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P&O Ferries prioritises freight, suspends 1,100 workers

In a reversal of its previous ‘business as usual stance’ P&O Ferries has today announced that all its ferries travelling between the UK, Ireland and continental Europe will switch immediately to carrying only freight.

Bob Jaques, Former Editor

March 27, 2020

1 Min Read
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As a result 1,100 staff have been temporarily furloughed onto the UK government’s recently announced pay scheme that will cover 80% of wages during the COVID-19 pandemic, with P&O Ferries making up the rest. Other European countries have similar schemes in place.

“P&O Ferries is having to respond with new measures to keep the business operational and to keep freight moving, which is vital to the economies of the United Kingdom, France, Ireland and the wider EU,” announced ceo Janette Bell.

P&O carries some 15% of the UK’s vital imports, such as medicines, cleaning products and foods, Bell added, and in light of the “very few passengers now travelling” could no longer continue normal operations and had to prioritise freight services.

Previously the company was operating services as normal, merely effecting certain changes such as no longer requiring truck drivers to share cabins on longer crossings, cancelling ‘mini-cruises’ on North Sea routes, and observing social distancing-type measures at customer check-in facilities. The company had also switched from air conditioning to natural ventilation on all vessels.

P&O Ferries operates a fleet of 20 ferries on eight major routes between Britain, France, Northern Ireland, the Republic of Ireland, Holland and Belgium, normally carrying some 8.4m passengers and 2.3m freight units every year. 

Related:P&O Ferries looks to post-Brexit future

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About the Author

Bob Jaques

Former Editor

Bob Jaques is a former editor of Seatrade Maritime Review magazine and has over 20 years of experience as a maritime journalist and moderator of shipping conferences.

Bob is an English literature graduate from the University of York with a postgraduate Diploma in Management Studies from Birkbeck College, University of London. He worked as an aerospace and media journalist in Geneva before joining Seatrade in the 1990s.

Bob is a past winner of the Seahorse ‘Journalist of the Year’ and ‘Best Feature Article’ Awards.

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