CA25100 - PMA: Ships: Outline and meaning of ship
Ships are treated more generously than other assets by the capital allowance system. A shipowner can claim a WDA (or an FYA if available) and then postpone it CA25200. This means that the allowance need not be taken in the chargeable period for which it is claimed but can be taken in a later chargeable period provided that the qualifying activity is still being carried on. Shipowners can also defer balancing charges arising in respect of ships by setting them off against expenditure on new shipping CA25300.
There is no definition of ship in CAA01 so you should give ship
its ordinary meaning. Treat any vessel registered by the Maritime
Coastguard Agency as a ship as a ship for capital allowance
purposes. The Merchant Shipping Act 1995 defines a ship as
including every description of vessel used in navigation. Accept
that anything that is covered by the Merchant Shipping Act 1995
definition of ship is a ship for capital allowance purposes. This
means that you should treat any vessel that is capable of being
manoeuvred under direct or indirect power as a ship.
Oilrigs and platforms, accommodation barges, light and
weather ships etc are not generally regarded as ships. They do not
normally move about and are not used in navigation. Semi-
submersible oilrigs and similar vessels in the oil and gas industry
may be ships, depending on the use made of them. This use-based
approach was followed by the Court of Appeal in Clark v Perks
(2001) [which held that a semi-submersible drilling rig could be
considered as a ship]. As a result, you should not automatically
accept that all such vessels qualify as ships.
