A group of built environment professionals have secured government backing to look for a new approach to procurement culture based on best value rather than lowest cost.
Over the next nine months, in a move commissioned by the Construction Leadership Council as part of the sector deal to modernise construction, the group will seek to develop new software, tools and practices to deliver measurable ways of procuring built assets over a whole lifecycle.
The news comes following July’s Construction Sector Deal and Procuring for Value report, which blamed current procurement practices for creating “a race to the bottom”, resulting in poor quality and unfair payment practices.
The report estimated that a more “joined up” approach to procurement could result in savings of over £15bn each year.
CLC’s procurement initiative is being led by Ann Bentley, global board director of Rider Levett Bucknall (RLB) and CLC and Construction Industry Council (CIC) board member, who wrote Procuring for Value.
CLC is drawing on the expertise of professional bodies within the Construction Industry Council, which is also providing the secretariat. The work stream will be handled by four working groups:
- The Procuring for Value Model: chaired by Geoff Hunt, director and chief operating officer UK, India, Middle East + Africa of Arup, this group will define what constitutes value to clients and end-users and develop metrics to measure compliance with the brief and other value indicators.
- Predictability: chaired by Ashley Bateson, partner of Hoare Lea and vice president of CIBSE, this group will come up with metrics for measuring predictability of asset performance. These metrics should provide yardsticks that will indicate if the built asset performs the way it is meant to and by implication how well the contractors and consultants perform.
- Procurement Behaviours: chaired by John Nolan, chairman of the Construction Industry Council, this group will look at the procurement process itself, particularly from the different perspectives of clients, consultant advisors and contractors and what tools we can develop to change behaviours.
- Procurement and the digital agenda: chaired by Simon Rawlinson, partner, head of strategic research and insight at Arcadis and member of the Construction Leadership Council, this group will develop ways of tying procurement into construction’s digital landscape.
Each of the four groups will comprise up to 20 experts from a wide range of companies and organisations. The groups will liaise with other industry work streams that are currently working to improve procurement.
Ann Bentley said: “It has become widely accepted that a huge amount of effort is wasted in construction through poor procurement. As part of the construction sector deal, which forms part of the industrial strategy, government has agreed that procurement should move away from lowest price capital cost to a broader based outcome of better value. But in order to satisfy government, we need to be able to prove that better value will actually be delivered.
“The aim of this project is to come up with a measurable and demonstrable way of procuring built assets by better value over a whole lifecycle that can be embedded into the industry.
“We will be developing practical tools such as training programmes, software and guidance to build clients’ confidence that they are getting the best possible value over the life cycle of their asset.”
Chairman of CIC, prof John Nolan, added: “Both the membership of CIC and I are delighted to support this initiative. The Grenfell disaster together with the Scottish schools collapse and the Carillion insolvency are indicators that the system is broken. It is clear that a substantial factor in this is our nonsensical procurement system that conflates cost with value and incentivises a race to the bottom. I am pleased that Government recognises that there is a problem and is looking for industry advice and support to sort it out."
Comments
Comments are closed.
… and this will be the umpteenth attempt.
It’s never given long term benefits to Client or Contractor in the past, why should it now?
The UK needs an educated client base not a bunch of civil servants who have little idea of construction/contracting.
The PSA (property services agency) was a good idea – with it’s own specifications and so was the hospital services with the Health Technical Memorandum system.
Something along these lines, staffed by professionals, is the way forward.