for electrification. Denmark, Sweden, Casco Bay, Washington State are starting electrification of their fleets with electric ferries already running or under conversion now. The SSA has nothing planned and is only just starting to think about electrification. General Manager Bob Davis has said. “It’s a long roadmap to get there.” But it seems they're not even on the road yet!

Submitted by Anonymous (not verified) on Sun, 04/09/2023 - 21:27

Permalink

Tom Engley West Tisbury

Hugh Weisman is correct. It’s time to start planning for electric boats. Soon we will have an abundance of wind power to charge those gleaming white ships. Maybe even in our life time this will happen.

Submitted by Anonymous (not verified) on Tue, 04/11/2023 - 09:18

Permalink

Gabe Mv

We should be buying new ferries… not used all ferries. What are they thinking??

Submitted by Anonymous (not verified) on Tue, 04/11/2023 - 09:27

Permalink

Jason Peringer Vineyard Haven

All of these "meetings" and "conversations" with the SSA will yield zero changes to how they conduct their business and/or how they make their decisions. If there is to be any improvement(s) in their operations, it needs to be mandated through the "charter" that allows them to operate a "legal monopoly". They have accessed public transportation funds to acquire these vessels but are somehow exempt from the state mandate that requires electrification in order to access those funds. The state needs to address this through legislation, and quickly. I will add that there is a planned wind project slated to land cables in Falmouth. Mandating the SSA to reappropriate their multi-million dollar ticket office funds in Wood's Hole to acquire electrification from the aforementioned project would be a good first step. It is obvious Bob Davis values his ability to approve his salary increases without planning for the future of the SSA beyond his tenure.

Submitted by Anonymous (not verified) on Wed, 04/12/2023 - 05:30

Permalink

Tim Edgartown

Nothing changes at the SSA. Buying old ferries and retrofitting them? The building in Woods Hole not needed. New slips where the passenger gang ramps don’t work in high tide… I could go on and on…

Add new comment

Plain text

  • No HTML tags allowed.
  • Lines and paragraphs break automatically.
  • Web page addresses and email addresses turn into links automatically.