Government construction and infrastructure pipelines
Contents |
[edit] Overview
The Plan for Growth published by the UK government in 2011 set out a commitment to publish a rolling forward programme of construction and infrastructure projects. This ‘pipeline’ is the joint responsibility of the Efficiency and Reform Group in the Cabinet Office and HM Treasury, however, the government has contracted Barbour ABI for the management, maintenance and future development of the pipeline database.
The pipeline publishes details of planned government construction and infrastructure projects, including those that are in very early stages where funding has not yet been secured and may not actually happen. The pipeline is not therefore intended to give a commitment that projects will proceed, rather it is a strategic planning tool. It gives forward visibility by providing the ‘…transparency and certainty, which will help businesses plan and give investors confidence.’ It is seen to support the ambitions of the Government Construction Strategy, and the Infrastructure Cost Review Implementation Plan.
The pipeline is published as two documents, the Government Construction Pipeline and the National Infrastructure Pipeline. The government has committed to update the construction pipeline on a 6-monthly basis and the infrastructure pipeline on an annual basis.
The infrastructure pipeline sits alongside the government's National Infrastructure Plan published by Infrastructure UK (now the Infrastructure and Projects Authority), created to tackle the UK’s historically fragmented infrastructure development programmes which tend to be ineffective at prioritising need, instead only reacting to failures. The plan is intended to provide a clear, long-term strategy for maintaining and improving infrastructure, enabling the UK to remain competitive and to accommodate an increasing population.
[edit] Updates
[edit] 2015
A revised pipeline was published in July 2015. (Ref. Gov.uk.) This detailed £411 billion of investment in 564 projects and programmes from 2015/16 onwards with increasing investment in transport, energy, communications and environmental networks.
An assessment of the skills required to deliver the pipeline was published in September 2015. See National Infrastructure Plan for Skills for more information.
In September 2015, analysis by KPMG revealed that 28% of construction and infrastructure projects has ‘disappeared’ since the previous pipeline analysis in December 2014 largely due to potential projects being removed to avoid pre-empting the Spending Review.
Richard Threlfall, KPMG’s UK Head of Infrastructure, Building and Construction said:
“I hope the Government will recognise that what this industry most needs is long-term certainty and stability in demand, to provide it with the confidence to invest in technology and its workforce. Our growing economy is creating a welcome uplift in private sector demand, but the Government should not use that as an excuse to cut back its own investments, create another hiatus, and send ripples of uncertainty through the industry.”
In his speech to the Conservative party conference on 5 October 2015, then-Chancellor George Osborne announced the creation of a National Infrastructure Commission to provide an unbiased analysis of the UK’s long-term infrastructure needs, delivering a long-term plan for, and assessment of, national infrastructure needs early in each parliament.
[edit] 2017
A revised National Infrastructure and Construction Pipeline was published on 6 December 2017, setting out £600 billion of public and private infrastructure investment over the next ten years. (Ref. https://www.gov.uk/government/publications/national-infrastructure-and-construction-pipeline-2016)
This was published alongside a new Transforming Infrastructure Performance programme, giving details of plans to improve infrastructure and boost the productivity of the construction sector with the intention of saving £15 billion a year on economic infrastructure such as transport and energy networks, and social infrastructure such as schools and hospitals.
For more information, see Transforming Infrastructure Performance.
[edit] 2018
In November 2018, a revised National Infrastructure and Construction Pipeline was published, listing projects with a total value of £600bn over the next 10 years, the same figure as the previous year.
The pipeline includes the £28bn national roads fund, upgrading the M6 to a smart motorway, the East West Rail project, and the world's largest offshore wind farm - Hornsea Project One.
In addition, it includes an update on delivery progress, showing that more than 400 infrastructure improvements were delivered in the past year.
[edit] 2019
In February 2019, the Infrastructure Forum reported that less than 8% of the projects in the pipeline were sufficiently certain for contractors to invest to deliver them.
[edit] 2020
On 16 June 2020, the government published a separate procurement pipeline bringing together the details of planned procurements for the 2020/21 financial year to help industry to make informed decisions as it recovers from the impact of COVID-19. Ref https://www.gov.uk/government/publications/national-infrastructure-and-construction-procurement-pipeline-202021
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- Infrastructure and Projects Authority.
- Infrastructure Transformation.
- Infrastructure UK.
- Is a bridge needed between Scotland and Northern Ireland?
- Long term, strategic approaches to infrastructure planning.
- National Infrastructure Commission.
- National Infrastructure Delivery Plan 2016-2021.
- National Infrastructure Plan.
- National Infrastructure Plan for Skills.
- National Infrastructure Strategy.
- Nationally Significant Infrastructure Projects.
- Steel requirements for infrastructure.
- Transforming Infrastructure Performance.
- UK Guarantee Scheme for infrastructure.
- Union Connectivity Review calls for UK-wide strategic transport network.
- Williams-Shapps Plan for Rail.
[edit] External references
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