LONDON: Iconic shipbuilder Harland and Wolff, famed for constructing the doomed Titanic, said on Monday it faced renewed financial difficulties, forcing it to offload non-core assets to preserve its shipyards.

The Belfast-based company said in a statement that it was appointing outside administrators to help sell or wind down non-core assets, including its Scilly Ferries business.

Harland and Wolff’s interim executive chairman Russell Downs said “extremely difficult decisions have had to be taken to preserve the future of” its four UK shipyards, including the Belfast site on which the Titanic was built in 1912.

“The group faces a very challenging time given the overhang of significant historic losses and its failure to secure long term financing,” he added. The group statement said that the shipyards could still be sold.

Harland and Wolff “is insolvent on a balance sheet basis per its last audited accounts and most recent management accounts”, it added.

“Accordingly, contingency planning for the making of an administration order and appointment of administrators... is underway for the company. This process will likely commence this week.” As well as building the Titanic, Harland and Wolff built its two sister ships Olympic and Britannic, and also supplied almost 150 warships during World War II.

Published in Dawn, September 17th, 2024

Opinion

Editorial

Tax unrest
Updated 14 Jul, 2025

Tax unrest

Govt has a very poor track record of staying the course of tough decisions that affect the ruling party’s core political base.
Surging numbers
14 Jul, 2025

Surging numbers

PAKISTAN is running out of time — and space. Our population, now over 240m, continues to grow at nearly 2pc a ...
Media matters
14 Jul, 2025

Media matters

PAKISTAN’s journalists are no strangers to living dangerously. The Freedom Network’s new report, Journalism in...
Hybrid worries
Updated 13 Jul, 2025

Hybrid worries

Once elected office is reduced to theatre, useful only for maintaining appearances, it becomes a stage for managing perceptions rather than exercising power.
Bitter taste
13 Jul, 2025

Bitter taste

THE government’s plan to import 350,000 tonnes of sugar, months after allowing the export of more than twice that...
No red lines
13 Jul, 2025

No red lines

THE US’ move to sanction Francesca Albanese, the UN’s Special Rapporteur on human rights in the occupied...