Montreal

Davie shipyard jumps on bid soon after sale

A beleaguered Quebec shipyard will find out soon if bureaucrats are going to green-light its eleventh-hour bid for a lucrative contract to build the next generation of warships and coast guard vessels.

Beleaguered Quebec shipyard makes 11th-hour pitch shortly after being sold

The Davie Shipyard shown Thursday, July 21, 2011 in Levis, Que. A partnership between SNC Lavallin and Upper Lakes as the new owners of Davie was announced and the group was able to bid on $3 billion in contracts for the federal government to build navy warships, coast guard cutters and other vessels. (Jacques Boissinot/Canadian Press)

A beleaguered Quebec shipyard will find out soon if bureaucrats are going to green-light its eleventh-hour bid for a lucrative contract to build the next generation of warships and coast guard vessels.

Senior officials from the National Shipbuilding Procurement Strategy Secretariat say they'll decide in the days ahead if Davie Yards is fit to be vying for work that's worth billions of dollars.

The shipbuilder from Lévis, Que., put in its pitch for the work on Thursday morning a scant few hours before the deadline. Two other shortlisted companies — Irving-owned Halifax Shipyard and Seaspan Marine of North Vancouver — also submitted bids.

But it was Davie's bid that had people buzzing.

The shipbuilder has been in creditor protection since February 2010.

The firm's money woes didn't keep the federal government from naming Davie one of five companies on a short list for the shipbuilding jobs.

The only condition was that Davie had to be able to cover all its debts to qualify for the work.

For a while it looked like an Italian company might buy the shipyard, but those talks collapsed last week.

That left Davie scrambling to get a deal done.

Negotiations to keep the company afloat went well into Wednesday evening before a Quebec Superior Court judge approved a deal to sell the shipbuilder to Ontario's Upper Lakes Group.

Upper Lakes is comprised of five independent companies — including Seaway Marine and Industrial, one of the original five shortlisted bidders.

Upper Lakes Group is involved in a consortium with Montreal-based SNC-Lavalin and the South Korean firm Dae Woo.

But Upper Lakes is the only buyer of all the assets of Davie, a transaction valued at about $28 million.

$35 billion in contracts

Bureaucrats say they'll decide soon if Davie qualifies as an eligible bidder. If it does, the company's pitch will be considered along with proposals from Irving Shipbuilding and Seaspan Marine.

"We are very confident in our bids, our facilities, our partnerships and, most importantly, our workforce and their ability to build the best ships to meet the needs of the federal government well into the future," Irving Shipbuilding CEO Jim Irving said in a statement.

Seaway Marine did not bid on the contracts and another shortlisted company, Kiewit Offshore Services, dropped out this spring.

Two major contracts are up for grabs. One is for $25 billion to build about 20 large combat vessels for the navy. A second is for $8 billion to build smaller vessels for the coast guard and supply ships. A further $2 billion will be spent on other small craft and repair contracts.

The federal government wants to have its two shipyards picked by the fall.

The shipbuilding deals have been the focus of heavy lobbying by the premiers of British Columbia and Nova Scotia. In recent months, B.C. Premier Christy Clark and Nova Scotia Premier Darrell Dexter have made trips to Ottawa to talk shipbuilding with Prime Minister Stephen Harper.

The political boosting continued after all the bids were in.

"Irving Shipbuilding has demonstrated throughout the bid process that it has the experience and ability to build Canada's ships. Our bid is Canada's bid," Dexter said in a statement.

"The federal government needs a dependable, capable partner in this project, and Irving is it. This bid submission has my complete support, on behalf of all Nova Scotians."