Brittany Ferries is testing berthing the Barfleur in St Helier harbour this morning (26 March), ahead of doing the same in Guernsey.
Ports of Jersey says the company, which is a shareholder of Condor Ferries, is testing the 157-metre-long vessel as part of its own 'business continuity plans.
Two tugs are supporting the Barfleur's arrival to Jersey, to ensure a safe entry into the port. The vessel is around 30 metres longer than Condor's Commodore Clipper, Goodwill and Islander.
A couple of Ports of Jersey pilots will also be onboard the ferry to help the bridge team and give them local knowledge of island waters.
Guernsey will see a similar trial at a later, unconfirmed, date.
In December 2023, DFDS trialed a similar berth of the 162 metre long Finlandia Seaways. The governments of Jersey and Guernsey commissioned that test as part of their own contingency plans.
It comes as Condor's written agreement with the islands comes to an end in March 2025. Guernsey has a less formal Memorandum of Understanding with the company and last year lent it £26 million to buy the 'Islander' ferry.
READ: Condor Addresses Rumours On Finances

In February 2024, Condor's CEO, John Napton, stepped down and Brittany Ferries' CEO Christophe Mathieu was appointed to take over the interim position, with immediate effect.

More Channel Island musicians to get funding for gigs
Daughter of L'Ecume II skipper and former Jersey Reds Captain join police force
Speed limits to be cut on 52 St Ouen roads
Experts identify aspects of Assisted Dying Law that raise issues
Deputy decries £280k unspent IVF funding despite demand
Aurigny promises average Guernsey-Jersey air fare will be £70 one way
Missing moggy survives Storm Goretti and returns home after five weeks
A Channel Islands success story to expands to Dubai