Press Release - The Red Dragon
project
27 March 2009
Red Dragon – a project by the
Ministry of Defence (MOD), Welsh Assembly Government and the then
Welsh Development Agency (the Welsh Authorities) to provide modern
aviation repair facilities at St Athan, South Wales – has cost the
taxpayer around £113 million, although it was meant to have saved
MOD money and protected jobs in the area, according to a joint
report released today by the National Audit Office and the Wales
Audit Office.
The project was established in 2000
and involved the modernisation of ageing MOD facilities, the
construction of a super-hangar for fast jet repair and an aerospace
business park promoted by the Welsh Authorities. DARA – the Defence
Aviation Repair Agency – was the intended main tenant, with most of
its work on RAF fast jets being moved into a purpose built
facility. However, the MOD committed to the project without having
decided on its full vision for aircraft support. Once this vision
had been established, but after the Red Dragon deal had been
closed, MOD announced in 2005 that DARA would close its fast jet
business at St Athan, leaving the site without its anchor tenant by
April 2007. The super-hangar project has achieved efficiency
savings of only £57 million (accounted for in the £113 million
total net cost) as opposed to planned savings of £263 million. Over
£1 billion of cost savings have separately been made through
transferring repair to main Royal Air Force operating bases.
The closure of DARA’s fast jet
business also resulted in many job losses which the Welsh
Authorities had originally intended to prevent through the project.
It was also hoped that 4,000 new jobs could be created over 15
years through the development of the aerospace park, but the
closure of the fast jet business delayed and complicated these
plans and only 45 jobs have been created so far.
The MOD and the Welsh Authorities
did not work sufficiently closely during the project. Although they
had complementary objectives, there was no common purpose between
them, with the MOD interested in securing more efficient repair of
fast jets and the Welsh Authorities interested in safeguarding and
creating jobs in South Wales. When the MOD decided that the St
Athan site was no longer the most efficient place to repair its
fast jets, the objectives were no longer complementary. The MOD and
the Welsh Authorities did not have a shared understanding of each
other’s key assumptions. The Welsh Authorities were not told as
early as they might have been about the implications for St Athan
of the MOD’s review of fast jet support. However, there were
examples of effective collaboration to address key issues of joint
interest, with the Welsh Authorities and the MOD cooperating on
marketing the site.
The MOD and the Welsh Authorities
are now working together to secure the future of the site. There
are currently plans by the MOD to establish a Defence Training
Academy using the super-hangar, which the MOD and Welsh Authorities
expect to bring significant economic benefits to South Wales. The
MOD and the Welsh Authorities expect that the Academy will bring
over 5,500 jobs to the area (although a third are likely to be
filled by staff relocating from other parts of the UK). The Welsh
Authorities also expect that the Academy will provide an impetus
for current plans for an aerospace park, potentially creating
around an additional 2,000 jobs.
Tim Burr, head of the
National Audit Office, said today:
"Both the Ministry of
Defence and the Welsh Authorities have invested a considerable
amount of time, effort and money in creating modern aviation repair
facilities in South Wales, with a super-hangar which is now sitting
almost empty. As it happens, under the Defence Training Review
there should be a future for the super-hangar at St Athan, but the
Red Dragon project underlines that public bodies need to have
considered all implications of their respective strategies before
commencing joint projects."
Jeremy Colman, Auditor
General for Wales, added:
"The Ministry of Defence
and the Welsh Authorities failed to collaborate sufficiently
throughout the project. Although for much of the time both had
complementary objectives, they did not establish a common purpose
for the project or a common understanding of their respective
assumptions about the future of the site. The Red Dragon project
highlights the danger in large and complex projects that involve
multiple public bodies of insufficient openness and information
sharing."
Notes for Editors
-
The Welsh Assembly Government and the former Welsh
Development Agency are collectively referred to in this press
notice and the accompanying report as the Welsh Authorities. In
April 2006, the Welsh Development Agency was merged into the Welsh
Assembly Government
- This joint report reflects the separate powers of the
National Audit Office and Wales Audit Office and the accountability
arrangements which the two bodies support. The National Audit
Office examined the activities of the Ministry of Defence under
section 6 of the National Audit Act 1983 and reports to the House
of Commons. The Wales Audit Office examined the activities of the
Welsh Authorities under the Government of Wales Act 1998 and the
Government of Wales Act 2006 and reports to the National Assembly
for Wales. The conclusions are joint.
- The Defence Aviation Repair Agency (DARA) became a
trading fund of the Ministry of Defence in 2001. DARA became a
trading fund in order to compete with industry for business that it
had previously held.
- The Comptroller and Auditor General, Tim Burr, is the
head of the National Audit Office which employs some 850 staff. He
and the NAO are totally independent of Government. He certifies the
accounts of all Government departments and a wide range of other
public sector bodies; and he has statutory authority to report to
Parliament on the economy, efficiency and effectiveness with which
departments and other bodies have used their
resources.
- The Wales Audit Office is independent of government and
is responsible for the annual audit of some £20 billion of annual
public expenditure. Its mission is to promote improvement, so that
people in Wales benefit from accountable, well-managed public
services that offer the best possible value for money. It is also
committed to identifying and spreading good practice across the
Welsh public sector.
Press Notice
23/09
Phil Groves
Press Officer – National Audit
Office
020 7798 5339/07770
687477
phil.groves@nao.gsi.gov.uk
Laura Towler
Communications Officer – Wales
Audit Office
029 2032 0519/07971
329795
laura.towler@wao.gov.uk