Defence equipment projects are widely different. They range from off-the-shelf arrangements to cutting edge technology developments; from the replacement of existing capability to the delivery of radically new capability; and from projects where the Department is the only procurer to complex international collaborative procurements. The urgency with which a new equipment capability may be required or the strength of industrial or other wider imperatives will also vary. Each project thus poses different risks and challenges, some of which it will be neither cost effective nor possible to mitigate fully in the Assessment Phase. To help ensure the cost-effective and timely delivery of mission critical equipments, the diversity of projects and motivations to progress them quickly need to be fully recognised when the main investment decision is made. The point when a project is mature enough for the main investment decision to be taken will look very different from one project to another dependent upon the perceived benefits of progressing the project quickly albeit with a greater level of recognised uncertainty and risk. The Department should clarify what is required to demonstrate maturity for different types of project. This definition should include: a clear statement of required best practice; and an articulation of the treatment of risk and appropriate ranges of cost and time estimates that are acceptable in the circumstances of individual projects. It is then for the Department to manage varying levels of risk and identified benefit on both the individual projects and at the aggregate level through its Equipment Programme.
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