Bosses from two of P&O Ferries’ rivals are due to meet with UK government officials to discuss the fallout from the firm’s widely-criticised move to sack 800 staff.
The UK Department for Transport (DfT) has invited DFDS and Stena Lines for talks on Monday, amid concerns over chaos at ports during the Easter holidays.
The department confirmed the meeting is taking place, but declined to comment on the topics for discussion.
But a spokesman said: “Ministers are working to understand how we can ensure the continuation of services in collaboration with other operators, including DFDS and Stena.”
British Prime Minister Boris Johnson backed his Transport Secretary Grant Shapps’ call for P&O boss Peter Hebblethwaite to quit over the mass sacking of the hundreds of workers without notice on March 17th, with replacements being paid the minimum wage.
The meeting is set to come after the PA news agency learned P&O Ferries conducted a study last year into options to sustain the company which calculated it would cost £309 million (€371 million) to keep the business going while consulting with staff over job losses.
It decided against a full staff consultation over its plans to cut almost 800 jobs, a move which has attracted a huge backlash from unions and politicians.
A company source said the study calculated it would cost £309 million to keep the business going through a consultation period of at least three months, adding there was no guarantee of recovery.
Months of consultations would have undermined the business, caused disruption which would have led to customers leaving to competitors, dealing a “fatal blow” to P&O, the source told PA.
P&O believes it has safeguarded the long-term future of the company and the livelihoods of 2,200 employees.
A P&O spokesperson said: “Over 90 per cent of seafarers affected are in discussions to progress with the severance offers.
“We are sorry to the people affected and their families for the impact it’s had on them. They’ve lost their jobs and there is anger and shock, which we completely understand.
“We needed fundamental change to make the business viable. This was an incredibly difficult decision that we wrestled with but once we knew it was the only way to save the business, we had to act.
“All other routes led to the loss of 3,000 jobs and the closure of P&O Ferries.
“In making this hard choice we have guaranteed the future viability of P&O Ferries and secured Britain’s trading capacity.
“We are committed to ensuring the continued and ongoing support for all those former and current employees affected.”
The company said the settlement with its workers is believed to be the largest compensation package in the British Marine Sector.
A total of 40 employees are receiving more than £100,000 and in some cases are over £170,000, said P&O.
The total value of the financial settlement is over £36 million.
Protests were held in Liverpool, Hull and Dover on Saturday and more are planned in the coming days.
The UK Rail, Maritime and Transport and Nautilus International unions are urging the company to reverse the sackings and for the UK government to take action against P&O.
A ship operated by the ferry firm was detained for being “unfit to sail” on Friday.
The European Causeway vessel was held at the port of Larne in Northern Ireland due to “failures on crew familiarisation, vessel documentation and crew training”, the Maritime and Coastguard Agency (MCA) said.
Mr Hebblethwaite admitted to MPs that the firm broke the law by not consulting over the sackings.
Mick Lynch, general secretary of the Rail, Maritime and Transport union, said: “The campaign to get the workers back on the ships, operating these crucial ferry links safely goes on and the company need to face up to the hard facts and take responsibility for their grotesque actions.”