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Defence procurement privatisation plan axed | |
(35 minutes later) | |
The government has abandoned plans to privatise its defence procurement body after only one bidder was left in contention for the contract. | The government has abandoned plans to privatise its defence procurement body after only one bidder was left in contention for the contract. |
Defence Secretary Philip Hammond said there was no longer a "competitive process" and the risks of continuing were "too great to be acceptable". | Defence Secretary Philip Hammond said there was no longer a "competitive process" and the risks of continuing were "too great to be acceptable". |
But private sector experts are to be hired to buy military equipment, he told MPs. | |
Labour described the decision as an "embarrassing U-turn". | Labour described the decision as an "embarrassing U-turn". |
The Bristol-based Defence Equipment and Support Agency has an annual budget of £14bn. It buys equipment including ships, aircraft and weapons for the armed forces. | |
'Match-fit' | |
The Ministry of Defence (MoD) had been considering replacing the agency with a "government-owned, contractor-operated" (GoCo) body, which it said would streamline operations and provide better value for money. | |
But two of three consortiums interested in the contract withdrew. | But two of three consortiums interested in the contract withdrew. |
Mr Hammond told MPs: "I've decided not to continue the present competition." | |
He added that the "heart of our approach was to test the market conditions for delivering GoCo", saying: "I've always recognised that there are risks inherent in the GoCo approach." | |
With only one bidder left, Mr Hammond said he had "made a judgement", as "we do not have a competitive process". | |
"We therefore concluded that the risks of continuing with a single bidder are too great to be acceptable," he said. | |
But the agency would still get a "significant injection of private-sector skill", Mr Hammond told MPs, adding that this would ensure "the organisation becomes match-fit". | |
Mr Hammond told MPs he was creating a new arms-length government trading entity to buy equipment and supplies, which would be able to recruit and manage staff "along commercial lines". | |
For Labour, shadow defence secretary Vernon Coaker: "It's another embarrassing U-turn for the government." | |
He added: "You can't run defence and security on an ad hoc basis." |
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