RE: H&W24 Sep 2024 16:28
With one exception. That was in 2019, when an Aim-listed company called InfraStrata bought H&W out of administration and amid fanfare, announced a return of the shipyard to its glory days, reawakening British shipbuilding and taking on related side projects.
This was delivered with passionate zeal. Belfast and government ministers and officials, relieved they would no longer have to come to H&W’s rescue, had cause for celebration. John Wood, the chief executive of InfraStrata, set out exciting plans to revitalise H&W, becoming a builder once again of ships and of energy infrastructure projects.
For the first time in decades, there was talk of adding to the employees, who had fallen to a few hundred in number. The shipyard, which had not completed a vessel since 2003, would be producing them again; the old place would be humming once more. Big ships and energy projects, being worked on side by side, it all seemed too good to be true. Sadly, so it proved.
The ambitious InfraStrata went on a shopping spree, buying the defeated Appledore shipyard in 2020. Renamed H&W Appledore, the Devon business would focus on building and repairing smaller vessels. A year later, InfraStrata added two more yards, specialising in prefabricating oil-and-gas drilling structures, and the company was renamed Harland & Wolff Holdings.