Executive Summary
National Audit Office Value for Money Report
- The Ministry of Defence (the Department) undertakes a wide
range of activities, including front line military capability and
essential support functions. To deliver these activities
efficiently, the Department uses various forms of relationship with
the private sector, with differing approaches to sharing risk. The
Private Finance Initiative (PFI) represents one important form of
relationship. In PFI projects the Department usually defines the
outputs it requires and invites the private sector to design and
deliver the required service outputs for an agreed annual
price.
- Risk management is important to all forms of procurement
undertaken by the Department. Effective risk allocation and
management is particularly important to delivering value for money
in PFI contracts. These contracts seek to optimise value for money
by agreeing an allocation of risks between the public and private
sectors over the course of a long-term contract. This is not the
sole contributor to value for money but it is very unlikely that
the best possible PFI outcome will be achieved without effective
risk allocation and management.
- This study examines whether there has been effective allocation
and management of risk in the Department’s PFI projects. Our
findings are based on a detailed examination of eight PFI case
study projects. This analysis is supported by a census of all the
Department’s PFI contracts let in 2007 and consultation with the
Department’s staff, contractors and advisers. We selected the case
studies to reflect the diverse nature of the Department’s PFI
portfolio (Figure 1). Appendix 1 contains detailed
findings from each case study. Our examination has also drawn on
our previous experience of examining risk management in PFI
projects (see Methodology, Appendix 2).
Figure 1 ("The eight case studies
projects") is unavailable in this version of the executive
summary.
- Our analysis of these projects focussed on ten key risks. In
doing so we recognised two important features of the Department’s
portfolio of PFI contracts. Firstly, the Department’s approach to
procuring PFI deals has developed over time. Our case study
projects were relatively early contracts entered into between 1997
and 2002. These were chosen to provide a good level of operational
experience to examine. Since these contracts were let the
Department has achieved a greater standardisation of contractual
terms and conditions. It has also improved its internal scrutiny of
PFI deals and all large projects in the light of previous
experiences. Secondly, we recognise that the Department has faced
particular challenges arising from the fact that its PFI portfolio
is less homogenous than those of other departments.
- The Department’s portfolio of more than 50 PFI projects
represents a small, but important, part of the Department’s annual
spending. The total private sector capital investment in Defence is
over £9 billion. In 2007-08 the Department spent £1.3 billion in
PFI service charges. The projects range from small projects with a
capital value of under £50 million to larger projects with a
capital value of over £1 billion. The larger projects include the
service accommodation contract Allenby and Connaught let in March
2006 (capital value £1.3 billion, total contract value £8 billion)
and the Future Strategic Tanker Aircraft, the Department’s largest
PFI deal completed in March 2008 (capital value £2.6 billion, total
contract value £13 billion). The capital value of the case study
projects we examined, focussing on projects in full service in
2007, was just over £900 million (Figure 1, page 5)
Findings
- The Department has achieved a good service delivery on a broad
and diverse portfolio of PFI projects. Across its whole PFI
portfolio of more than 50 projects most have reached full service
delivery on time, for the cost set out in the contract and are
delivering services satisfactorily. These new projects have enabled
the Department to achieve considerable benefits from a range of
services. Some of the projects are delivering new equipment and
training which are contributing to improving the effectiveness of
military personnel. Others are providing support services which are
helping the Department to carry out its work more
efficiently.
- In the case study projects we examined most of the risks were
being well managed by the Department with the projects delivering
value for money but there were exceptions. We concluded that in
nine out of the ten risk categories we examined there was either a
low risk to value for money or moderate risk to value for money
(Figure 2).

In one risk category, the specification of the asset or service, we
concluded there was significant risk to value for money to the
procurement phase although not to the subsequent management of the
projects in their operational phase. The specification issues had
contributed to problems on two procurements: the Armoured Vehicle
Training Service project which was cancelled during its procurement
and the Defence Animal Centre where the contract will need to be
renegotiated. In the other six case study projects we examined the
risks had generally been well managed contributing to value for
money. The Defence Animal Centre has a capital value of £11 million
and is therefore, under current Treasury policy, below the
threshold of projects which would now need to be procured under
PFI. Since these deals the Department has taken a number of steps
to address the risk of inadequate specification of assets or
services (Figure 3).

- The Department has developed commercial disciplines for
scrutinising the value for money of its PFI procurements and has
extended these into other projects. The Department has over time
developed appropriate processes for scrutinising PFI procurements.
The Department has an experienced Private Finance Unit which
provides support and guidance to PFI projects. Large PFI projects
also need to satisfy the Department’s Investment Approvals Board.
Recently the Department has used its PFI experience to establish a
further review process for its large projects under all forms of
procurement. The new review process draws on the checking, known as
due diligence, which the private sector funders carry out on PFI
deals. It aims to improve assurance that the proposed commercial
arrangements will enable the project to meet operational
requirements with appropriate contract terms.
- The Department is using these disciplines to take tough
decisions on some PFI projects although these decisions could have
been made on a more timely basis. Although most of the Department’s
PFI projects have delivered the services required the Department is
prepared to take decisions to abandon inappropriate PFI project
proposals or to renegotiate or terminate PFI contracts which are
not delivering the required services. These decisions are taken in
the interests of achieving value for money, but in some cases the
Department has taken a long time to decide on the appropriate
action. For example, the Department took the right decision not to
proceed with a proposed PFI procurement for Armoured Vehicle
Training but only after spending six years in developing the
project. The Department is rightly seeking to renegotiate its
Defence Animal Centre contract but has also taken six years to
reach this position despite ongoing dissatisfaction with the
service delivery.
- The Department took on average 37 months to procure the
projects we surveyed, where data was available, but large projects
often took longer. The Department’s methods for overseeing PFI
procurements aim to avoid inappropriate deals being completed. It
is right that time is spent on undertaking such assessment. But it
is also important that procurements are efficient so that service
delivery is not unduly delayed and bid costs, which are likely to
be factored into contract prices in the long term, are kept within
reasonable limits. The average procurement time in the Department’s
PFI projects we surveyed, in the 77 per cent of projects where the
Department held such data, was 37 months. These statistics compare
with the average PFI experience across government of 34 months in a
2006 NAO survey (Improving the PFI Tendering Process HC 149
2006-07). Larger projects often took longer to procure, the average
for the Department’s PFI projects with a capital value of over £50
million, where data was available, being 45 months. This longer
time reflects: the special requirements of the Department’s
projects compared with repeat projects such as hospitals or
schools; the range of the Department’s in-house stakeholders who
are involved in decisions about the projects and the assessment of
the deals; and some scope, despite these special considerations,
for the Department to improve the speed at which it closes larger
deals, which it is seeking to do through improvements to the
oversight of its capital procurements.
- The Department’s efforts to allocate and manage risk at the
outset of the projects that we examined were often hampered by a
lack of data on the services required. Lack of data represented a
significant risk to value for money in the eight case study
projects we examined. Insufficient service information creates a
risk because the Department may not get the service which matches
its needs or the contractors may increase the pricing of deals
because of the resulting uncertainty. Procurement times have also
been affected by the need to clarify specification issues. In
particular lack of data on the Department’s service requirements
was a factor in the cancelled Armoured Vehicles Training PFI
project. Some issues, which could have been identified earlier,
only emerged after contract letting. For example, in the Field
Electrical Power Generators project the Department had to pay the
contractor £7.3 million without competition to modify the
generators when the Department found that some of its vehicles,
when pulling the generators, had manoeuvrability problems and could
not turn corners safely.
- The Department’s PFI contracts have flexibility to deal with
changes but there are risks to maintaining value for money where
changes are required. The Department works in a fast changing,
often unpredictable, environment. It often finds that changes are
needed to its projects either in the run-up to contract letting or
once the project is in service because:
- the operational needs of its military staff may change,
particularly if they need to be deployed in new territories;
- new technology used in equipment or training may be developed;
or
- in some cases, changes are needed because the Department’s
needs are initially difficult to define precisely across its large
complex organisation.
Any change after appointing a contractor creates a risk to value
for money as it may involve added costs in a situation where
competition is absent. The NAO report Making Operational Changes in
PFI Projects (HC 205, 2007-08) analysed the risks arising from
contract changes, and described how Departments and agencies can
best manage these risks. The capacity for the Department’s needs to
change, sometimes at short notice, does not mean that the PFI is an
inappropriate form of procurement: well-designed PFI contracts are
flexible and can adapt the services provided as circumstances
change. It does mean that changes, and the pricing of them, have to
be carefully negotiated between the Department and their
contractors.
- There are instances where contract management could be
improved, especially in assessing performance. The Department’s PFI
projects in service are managed by teams who are generally
addressing contract management issues in an appropriate manner and
building effective working relationships with their contractors.
The Department’s Private Finance Unit has also already made a
useful step in evaluating the Department’s overall experience of
using PFI through its 2005 review of the operational experience of
its PFI projects. Our examination has, however, identified the
following areas for improving project management:
- User satisfaction feedback had not been obtained in 25 per cent
of the projects in our census.
- Risk management processes such as risk registers were not used
consistently.
- In some projects post contract evaluations, to consider the
costs and efficiency of the procurements, were either not carried
out or were not done on a timely basis.
- In the Defence Fixed Telecommunications project, the Department
had to recover £1.3 million from the supplier BT after it became
apparent that employees of BT had inflated the number of calls
being answered within the required time limit by calling each
other. This fraud was not detected initially because there was no
adverse consequence for the Department’s staff using the
telecommunications services. The Department and BT have taken steps
to address the circumstances which led to this fraud. The
Department and BT have now imposed a new management structure and
governance arrangements on the contract. There is more detailed
performance reporting by BT which is subject to audit by the
Department. BT has also made changes to the staffing of the
project.
- Appropriate skills are required for managing PFI contracts so
that value for money is not eroded during the contract’s life.
There is a particular need for the knowledge of the contract and
the aims of the project to be transferred to those who will manage
the contract. There was a lack of staff continuity on some of the
case study projects we examined, but other case study projects had
benefited from retaining at least one member of the contract
negotiation team in post for the first year or two of the
operational phase.
Value for money conclusion
- In six of the eight case studies we examined the Department has
procured and managed successful PFI solutions. One project was
cancelled before contract letting and one other contract we
examined will need to be renegotiated. In the PFI projects we
examined the Department has therefore generally achieved effective
allocation and management of risk. The allocation and management of
risk, which has been the focus of this examination, is however not
the sole contributor to value for money. Effective competitions, or
strong benchmarking processes where there is a single supply
source, are also needed to obtain the best prices for the risks
transferred. The case study contracts we examined were all procured
through competitive tendering.
Recommendations
These recommendations relate to the Department’s portfolio of
existing PFI projects and any further PFI procurements they may
undertake. The recommendations may also have relevance to other
forms of public/private partnerships which the Department may
develop in the future.
- A lack of robust data for project teams to specify their
requirements and the risks being transferred to contractors has
been an issue for a number of the case studies examined. Project
teams should ensure that the initial planning stage of each project
includes the production of suitable data on any existing use of the
required service, forecast usage and the condition of assets being
transferred to the private sector. The Department’s Private Finance
Unit should check that this information is available before bidding
competitions commence.
- PFI contracts are long term contracts which have the potential
flexibility to deal with the Department’s changing requirements.
But change requires negotiations between the parties which need to
be managed effectively to ensure value for money is not eroded
during the contract period. The Department’s PFI project teams
should assess the likely impact of future changing circumstances on
the PFI contracts they propose to enter into. In particular, they
should:
- be fully conversant with the prescribed processes for dealing
with change, including Treasury and Departmental guidance;
- only enter into contracts that set out clearly how changes will
be made to the project including processes for benchmarking the
price of variations;
- continue, during the service period, to undertake regular
assessments (at least yearly) of factors that could affect future
requirements and the impact these may have;
- actively manage supplier relationships with the private sector
to successfully incorporate changing requirements on terms which
are value for money; and
- when considering a possible change in the use of an asset
delivered by the private sector, remember that the Department may
become liable for repairs arising from the change.
- Some of the Department’s projects with early PFI contracts may
experience difficulties in enforcing the performance they require
because of a lack of clarity in the drafting of the contract. Where
the Department’s projects experience service problems because the
contract does not set out their requirements clearly they should
either renegotiate the contract or seek, through their relationship
with the contractor, a mutually agreed working arrangement to
overcome the contract deficiencies. Terminating a non-performing
contract represents an extreme option. It imposes significant
transaction costs on the Department, but these costs may be lower
than the ongoing costs of poor performance. The Department should
not rule out termination of non-performing contracts on the grounds
of transaction costs alone.
- Although it is normal practice in PFI projects for the private
sector to record performance and the public sector to monitor
performance levels there is a risk that contractors might misrecord
performance to avoid payment deductions. The Department’s project
teams should assess the appropriateness of the systems used to
validate contractors’ service performance. In particular they
should be alert to the risk that the extent of successful service
delivery could be overstated without any adverse effect on users of
the service that would draw their attention to the situation.
Project teams should carry out audit work on the performance
monitoring systems, consider whether the performance data being
provided is adequate and carry out spot checks of the authenticity
of the underlying data.
- Good contract management involves retaining knowledge about the
project, monitoring risks and carrying out regular evaluations.
There was a lack of staff continuity on some of the case study
projects we examined, which meant that it was harder to achieve a
high standard of contract management. To improve the management of
PFI projects the Department’s PFI project teams should:
- keep at least one senior member of the team in post for the
first year after the contract has been let, so there is a suitable
transfer of knowledge to the team who will manage the
contract;
- have staff with appropriate contract management skills acquired
through either previous experience or appropriate training; n
capture project risks on formal risk registers in both the
procurement and in-service phases;
- undertake user satisfaction assessments on a systematic basis;
and
- carry out post contract evaluations and subsequent annual
reviews of overall contract performance. The NAO framework for
evaluating PFI projects may assist this process (available from the
NAO website www.nao.org.uk).
- identifying and disseminating lessons from its project teams’
post contract evaluations and subsequent annual reviews;
- analysing information on the internal and external costs of
procuring recent and current PFI deals to identify action points
for improving the efficiency of the procurement of future deals;
and
- recording and monitoring the main risks affecting the
successful delivery of services across the Department’s PFI
portfolio taking account of the project evaluations and the issues
identified in this report.