Can the QE2 be saved from its ‘filthy’ state in Dubai?

The QE2 is apparently falling into disrepair in a dock in Dubai, but plans are afoot to save it.

Queen Elizabeth 2 docked in Dubai.

Calls to save the historic QE2 ocean liner from the scrapyard are growing louder as campaigners say it lies “filthy, forlorn and neglected” in a Dubai dock.

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The Queen Elizabeth 2, launched by the Queen in 1967 and Cunard’s flagship liner for 40 years, was retired and sold to the UAE government conglomerate Dubai World for £64million in 2008. The ship was destined to become a luxury hotel but since plans stalled in 2013 after the economic downturn, it has languished in Port Rashid.

• Is Glasgow going to save the QE2?

The engine was turned off in 2013 and the ship has since suffered from mould thanks to the country’s hot, humid conditions. Concerned campaigners say they have heard nothing from Dubai to suggest that the QE2’s future lies anywhere but in the scrapyard and argue that to let such an iconic ship go to ruin would be a travesty.


The QE2 “forlorn and neglected” in Dubai

One campaigner even believes that the QE2 could be saved for just £3million.

“Its scrap value is decreasing, and weighted against the cost of decontaminating the ship – as it’s got asbestos – it could probably be bought for about £3million,” said Rob Lightbody, a member of online campaign group The QE2 Story

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“The options now are to scrap it – but clearing it out would cost millions and millions – or just leave it somewhere.

“It’s just sitting in Dubai. Nothing has happened to it in the last two and a half years. There’s no power. There’s no air. She’s filthy.”

Mr Lightbody wrote in a report on the QE2’s history that the ship now “looks forlorn and neglected.”

He said that if she were sat in a dock in Southampton she would not have been treated like this, adding that she is just seen as an inconvenient problem in Dubai.


The original planned hotel in Dubai.

The QE2 was in fine shape in 2011, according to Mr Lightbody, who said that it was only once the engines were turned off in 2013 that she fell into disrepair. He said tourists are kept away from the ship.

He added that he would be happy to see the liner to rest somewhere associated with its history: Southampton, Liverpool, London or New York.

Louis De Sousa worked on the QE2 as a bartender between 1990 and 1999.

He told Telegraph Travel the situation surrounding her ownership was confusing as nobody seemed to be taking responsibility for her.

• The farewell cruise of the world’s most famous cruise ship, the QE2

“Her future most likely will be the scrapyard,” he said.

“Of course it is sad. But I truly don’t believe in hotel ships. If you are going to save a ship then have her as such. Dubai just wanted to rip her apart and turn her to into something like Las Vegas.”

Drydocks World, which is owned by the Dubai government and where she is currently docked, did not respond to a request for comment.

Last weekend another QE2 campaigner used Cunard’s 175th anniversary celebration in Liverpool as an opportunity to raise awareness of the liner’s plight and hand out flyers.

If the QE2 were to be saved, it would not be the first time the Telegraph had had a hand in the salvaging of an old liner. In 2006 the Swan Hellenic, a floundering P&O liner, was purchased and revived by Lord Sterling after a “Save our Swan” campaign run by Telegraph Travel was firmly supported by its readers.

QE2 crew on strike amid Ukranian political crisis

QE2 crew on strike amid Ukranian political crisis The crew of the former Cunard flagship QE2 in Dubai is on strike ahead of plans to sail it to China to be refitted as a floating hotel.

Ukrainian workers on the ship say they were not paid in March or April.

Owners Oceanic Group said an agency had been paid and blamed the political situation in Ukraine for difficulties in dealing with crew issues.

The company said it was still planning on eventually locating the vessel in Hong Kong or Singapore where it is due to become a ‘heritage hotel’ with 400 bedrooms and suites.

The BBC said it had obtained a letter from the Ukrainian captain to the ship’s owners stating the 48-strong crew has been on strike since May 15.

Winnie Ip, vice chairman of owners QE2 Holdings Ltd, said: “We are waiting for new crew to replace the existing ones on a sign-on/sign-off rotation basis, but, given the present political situation in Ukraine, it is difficult and a little slow.”

She said the consortium was still committed to sailing the QE2 to a Shanghai shipyard under its own steam for the refit.

Its 900 cabins are to be converted into 400 larger suites as part of the planned £62 million refurbishment.

The QE2 to be ‘sold for scrap’ to Chinese

The QE2 to be ‘sold for scrap’ to Chinese

Dec 24, 2012

Former Cunard flagship The QE2 is set to be sold to the Chinese for scrap for £20 million after a bid to bring it back to the UK as a five-star floating hotel failed.

The ship has been moored in a commercial port in Dubai since it was sold for £64 million in 2008.

A British consortium presented owner Dubai World with a bid to bring the QE2 to London and convert into a five star hotel moored opposite the O2 Arena.

The QE2 London bid could have brought up to 2,000 jobs to London.

However a Chinese crew of around 20 boarded the QE2 last Friday leading to fears it has already been sold as scrap, the Daily Mail reported.

They replaced a crew of around 40 who had been maintaining the QE2 in Port Rashid for the last four years.

Roger Murray of QE2 London told the newspaper: “We have been told the ship is going to be put into a dry dock before being taken to an unknown destination in the far east.

“That is a tragedy because it almost certainly means the QE2 is being sold as scrap.

“Our investors were going to give £20 million for the ship itself plus £60 million for renovation and the cost of bringing the ship back to Britain.

“But the ship could raise as much as £20 million as dead weight scrap and the Chinese cash would be immediate.”

Alaric Errington from an organisation called Equity in Finance was leading the investment consortium behind the QE2 London bid.

He said: “This is a fantastic opportunity and we put forward a very commanding commercial proposition that was designed to give Dubai a future return.

“The QE2 is an icon but our proposal also makes business sense. The cost of renovating the QE2 and bringing it back to the UK is no more than acquiring land in central London to build a luxury hotel.”

When Istithmar – part of the state conglomerate Dubai World – bought the QE2 from Cunard in 2007 it agreed it would not sell it on for at least ten years.

But a source close to Dubai World said he believed “a contract modification could be agreed” allowing it to be sold on for scrap, according to the report.

Dubai World was unavailable for comment.