Posted: 2024-08-12 06:38:46

In short:

It has been revealed both the government and the company managing Tasmania's port facilities had concerns about the ability of the state-owned company operating the Spirit of Tasmania ferries to manage the construction of upgrades to the berths for the new ships.

It has also come to light the decision by TT-Line to rescind its preferred tenderer status was "made unilaterally by TT-Line" while Tasmania's government was in election caretaker mode — and a report detailing concerns about the project was not passed on due to the "good intentions" of a "junior staffer".

What's next?

The refurbished port facilities are expected to be completed in early 2026. Until then, the new ships, which are yet to arrive, must operate well below capacity so as to be able to use temporary berths.

Tasmania's infrastructure minister has told a parliamentary inquiry he had "concerns" about state-owned ferry operator TT-Line's ability to deliver the port infrastructure for the new Spirit of Tasmania ships as far back as late last year.

The first of the bigger and better Spirit of Tasmania ships is due to arrive in Tasmania at the end of this year, but the port infrastructure won't be ready until January 2026.

In the meantime, an unknown amount of money will be spent to upgrade berth one — Labor claims it'll cost at least $50 million.

And the ship will have to operate at a reduced capacity, taking the same number of passengers and freight as the existing ships.

An aerial shot of a river port with buildings on both shores

The new port facilities will not be ready until at least 2026.(Supplied: TasPorts)

In a parliamentary inquiry into the TT-Line spirits project on Monday, Infrastructure Minister Michael Ferguson revealed he was "aware of concerns in the civil contracting industry about TT-Line's works at berth 3" back in October 2023.

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